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va PAGE SIX BIG TEN FANS ARE WATCHING CHICAGOGAME Western Team Hooks Up With Princeton University on Gridiron ‘Chicago, Oct. While Big Ten fans are looking toward the east today | for’the result of the Chicago-Prince- ton game a contest of major impor anco in the ‘Big Ten conference w: scheduled for Ann Arbor, Mich. Ohio State went there to meet the! ‘Michigan Wolverines. Coach Zueppke at Illinois, has made | some cal changes in his line-up since the defed 5 and hoped for a the onsin at Urbana, Mh, ne with Wi: to Indiana” plays at M taking on the Gophers and the chanc } i of the two elevens looked about even. ; Coaches jf both teams were pess mistic, declaring their teams consist- ed of “a bunch of cripples,” Outside t conference the game of | most interest in the west today is at Notre Dame where Nebraska has gone | in en effort to repeat the performance | of lowa by beating the Ind: jans. Three of the Big Ten teams are idle | today. hey are lowa, Northwestern and Purdue. S STAGG DEAN OF COLLEGE COACHES . 22--(By Chicago, Oc ed Press. (By the Associat- “ears from the ss Alonzo Stagg} ll against Princeten un-} he sends his Uni*| ‘0 eleven against his is. The intervening years have made him the oldest football coach in|! the country. In all this time his first! aim on gridiron has been to; ; “make men. | “With the right sort ot coaching! you can make mén faster on the foot- ball field than in any other sport,” said Coach Stagg in louking back over is three decades cf coaching just be- fore taking his team east. “Football is a glorious game. It calls for the highest in courage and sacrifice, for the good of the schoo! and to win. It is a vigoruus game and in certain’ sense it is to the glory of football that men will play the game in spite of injuries that quite often do come. | “One of the chief developments of} the past 30 years is a recognition oi} the worth of football and of atheltics. The war aiso has helped to meke peo- | ple see that they are worth while in} developing our boys physically, men-| tally d morally. “Football coaches have greatly im- proved in ideals. ‘There are many| more of them today who see the real valle of the sport. Some still are to be found who reverse its benefits by trying to. win at any cost-—who play the game crookedly, who set false ideals before their players, who encourage foul tactics and bad sports- manship. “We shall never get the best grade of coaches, in my judgment, until the coach is made a member of the fac ulty. He needs to be set above the} necessity ‘of immediate winning of games. He needs to have the ideals ef an educator, He snould not have his job depend solely on winning teams. I think this has been the cause cf much of the poor tactics some coaches. have employed.” Coach. Staggehimself strikingly il- ustrates the revolution that has taken place in the coach’s pysition in the college word, for he’ was the first coach to be made a member of the fac- | ulty of his institution. When he was invited to come to the University of Chicago at its opening in the fall of| 1852, he was made, at his own request, head of its department of physical culture and athletics, Up to that time college athletics were entirely separ- ate from: physical education and the University of Chicago was the first college to combine the two under a department. This department also took“over the managemcnt and coach- ing of the university's athletic teams. Until then all collegiate sports had y—It been managed and controlled by the! students, Stagg was Yale’s great pitching star from 1886 to 1890, the winner of five baseball championships. He was also selected on Camp’s All-American foot- ball team of 1889. Entering the (Springfield, Mass., Y. M. C. A. college} in the autumn of 1890, he really start -/ ed his coaching there. The college had never before had a football team and Stagg started to build one, succeeding ‘so well that at the end of the season it was able to schedule games with Yale and Har-| He played| vard for the next year. football there these two years, and also organized the college's first hase ball team. This makes Stagg's iciual coaching! record 32 years long, and in contin-| uous service. This year'marks his 30th football season the University of Chicago—a record unique in length and continuity at the same institu- Aneapolis today | of West. Virginia defeated Ohio Uni- | 5 ALL- bie oes ON STATENS | wy | CHICK’ HARLEY AULA AMERICAN HALF BACK FOR THREE YEARS —NOw, WITH DECATUR PROS. he . (By Roy Grove) _, Starting out with five A@American ‘George Halas, ‘ound athlete u Great Lakes f service days, landed two of the most sought for college gridders in the country in the persons of “Chick” Harley and Pete Stinchcont All-American men from Ohio State, the former being selected for the my- thical eleven for three years. (Harley and Stinchcomb are playing in the backfield fot the Staleys and with Dutch Steraman, former Illinois hero, and Kenneth 'Huffine, the old Purdue battering. ram at full, form @ great offensive. Ralph Scott of Wisconsin, selected versity 7 to YI a game between teams | of supposedly equal rank, university | of Detroit defeated West Virginia ; Wesleyan, 5 to 0. While the three defeated teams have not defined their position in the | Middle Western sun this year, with} the possible exception of Wabash, the record made by each one last year is not impressive. Western. Reserve, playing a full scheduie of the small. er Ohio schools, ten games in all won its first and last game. Ohio Univer- sity, one of the three schools of: the Buckeye Commonwealth, defeated Bethany, Marshall, Otterbein and Agron and lost to Cincinnati, Denison j and - Heidelberg. Wabash won from Transylvania, Rose Poly and Kalama-' zoo Normal and lost to Marguette, De! Pauw, Purdue and Chicago. The score of the latter game was 41 to 0. | Of the mid-western college meet- ing Eastern teams this year, Ohio University achieved ‘the largest amount of travel, having already met Syracuse and West Virgina and being scheduled to meet Columbia. Western Reserve was at Ithica Saturday and| is scheduled to meet the Navy. Other ; games to be played this year between ! the Middle West and the East include | the meetings of Chicago and Prince- | ton, Detroit University and Boston | College, Nebraska and Pittsburgh and! the games of Notre Dame against the | Army and Rutgers, Incidenta}ly, the Middle West was well represented in the victory of the | Navy over Princeton, a victory in which Princeton was held with out! making a first down, one of the few | times in the fifty years of play at Old | Nassau that the Tiger has had this! experience. Four of the Navy players; who accomplished this. are ‘from | the Middle West. While this is a year of the most unexpected football upsets, an any- where near form, Western teams! should not be outclassed in more than two of the remaining intersec- tional games, while in at least two instances, the small college teams have shown themselves a good match for the ‘great or near great of the East. TODAY'S GAMES Princeton, N. J., Chicago vs. Prince- ton, © "Kmes, Ia., Kansas vs. Ames. ‘Manhatton, Kan., Missouri vs. Kan- sas Aggies. Normal, Okla,, Washington vs. Okla- homa. » South Bend, Ind., Nebraska vs: Notre Dame. Lansing, Mich., ‘Western State Nor- mal vs. Michigan Aggies. ‘Lexington, Ky,, Transylvania vs. | Centre. ne Lexington, Ky., Georgetown vs. Kentucl tion. INTEREST CENTERS ON EASTERN GAMES, Football, a: half of the United States had an es-| pecial interest to its followers in the middle West, Saturday, October 15. For some reason, a number of East- | ern football teams scheduled games with the teams of small middle west- ern colleges. Friends of Western foot- ball expressed fear at the time the schedules were announced that the re- sults of these games would be used | to prove that the East was much bet- | ter than the West in football. Three such games were played Sat- urday. Cornell University, indulging | in the first field day for that school | for serve 110 to 0. The Army defeated Wabash a little bit worse than the Navy defeated Princeton. University s played i in the nantern | many a day, beat Western Re- | Cincinnati, Kentucky Wesléyan vs. | Cincinnal mene d ton, ‘Appleton, Wis., Beloit vs. Lawrence. ‘eb., Marquette vs. Creigh- former |; ners, vs. North ‘Dakota Agies. vs. North Dakéta. wih THE by Walter Camp for his 1920 All- American, is- playing the same old le position as he did at the Bad- ger, school and Hugh “Blacklock, who played a great game with the Michigan Aggies in the period.when that school was a factor in western football, is on the other side. In the line they have four of their old vets. Halas and Guy Chamber- (lain, the old Nebraska ends, who will be remembered as part of the Halli- gan, Chamberlain and Rutherford trio at the Cornhusker school, when Jumbo Stiehm, now coaching at Indiana, was turning out Missouri Valley title win- Grand Forks, N. D., South Dakota; Rock Island, Ill., Millikin vs. Augus- | j tana, Dallas, Tex., Vanderbilt vs. Texas. Lake Forest, Ill., Monmouth vs. Lake Forest. ‘ Bradley. Fargo, N. D., Concordia vs. Fargo. Peoria, Ill, Illinois College vs. Lawrence, Kan., Haskell vs. Ameri- can. school of Osteopathy, Kansas Normal. . Topeka, Kan,, Baker vs. ‘Washburn Emporia, Kan., Southwestern vs. Cincinnati, Rosepoly vs. St. Xavier. Galesburg, I1l., bard. Beloit, Wis:\Lawrence vs. Beloit. (Naperville, Ill, Kalamazdo vs. / Northwestern College. WILLARD WILL MEET DEMPSEY New York, Oct, 22—Jess Wile lard will attempt to regain the world’s heavyweight champion- ship at Jersey City next July 1, Tex Rickard, promoter, said to- day. Rickard returning from = Chi- cago, where he conierred with Jack Kearns, Dempsey’s manager, sald he had verbal agreement with both Dempsey and Willard _ . for the hout. and added he had sent Willard a contract. A», soon as Willard’s contract is received Rickard expects to sign Dempsey, [HALF TEAM IS HELD INELIGIBLE. Fargo, Oct. 22.—Wii his first string crew lared inelig- ible by faculty ruling, Coach “Litz” Rusness of the Moornead .Teachery, college was yesterday fcrced to cancel his game with Jamestown ‘colleg?, The stiff ruling of the faculty fellow- ed a preliminary announcement. made some time ago, that scholastic stand- ing was to be considerad before foot- ball ability at the Teachers’ college. ae i a RES ’ WITH BOWLERS | aS EES eeeeeeeneeeeeteeemeseeeeete: 2 The Barkers took three straight last night from the Bank of North Da- kota bowlers, taking the first game by 10 pins, and the set by 309. ‘Semple of the Barkers rolled high total, 516, topping Kontos-of the same team by two pins, Donahue, sub. for Hearshy in the second game took high single of the day, 212, while Green- field of the Bank of ‘North Dakota rolled high single and triple for his team. Barkers FIVE ALL- AMERICAN PLAYERS ARE mut the center. ternoon sé3sions before a big game. ‘lated weight of 1 Des Moines vs. Lom-! | letics, said copies: were sent to all | nearly half of) errrerrs THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE STINCHCOMB ALL-AMERICAN LAST YEAR AND “HARLEYS | RUNNING MATE i i i | i ( | | f i DECATUR GRIDDERS i j raul Tarzan Taylor, who helped Ohio} State win the Big Ten honors in 1920, will be at the guard post and Trafton, formerly of Notre Dame, will block ‘Half a dozen other | grid stars of universities and colleges | all over the country make vP the re- serve. list. The Staléys are éonauetad along the} same lines as a _ university eleven, | holding their daily drills and in man. instances having both morning and af: During the 1920 campaign the Sta- leys lost one game out of 13, and that to a team they afterwards defeated | j more decisively. | | GOPHERS MA MAKE | AN APOLOGY FOR. WILLIAMS Chicago, Oct. 22—A le letter apologiz- | ; ing to the members of the “big ten” |conference for the action of its coach, | Dr. H. .L, Williams, in placing numbers |of four digits on the backs of Univer- ity of Minnesota football players was eceived at ‘Northwestern university, | which played the Gophers two weeks i g0, Tho letter, signed: by James | ‘aige, chairman‘wf the students’ sen- jate committee on intercollegiate ath- | i | 1 t members of the conference. “The University of Minnesota sin- cerely regrets the incident and apolo- gizes to the conference for the action by her coach,” the letter concluded. COBB SPIKES PLAYER San Francisco, Oct. 22—Ty Cobb, major-league star and manager of the ; San Francisco club in the winter base- {ball league, spiked Sam Agnew, catch- | |er for the Mission team in the same | league, so severely today that Agnew | was placed under a doctor's care. | | CARP IS COMING | | New. York, Oct. 22—Tex Rickard to- | joey. received a letter fram Georges Carpentier. stating that the French- man would yeturn to America during, the latter part of December to meet } Tommy Gibbons for the light heavy- j weight championship of the world. | ' BANKERS’ ADVICE PROVES WISE Two more young men are glad they took advice from bankers and attended Dakota Business College, Fargo, N. D., ia order to qualify for bankepositi They are Ed Gregersoa, recently made asst. cashier of the Burke Co. State Bank: , and Leonard Miller, | in the auditing department of the ; Bank of North Dakota. / About 220 D. B. C. graduates have been promoted to official po- sitions in banks, x **Follow the Succe$$ful’’ to the right school to get right training. Write P. 1.. Watkins, Pres,, 806 Front-ft., Fargo, N. D, HOSKIN AMATEUR i Reasonable’ Charges—We are known everywhere for? the expert work we do. Mail Orders Given | i i i i i i i KODAK WORK Done For The iIs Elected City Commissioner led. 1,3 | port of many Nonpartisans. jout in Mandan that Heinsohn received |@ great number of votes i who are opposed to paving improve- Sa SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 21 SLO 7AC NET NEN CNG T AE TOT TRC TANGIAG TAG season. prices. at Market Prices. J. B. 210, 5th Street. A AIATAT TN ANNOUNCEMENT Having just recently bought the G. M. Mandigo Grocery Store, at 210, 5th Street, I wish to inform the customers of this store and the public, that I have a complete new stock of Groceries and will also aim to carry a complete line of Fruits and Vegetables which are in Tam going to make every possible effort to have.on hand at all timgs the best goods which the market affords, and at: moderate All orders will be promptly delivered anywhere in the city. I will also buy Butter, Eggs, Vegetables and all kinds of Produce Any portion of your patronage will be greatly eppreciited. . Yours For Service. Successor to G. M. Mandivo. Fresh Cream ae eras to Whip AWAD DWE AWAWIV'A NEN OMNOINGINUING IAG AT ING INC IATTAEI AIAG TRG TING DAG TAG TANG NGI SMITH, Grocer Phone 371 AWA AAA AWWA sg “MANDAN NOTES ROMER WINS IN MANDAN FIGHT | a Over-M. C. Heinsohn | Nels iH. Romer, hotel man, was vic- tor over M. C, ‘Heinsohn, N. P, en- gineer, in a closely contested city elec- tion here yesterday by a majority cf 142 votes. ‘The largest. vote in the history of city elections in Mandan was record- 533. Romer got 830 and. Hein- sohn 688, Heinsohn had been endinied by the central labor union, and received sup- While the vote may be partially considcrcd as an indication of possible. strength to be shown by the league in {the recall election Friday, it is pointed from persons ments for which Romer was pledged. If the vote is any indication of Non- partisan strength in Mandan it shows a decided gain. “Mandan high school's. football teanr jis playing the Dickinson high school Each Cainule bears name £2 Beware ofcounterfe BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © Known all over the Northwest for Quality ® MAIL US YOUR FILMS ® The invisibie with merits NEAT — STRONG — DURABLE Snubs the rebound — Prevents sidesway. MORE VALUABLE- COSTS LESS Agents Wanted. DEFENDER SALES CO. 414 So. 6th St., Minneapolis. may be next Suppose it were! Suppose tHe Fire Prompt Attention. Demon wiped out |team at Mandan this afternoon. Dickinson team will remain over until NAW AWA WATAWOWAN The | Monday and play the state training school team, “ 9 WEEKS | BEFORE CHRISTMAS There’s Christmas Spirit in . Photographs A Christmas Gift should be something of. ’ | - value—— no matter how much or little: it costs: It should be a tangible expression of the affection or friendship of the giver. anhs Photogra is, because of their personal sentiment, make ideal gifts. ‘ a Butier Studio Phone 249 31114 Main Street. Makes a specialty of training young men and young women for the best BOOKKEEPING and STENOGRAPHIC POSITIONS B. B.:C. graduates are 7 expert, and experts are, always in demand. A BY B. C. graduate never : Se had to shop for a posi- , tion. If you aspire to get a good start in LL 2 BUSINESS BANKING let us plan a course for: you, and what we have done for thousands of the most_successful business men and women throughout the United States, we ean ? do for you. ENTER AT ANY TIME No entrance examinations, any deficiency in the common branches can be made up while pursuing the special course. For Particulars write BISMARCK aetdd Net Bismarck ~ G. M. LANGUM, President N. Dak. Safety and Service THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON WHICH WE: ARE BUILDING OUR BUSINESS } indianapolis, Ind., Earlham vs. But- | Kontos. ..160 156 198 . ; Smith . “116 207. 176|{ HOSKINS, Ine. Bismarck, N. D1! your home— your - © CLINETOCK ¢ St. Louis, Mo., DePauw vs, St. Louis. ; Walbert . +144 138 125) = { > i Akron, O., Ohio Northern vs. Akron. | Semple 1169 168. 179 fortune—— tonight! MINNEAPOLIS. MINN mioesten 0., ake Ue gaskets (Hearshy +1460 212 «151 1 ght. Tanville, O., Ohio niversity vs. —_ g Dennison\ Totals. scsda ences Sais 735 881 829 WE CAN USE ANY i khat Hartford | Tiffin, O., Otterbein vs. Heidelberg. Bank of North Dakota QUANTITY |] Remember ee ree | Oberlin, 0., Oberlin vs. Hiram. Sherwin... veTI9 104 121 | Insurance Company not-only makes * Alarm System whi h_ | Gambier, O,, Mt. Union vs. Kenyon. | Erickson 122 121! : ee |] good your lose but offers to cooperate With our new McClintock Burglat Alarm System whic! Oxford, 0., Ohio Wesleyan vs. Mi-|Smith, . 134 133|fand_ will bay top prices for] ; ee we recently installed, our bank is a safe place to keep your lami. Lofthus 139 160 all your |f to belp you prevent bles as well as to d Springfield, O., Western Reserve vs. | Greenfield 173 204 Y H er Baeds ane other valuables oe Wittenberg. Poultry—Veal—Butter—Eges i Call or phone. ren anking busw | Stillwater, Okla., Arkansas vs. Ok- —Produce | \lahoma Aggies. inal To oh MURPHY | Waco, ‘Bavtor vs. Phillip. Now COMPLETE TRAINING | Tags and Prices Upon Request. First National Bank, Bismarck, N. D. alesburg, nox vs. Carlton. New York, Oct. 22—Lew Tendler, ee Y ‘Hamline, Minn., St. Thomas vs.! Philadelphia, and Rocky Kansas, Butf- Teak pee: & Sane “The Man Who Knows GET ASA DEPOSIT BOX NOW Hamline, Minn. falo, finished training for their 15 |{__, Jacob E. er . Irtsurance. Sa ae First (Northfield, Minn., MacAlester vs. St.|round contest in Madison Squaro Gar. | Minneapolis and Duluth, Minn. Bismarck, N. D. Olaf. den last night, Their managers an-