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i j ] PAGE SIX - vi THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE FRIDAY; OCTOBER 28, 1921 BADGERS TAKE. ON MINNESOTA - AT HOMECOMING Wisconsin Expects Gophers To Prove a Formidable Foe in Saturday’s Grid Game I[LINOIS AND MICHIGAN, (Medison, Wis., Oct. 28—Wisconsin! expects its eleven to be as any that ever fought 1 dinal when it meets Minnciote here tomorrow in the annual Badger Home: coming game. A heavy schedule has put the Badgers in condition to meet their old s on a footing regarded here as spccially favorable to victory. The fact that the Minnesota team is! aly in trim to put up a stiff fight) nst its traditional Wisconsin ath- | 2tic enemies, lends particular inter-| est to an encounter which wil] have a| direct bearing on the Badger’s cham- | pionship hopes. H With Arnoid Oss out of the game,} indications are that the spectacular field work will be shown by the Bad- ger~ backs, ‘Elliott and Williams, whose powerful offensive playing has been 2 feature of Wisconsin’s game. These men with Captain Sundt at fullback, Gibson at quarterback and Tebell and Gould at ends, make up: the powerful Badger offensive ma-/ chin the Gopher line that assurance of a Badger victory depends. Ms mets Expects Passing Game | There is little doubt that Wiscon- | sin will turn to the passing game in the play, opening up with the! ‘ing work that Coach Richards has concenirated on throughout the sea-| The Badgers were forced 10 de-| yelop the pass because of a light line; that makes successful plunges largely! out of the question against Minne-| sota’s beefy forward wall. i ‘Since early in the season Coach Richards has had the Badgers behind | closed doors. ‘He has had a strong, group of second string men to pit} against his regulars with opposition | It is on their ability to get by (capital in thee Unite, |CYCLING 65,000 MILES, HANDCUFFED IS JOB CUT OUT FOR HIMSELF TONEY PIZZO HAS 1 | | Sailer Tony Pizzo tal his bicy Below, Pizzo handculfed to his wheel and ready to hie 47 state capitals, Pt ie By. N..E. A. Service. ‘Denver, Oct. To every state d States, handcut- fed to a bicyclet That is tne job Sailor Tony Pizzo, sau of Denver, has cut out for him- eel!. ’ It is a 65,600-mile trip and will take j him two years to complete—it. bathe, ‘shave himself, dress and un- dress without the aid of valet. He also will make all the repairs necessary for his bicycle. Governor Oliver H. Shoup slipped Pizz’s wrists into the handcuff loops in front of the Colorado state capitol and stood by while the locks were soldered fast. “ (He left Denver on Oct. 5, heading south, Austin, Tex., will be his first turns out to look me over. er. Iam, in a way. But my bicycle is; his white brother. in-the state in oul- my only jai 1 Levause wher During this time he will eat, sleep |\ legs toughened up to the steady rid-! reported for every. hyndred women ing.” i ‘ “ Havana for a two-week vacation some time this winter. exhibition in Cuba. cuffed to a wheel from Los Angeles to New York. e 2 "INDIANS SHOWS a Bd 1 ar Bismarck, N. D., Oct. 28 i Dut as certainly ag the great Missouri jvoll. the silt of its waters. toward the sea, North Dakota ibosing. its, In- ‘an population. At the beginning 9! | entury almgst..seven, ,thousan4! gine: were within the .contines state. Ten years.ago the fig- ood at 6,486;.and -in. the. days! then 232 Indiang have moved, to jother. pars .or qrifted ‘to. the. happy, | hunting .grounds_of ,their, ,race, Now, | for the first time gince statistics have heen kept cf North:Dakota populaticn, the Indians nurhber less than one per cent of the total population, the 6,254 ; members of the race being just a lit- | He short. of one per cent of the 646,- |.872 population accorded the state by {the figures of the 1920 census. | Four counties ef the state claim a | large percentage of the Indians as jtesidents. Rolette county has 2,466 Sioux, 1,303; Benson, 812, and Mc- Lean, 660. Nine counties have from | twenty-nine to 245 each, and eighty | Indians live in the state at iarge. ve | only counties in which they form any | considerable portion of the popula- tion is Sioux with /39.4° per cent and j Rolette with 24.5 percent. The aver- age Indian population’ of the state is hest expressed by. standing ninety-nine ‘whites in a/row’and-completing the ‘hundred with one Indian. Fux the first timealso in. this cen- rns Ot ; : tury, according to’ the 1920 census, At first they take me for a prison-| the Indian chief takes his place with “When I ride into.a town everybody itgeen T na be chums numbering the women of his race. In My ae prcniinal | both the previqus numberings of ,this It is fascinating, once I get MY' century, but. 98 “Indian. males were i | This time the rulers of the wigwam, Florida to; present and prospective, number 103 to each hundred of the gentler sex. That each future chief will have his mate, however, is shown by. the fact In 1919 he made a similar trip hand-| that of the Indian children between ten and twenty: years of age, 697 are beys-and 707 are girls. The disparity Four} in sex numbers is jn other ages. Pizzo will ship from He'll do stationdry,, ing, both on the boat and} He had many experiences. times he was run down by motor cars.| Statistics of the, children of the Once his collar-bone was broken. At) tribes, fail-to give a very definite in- another time both jof/ his arms were! dication of the future numfers of the Coach Richards in his recoré-as coach!ing the winter months and ride north | fractured. 2 ;tace. More than half of the Indians here has had particular success injagain next summer. In 1920 he made the return trip] of the state are classed as being un- preaking up the shift play that in the; “It ain't so bad,” says Pizzo, “as it|from New York to Los Angeles under | der twenty years of age. In contrast | and comparison, just half of the’ white plays. {capital stop. The Minnesota shift has been con-} According to Pizzo’s schedgle, he centrated on during the past week. | will. vi the southern capitals dur- past made the Gophers famous. It is | sounds.” similar conditions. believed that Wisconsin linemen will| be prepared for any style of offense | that Minnesota may develop from| their shifty play. | Traditional Rivalry A traditional rivalry always lends’ special interest to the annual Wis- consin-Minnesota game, which is rep- resented by Homecoming for Badger| graduates whenever the contest is! staged on home grounds. i ‘Karly season defeat for Minnesota | hag not drawn away belief here that | the Northmen will be easy prey for | Wisconsin. The fact that their strong, team last year was only able to come; off with the victory end of a 3 to 0} score against the comparatively weak Gophers leads the students and team here to look for an especially hard Enid, Okla., Texas Christian vs. Phillips. St. Louis, Mo., Lombard vs. St. Louis, St. Paul, Minn, St. Thomas vs. Carleton. St. Peter, Minn., Hamline ys: Gus- tavus Adolphus. St. Paul, Minn., Concordia vs. Mac- Alester. Topeka, Kan., Fairmount vs. Wash- burn. Monmouth, Ill, Augustana vs. Mon- mouth. Watertown, S. D., South Dakota Ag- gies vs. Yankton. » Decatur, Ill., ‘Rolla School of Mines vs, Millikin. fought contest. Austin, Tex., Rice Institute vs. ——. Texas.» ILLINOIS TEAM CHANGEO Naperville, Il], ‘hake [Forest vs. Urbana, Ill, Oct. 28—The experi-| mental stage of Illinois’ 1921 football squed is over. Having switched , his | men around into almost every conceiv- able combination, Coach Zuppke this} week settle: down to a more or less! stvble formation and started the grind) which will whet Illini appetites for Michigan next Saturday. i The two defeats at the hands of) Jowa and ‘Wisconsin have been thrust behind them, and the Orange and Blue | squad is intent on fighting desper-| ately and holding the Wolverines to a close score. Michigan’s defeat by Ohio Stat was one of the surprises last Satur-| day Whatever the situation may be in} the “Big Ten,” it is certain that Min- | ois is pa ; through a period of re-) construction similar to the one ,Chi-| ‘o had last year, and suffering de- feats in the same manner, Without players in good physical condition, anything can be expected, but by Sat-| urday the Illini_eleven expects to be} more polished. Zuppké has had three | dig games in which to size up his | rookies and he has tried them all in| most of the positions on the team, try- | ing to find where they belong in ore | der to get the best results. k | Michigan will be confronted with al different attack than that which was | tried against the Badgers last Satur- day and it is expected that the game | will be harder fought ‘and closer in| score and play. Te ("Saturday Games | oe | | | ‘Urbana, Ill, Michigan vs. Mlinois. | (Madison, Wis. Minnesota vs. wile, | consin. ‘Lafayette, Ind., Iowa vs. Purdue. i Indianapolis, Ind., Notre Dame vs. | | i | | ' i Indiana. | Chicago, Colorado Aggies vs. Chi- cago. Lawrence, Kan., Kansas. vs. Kansas | Aggies. Columbia, Mo., Drake vs. Missouri. Lincoln, Neb., Oklahoma vs. Ne-~ braske.. Aine St. Louis, Ames vs. Washington. ‘Milwaukec, Wis., Michigan Aggies vs. Marquette. A Grinnell, Ia., Coe vs. Grinnell. ‘Cambridge, Mass., Center vs. Har- | vard. | ‘Lexington, Ky., Georgetown vs. Ken- tucky. | Greencastle, Ind. Georgetown vs. | DePauw. | Ripon, Wis., Carroll vs. Ripon. Appleton, W: Northwestern Col- lege vs. Lawrence. Akron, O., Mt. Union vs. Akron. Tiffin, O., Case vs. Heidelberg. ‘Cincinnati, O., Wittenberg, vs. Cin- cinnati. Dayton, 0., Miami vs. Dennison. Hiram, O., Ohio Northern vs. Hi- ram. Westerville, O., Otterbein vs. Ken- yon. Athens, O., Baldwin-Wallace vs. Ohio. Delaware, 0., Oberlin vs. Ohio Wes- leyan. Cleveland, O., Western Reserve vs. ‘Wooster. 3 Kansas City, Haskell vs. Tulsa. ‘North Western Colleze. ‘Grand Forks, N. D., North Dakota Aggies vs. North Dakota. Fargo, N, D., Jamestown vs. Fargo. ‘Normal, Ill, Bradley vs. Illinois State Normal. Cincinnati, Creighton vs. St. Xa- vier. . ‘Kalamazoo, Mich... Earlham — vs.! Western State Normal. EDGE FOR GAME The Bismarck and Mandar nigh school football teams both were said to be in*good shape just before their clash on the local gridiron this after- noon. The ground had dried fast un- der the rays of the marning sun, and despite the three-day drizzling rain it was expected that a fairly fast game would be possible. A Service. New Brunswick, N. J: | George Sanford, the former Y. | is responsible for Rutgers’ rise in the | football world. He has coached at | Rutgers for eight seasons and lasi ‘year, for lack of material, had a poor | team. | Ina certain sense, the gridders he jhad last year were not meant to win games; it was a sort of a farming jout for this year’s schedule. This | year he has been blessed with a wealth jot good ones and added to the jane enes of last year it has given ~ “DUTCH” HOUSER Although ‘‘Putch” Houser, of INepoleon, former B arck high hool athlete,.has suffered at times this year from a bad ‘leg he had won a wide reputation as leader of the University of North Dakota football team. His ,work was especially good in the Uni- versity of South Dakota game. “Dutch’ was elected captain of the lickertail team and is playjng his last year of college football. RA i t COACH SANFORD AND HIS “CROW’S NEST” the Scarlet an eleven g those of golden da: powerful as nally knédwn inany new and glever innovation i son he introduced a tov de for directing afterncon scrimmage. it is built on wheels and can be pulled along the sidelines, so that the coach, standing on the platform of the tower, com- mands a full yiew of the team as a whole and can get a-definite idea of: the success of any formation. The tower is made of wood. It is 16 feet high and,has been properly dubbed the “crow’s nest.” population of the state is numbered in the same ages. The Indian numbers, however, have not been ch\nged by immigration as had the wuite, ant the new members of the Indian race in the state must be of the wigwam born. The enumerators of 1920 found 898 children under five years of age, 815. between five and niné years, 802 between ten and fourteen, and 602 be- tween tifteen and nineteen. Death statistics of the difference age | Broups for the children of the state is lacking, but, making. use of the sta- tistics for the coGntry at large, it would seem impossible for the In- dians of the state to {lose the usual percentage of youths, and also to make up for the loss by death of the older, poisons, especially the twenty |per cent of the Indians of the state who are over forty-five years’ of age. Apparently the Indians, who averaged a loss of twenty-three for each year of the last decade, is due to watch, for a few years more at least, a dwindling race of Redmen,’in this, once a state where his ancesters were supreme. 64 BILLION IS NATION'S INCOME New York, Oct. 28—An analysis of the ‘American dollar, its purchasing power and relation to production and taxes, is afforded in the finding of the National Bureau.of Economic Re- search, made public here today in ad- vance of the formal publication of the results of a year’s study of “In- comg, In the United States.” ‘ter announcing that the total na- tional income of the United States in 1918 was $61,000,000,000, as compared with $34,400,000,0000 in 1913, the study shows how income is distribut- ‘ed, the shares received by capital and i jabor, including the farmer, income tax discrepancies, the/contribution of | housewives, and offers a comparison of income in the United States with the national.and per capita incomes |.in the United Kingdom, Germany and Australia. . The complete. findings will be published early in November. Although 1918 showed a great in- crease indollars it did not represent a like increase in production, most of it being due to the rise in prices, for the dollar of 1918 and 1919, accord- ing to the report, was a much less ef- ficient dollar than that of 1913. The | actual total of commodities produced increased ‘therefore very little if at all and a large part was war materials and not of a kind really. benefitting | consumers. Individual incomes estimated:on a per capita basis, rose from $340 in 1910 and $354 in 1913 to $586 in 1918 but, the report says, $586'in 1918 was equal to only $372 in terms of, the purchasing. power of five years ‘be- 4 fore. The study, said to be the most | exhaustive ever made of the income question ‘in the United States, was conducted by Wesley Clair Mitchell, Willford: I. King, Frederick R. Ma- caulay and. Oswald W. Knauth, under the auspices of a board of 19 directors, including men prominent in business, education, labor, agriculture, econom- ies, -practical. statistics and repre- senting divergent points of view. Henry Stewart, 74-year-old walker of Los Angeles, ‘has’ made 11 trans- continental trips afoot. a KLEIN The old: reliable shop for dry clean- ing, pressing, repairing, remodel- ing, relining, dyeing and tailoring. Tailor made suits at ready made prices. POPULATIONOF (WOMEN'S Ho | Tailor and Cleaner. Phone 770 the English Women’s Hock ‘the bloomin’ K. E.,Lidderdale, speediest: star of the stick with the English Field Hockey, Huh, uh—not for a minute. member ens sauntered over.the foam last sum- mer and got their trimmin’s at ’ockey on the island. star of team, in action, and Mrs. M. §."@lay, g¢al ten- der, blocking the ball. 5 BY ROY GROVE. “You jolly weil know. we can ply gayhme,” says Miss Left, Miss K. E. Lidderd: players who have just arrived in Hamerica to ply the hair ribbons off’n our lassies. And nobody’s disputing her word. We rec- how our aid- to well »That’s wot. But they area sturdy crew, these English girls, and are the pick of the best players and clubs in all of Eng- land. They all possess that masculine type of slashing athletics so familiar to the British woman. They have the CKEY TEAM IN. U. 8. SEEKING WORLD ‘TITLE durance, go-get’m and accuracy. There are thirteen of them in num- ber. Lhe team of eleven members, an official ump from the English Hockcy club, and the team captain, Miss C. J, Gaskell... Strange to say, Miss Gaskell never gets into the game—that is into play —hecause it isn’t the custom of the Isles. She pulls a John McGraw and dirgcts the movement of the bali from the pine boards.on side lines. She led the team that went to Aus- tralia and came back with all the honors.that were possibie to grab in this particular branch of sport. Should..the Britishers win the ma- jority of their games here, they will be entitled to the monicker of World Champions in view of the fact that they have mastered all possible op- ponents of the British Empire. a LEFT EARFUL He swung a wicked kicking toc, nd said, “I kick a point.’ And then instead, he slipped andj}j kicked, 'His hip bone out of joint. RIGHT EARFUL ‘His optic had a bandage on, But, ’twas not from a-fall, The fullback kicked the pigskin, Pussyfoot Johnson Enters India in Drive on Booze Delhi, India, Oct. 28. (By the As- ‘sociated Press.)—William B. “(Pussy- foot”) Johnson, the Ameriéan anti- saloon crusader who lost an eye in trying to dry up the British Island is getting another kind of a reception in India. Moslem and Hindu, thousands of them in the past two weeks, have rendered Johnson honors . rarely shown to.any person short of royal- ty. Indian journalists describe the American’s entry into this ancient capital somewhat as Thomas Moore in ‘Lalla Rookh” pictures ‘the -bril- liant and triumphant arrival of. the Sultan of Bucharia to claim the heart and hand of Aurungzebe. Mr. Johnson -has been lavishly en- tertained by the Thakor Sahib of Limbri and other ruling princes and has been the recipient of numerous gifts. These -include a case of jewels and a gold watch, containing one Prince's photograph and his en- graved coat-of-arms inlaid in yegal purple engmel, At Jaipur, a aalbea? tion of leading citizens came to the train. at 2.o’clock in the morning and begged Johnson's secretary to per- mit then enter his car and gaze at the. sleeping foe of Robin. Hops and ~ John Barleycorn. The request was grantéd and “Pussfoot” did not know of the affair until breakfast. The night before, at 11:30 o’¢lock Johnson's train pulled into Ajmer. About 500 natives were at the station and yelled for a speech. The crusad- er was awakened and as the stop was only for a few minutes he didn’t have time to dress.. Whereupon the Ameri- can appeared on the platform in slip- pers and pajamas and gave the crowd a vehement if brief-broadside agdinst the drink evil. Women’s Patriotic Society of Ja- pan is probably the largest organ- ization of its kind in the world. THE TWIN CITY BARBER COLLEGE is now occupying its enlarged quar- ters. Our complete up-to-date equipment and advanced methods of instruction insure your learning trade in shortest possible time. Very good patronage 'to practice on. Fall term now open. Reason- able tuition. For complete infor- mation and FREE illustrated cata- log write : JWIN CITY BARBER COLLEGE 204 Hennepin Ave. < prowess that would bespeak any of Americas average male athletes—en- while, His eye was on the ball. Minneapolis, Mii ? and Shadows_~ Mr. A. P. Johnson, Publisher of the News, Grand Rapids, Michigan, in his issue of Oct 13 prints the following : PRODUCTIVE ADVERTISING \ There are three “Bewares" in the primer of every editor, reporter and aspiring newspaper sworker, Where they came from we don't know and we know less of what they mean to convey. They are “Beware of religion; beware of saying anything good about big corporations: beware of mentioning advertisers except when they pay for it.” Readers of this newspaper know where it stands on religion and corporations. We are for them when they.do more gaod than harm. We oppose them when they oppose human progress and retard human happiness. This is about beth. corporation and an adver- tiser—a big advertiser,the Standard Oil Company. A great change has come over the Standard Oil Company in recent years. It is no longer afraidof its ownshadow. It is no longer afraid to tell who owns it, what its,business methods are, what its Products are apd what it hopes todo. The story is being told In friendly and unfriendly papers without fear or:favor, embarrassment of com- this method of publicity. But we are not thinking of the dollars just now. ‘We are thinking of how much further we would have progressed in the solution of many of our economic and industrial difficulties ifmore light had been thrown upon the inner workings of the offensives and defensives in such disputes as involve the public at large. The series of advertisements which have been and are being published by the Standard Oil Com- pany have become economic arguments which carry a message. We are not so pleased with them but what we realize that they put the company's best foot forward. To what extent they have sold gasoline is a matter for their advertising depart- ment to decide, but it is certain that they have sold to the publica large measure of good will which the Standard Oil Company did not possess Rot so very long ago. Having committed this breach of saying some- thing good about an advertiser, we will now shut our eyes_and,wait for the catastrophe that is trying to do. punction in paid advertising space. bound .to occur according to the law of prim- Of course a pewspaper Would naturallyagreeto eval casein: f i aE \ HE above editorial is refreshing to those who are responsible for the policies of the - Standard Oil Company (ndeasa). When in October, 1918, the present management © of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) took charge \ of the business, one of the first things it decided was that the public should be given intimate infor- mation regarding the Company and ‘its affairs. Those responsible for the management knew that the policies that had animated this organization for many years were policies which benefitted stock- holders, employes and the public, and that these policies could not but meet the approval of the people generally, for they were on fai dealing, justice and equity. The result of this decision: was the authorization of a wide- spread publicity campaign, which has been carried on for about three years, and the proof of its effectiveness is to be seen not . only in the not infrequent mention being made by the news- pers of the country in editorials such as the one written by Mr.. Johnson, quoted above, but in the better under- standing on the part of the public of what the Company is 4 \ s The basic principle upon which the business of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is built is to provide the individual, wherever he may live in the-11 states served by this Com- pany, with such products of petroleum as he may need, and to get them to him when he wants them and at a price which is fair alike to the stockholders, the public and the competitor. Standard Oil Company <— reer Indiana) sie shasa pecsues Ave. Chicago, Ill.