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i ’ down possible. _ enter of field. Kludt went around PAGE SIX MANDAN VICTOR OVER BISMARCK. IN GRID CLASH Takes. Football Game on Local Gridiron by Score of 14 to7 ; ‘ STRAIGHT PLAYS ARE USED Mandan high school today has the! championship of-the gridiron in the| southw rm part of the state safely in her grasp, as a result of a 14 to 7 victory ov f rck High School} in the nd meeting ‘on this season. Mandan has- the right of representing the southwestern section in the semi-; finals for the state championship. The game was‘marked by straight} football. Practically every play was) from. off-tackle or through center.| Few end runs’ were attempted by; either team. Three passes were at- tempted by Bism: one of them; being completed. No forward passes were tried by Mandan. Alfson, Bis- marck plunging fullback, made wond- erful gains through the ‘line. At one time he went off-tackle for twenty; yards making Bismarck’s only touch-, Kludt put up his usual stellar brand of football, mak-! ing the touchdown and a: pretty run around end for fifty yards. Scroggins, playing . defénsive tackle — stopped. numerous plays, holding ‘the offense for small gains. Scott on the other side of the line at tackle, broke} through on several occasions or threw Mandan for losses. Brown recover- ed three fumbles for Bismarck. McDonald, of Mandan, played a snappy game all the way through. He went 30 yar(ls through center for a touchdown and showed real general- ship in the .way he ran his team.| Gray, Mandan's fullback, deserves special credit for his work. He has been sick in bed and got up Thurs- day afternoon in order to play yester- day. His line smashing wasn’t ‘quité up to his standard, but he put up a remarkable game for the condition that he was in. Burdick, right end for the invaders picked up a Bis- marck fumble and ran twenty yards for a touchdown, He als6 intercepted a Bismarck pass, and carried the ball for fifty yards. The Deciding Plays The plays leading up to touch- downs and advantageous plays are as follows: Bismarck received, defending north goal. McDonald kicked to Kludt who was downed in his tracks, Bismarck fumbled. Kludt punted to Gray, who returned ball for 15 yards, Gray made four yards. McDonald couldn't gain. Bismarck’s ball on downs. Kludt went through gruard foy nine yards. Alfson made first down, Bis- marck fumbled. Mandan recovered. Gray \made three yards. McDonald added four, Newgard failed to gain. Gray made first down.. McDonald went through for two yards. Fleck fumbled and Brown recovered. Kludt made three yards. Alfson then made twenty yards off-tackle and made it possible for Kludt to carry the ball across the last white line in three p: . Scroggins kicked goal. Score: Bismarck 7; Mandan 0. “Scroggins kicked to Burdick. Gray lost four yards and on the next play Scott threw McDonald for a seven yard loss. Mandan kicked, Kludt re- turned ball fifteen yards. Bismarck! was unable to gain and punted, but the kick was blocked. Mandan’s ball Reid stopped Newkard and limit- ed gain to two yards. : Second Quarter Mandan lost ball on downs. Bis- marck fumbled but Holloran recover- ed. Bismarck unable to gain and punt- ed. Mandan unable to penetrate Bis- marck’s line. Mandan lost _ ball on downs. After - three ~ tries atthe line. Bismarck kick ed, Burke recovering ball /after Man- dan man touched if. Bismarck ~penalized fifteen yards for holding. Kludt kicked. Gray returned kick ten yards. Mandan made. steady gains through line for two first downs and then McDonald went through line for thirty yards and touchdown. Mc- Donald kicked goal. Score Bismarck 7; Mandan 7 McDonald kicked off to Kludt who returned 10 yards. Bismarck fumbled and Mandan recovered. Gray, Fleck and McDonald each made two yards and Gray made first down. McDonald fumbled and Kludt recovered._Alfson «made three yards, Kludt two. Bis- marck fumbled and Burdick of Man- ,dan_ picked up ball and ran twenty | yards for touchdown. McDonald kicked goal. marck 7; Mandan 14. McDonald © kicked thea gridiron Score Bis- to Halloran in MANY WOMEN ARE. BANK OFFICERS Promotion in Northwestern isn’t'a matter of sex but of @; the kind. oftenest secured ess College, Fargo, W. D. This school has kept track of at least 40 women graduates who have become bank executives. The dat Miss Eleanora Veden, asst. eashier of the Farmers State Bank of Deer Creek. very Fargo bank and over 685 others employ D. 3. C. graduates. Every course is practical, interest- ing, thorough. “Follow the gucce$$ful.”? Enroll now. Write F. L. Warkins, Pres. 806 Front St,, Fargo, N. D. \ j homes. CAN ! ) Ne SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 221 UPPER LEFT, BENTZ, CENTER; RIGHT, CAPTAIN SNELL, FULLBACK. : LOWER “LEFT, COACH HUGO BEZDEK, AND TINY McMAHON, THE SIX-F. TEAM. BY ROY GROVE. ” Can the west again put the damper on the east in collegiate foothall as they did last year when California kicked Ghio State from the Sunkist plant back to the’ land of the buck- eyes?. Coach Bezdek’s hand of Penn State warricrs will furnish the answer on Dec. 8, when they journey to Seattte to play Washington universty, 1 team that/under Enoch Bagshaw is coming rapidly to the front Gn the coast. All the Pacific coast teams are stronger this season than they were last, and Pacific coast confeyence games are no exhibition matches. Peni Primed. But Bezdek’s men will be primed for the Bagshaw post-season lyuttle by the experience of a season, the schedule end for six yards then whistle blew for half, Second Half Both teams started «with line-up. Scroggins kicked _ off to Newgard: Gray’ stopped by Muir. Time out for Gray. Mandan penalized five yards for offside. McDonald punt- ed to Klpdt. Bismarck completed the only forward pass of the game. Hal- loran to Kludt. Neither Mandan nor Bismarck could) make any sub- stantial gains. ,Both teams kicked freely. Alfson made seven yards on a delayed cross-buck. A little later Kludt made fifty yards around end. Alfson made five yards through tackle, Burdick. intercepted a Bsimarck pass and ran fifty yards before. he -was “Stopped. New- gard made four yards. McDonald failed to gain twice. McDonald tried a drop kick that went too low and wide. Both teams would make one first down and then he held. Me. Donald tried another drop kick. Ball went too low. Bismarck’s ball on 20 yard line. Bismarck gradually march- ed down ‘the field to Mandan’s forty yard line. Bismarck’s pass was 4n- complete and Mandan was penalized when McDonald interfered with a man catching pass. Mandan recover- ed the ball on a fumble and then final whistle blew. Line up: Burke -R. EL). Burdick Reid R, T. Porter Rhud . -R. G. Renden Muir Cc. . Williams Hasse -L. G. .. Furness Scott T. Skjod Brown LE... . Nelson Halloran, Capt Q. McDonald Scroggins «oR. oH. . Fleck Kludt .. » He. ..Newgard Alfson . F, .4.--Gray, Capt ‘Substitutions: Bismarck — Hamil- ton for Reid, Middaugh for Hassel. Mandan—Farr for Porter, Phenning for Nelson. Johnson for Fleck. Touchdowns — Kludt ; McDonald, Burdick. Goal after - touchdown— Scroggins, McDonald 2. Referee—Richards of North Dako- ta. Umpire—Boise, Fargo. Head Linesman — Ellison, Dakota. ~ North TRY THIS FOR INDIGESTION Foley Cathartic Tablets are just the thing for constipation. Their ac- tion is wholesome and thoroughtly cleansing without grining, nausea or inconvenience. They banish head- ache, billiousness, bloating, gas, bad breath, coated tongue and other symptoms of disordered digestion. Mrs. H. J. Marchard, 36 Lawrence St., Salem, Mass., writes: “I used Foley Cathartic Tablets for constipation with good results, I keep them in’ the house.” eee LEARN of the Vale of Paradise--- where dreams come true. This won- der city is having a magic growth, and a million dollars’ in municipal im- provements are authorized for vie year. Every kind of business operfing here. We have seventeen miles of protected water front, with gorgeous ly beautiful home sites. Wonderful Wonderfal velvety lawns. Wonderful flowers in semi-tropical profusion, Fishing supreme. ~ Every day you can catch the 9ig fellows un- til your hack aches and your hands Dlister. Paradise for motor boats, with hundreds of miles of protected. water- ways with wonder spots to visit. Fin- est motoring roads in the south. Bathing in bay and,guif wonderful. Healthiest city in America, with no busin for doctors. Greatest golf course in: Amer under construction. Coolest place in America in summer, delightful in winter. You may own a beautiful home here, with a perpetual ‘income, at practically no investshent. Grasp the opportunity of a lifetme Address THE MAYOR, Valparaiso, Fila. Adv, same of which calls for games with Le- high, Harvard, Georgia Tech, Navy, Carnegie Tech and Pitt, all formidable re only three of the old varsity of |: season k with Penn State. Rentz, at enter, Gaarterback Killinger and Captain George Spell, full, All three are playing. their final year. Two freshmen of last fall are in the vars line-up, Madera at left tackle, and Cornwah at right half. Cornwall starred with the Freshies last year and his place kicking is scoring for Penn crew this son. He registered five perfect boots over the bar in the game with North Carolina, Redinger at left half and McCollum left end, were both left out of the HOW DO YOU SAY IT? By C. N. LURIE Common Errors in English and How to Avoid Them “DIFFER WITH,” “DIFFER FROM.” E TWEEN, the proper use of the term “diff@ from” and the proper clear distinction, although it is for- gotten frequently, even by some writers use of words, For a person to differ from another, he or it must be unlike, in appearance, in manner, or in some other character- means to disagree with him in opin- ion or belief. It follows, therefore, another, it cannot differ with another, since only thinking beings can have example, “I differ from Jchn in stat- ure, but I differ with him iu our views B — use of “differ with” there is a and speakers who are careful in the or for a thing to differ from another, istic, while to differ with a person that, while. a thing may differ from a difference in belief or opinion, For on the present national policy,” A LINE 0’ CHEER By John Kendrick Bangs, A HELPFUL ENEMY. HE howling welf outside the door Gets really little credit for The virtues’ that in him le Not clearly seen by human eye; How teldom does the thought oc- cur 1 That he’s a eet efficient spur * ‘To urge us on from present stress To things of ultimate success, And tNat his riotous halooing Results oft-times in Something Doing! YY Copyright. Statistics of school children in the United. States show those of the 'OOT SEVEN-INCH TACKLE, OF THE’ PENN STATE i af game on account: gf Injuries. are playing*theirlast' year. Two Heavies: Bedenk, right/gdira' dnd Baer, Jeft guard, have béth played before, Baer on the freshman team in 1919, and Bedenk substituting for two years. Jay McMahon, the giant right tackle, weighs 210 pounds and stands six feet seven inches. He is ‘a heavyweight wrestler and subbed last seasen. Along with McMahon Pe™n State has a 200-pounder in Baer. The lightest ‘man and greatest ground gainer is Killinger, who weighs 160 pounds. The team average.around 180 pounds. All the men are close to six footers, Sate aC OTT COOe Childless marriages, figured in more than 40 per cent to. the’ matrimonial suits in Great Britain.in 1919. They Disarmament the Ruins Anglo-Saxon _race are taller and weigh more than others. _ON THE | OBER HAND | 5 (By Grove) * -“Tex Rickard’ ie giving us a lot of new faces:at the Garden this winter,” says a line— ‘3 x Take Bob Martin's face for instance after he fit Fay Keiser. “It must be pretty goft,” writes B. R. B., “tor these sportsmen who don’t have anything:.but,.sport to: think about all-day long.” |. But is it?. Are there any business men who are busier and more. busi- négs like than Jack DempSey, Alexa Stiring, Ty Cobb, Babe) Ruth, Molla Bjusdstedt, Jim: \Barnes—and others 400, numerous to, mention, ‘It may look like play for those who get only a smacking of the great out- doors\ now and then, but tabse who make it a business probably. would call your job recreation, To ‘these who make sport a busi- ness, play is work. They spend days of worry and study, and are always at a high nervous tension. That is ox- pected of them. ' Dempsey, ‘Barnes, Ruth, Ty and the rest seldom smile when ‘‘on' the job.” Their minds arej,centered on their work. They have to:.deliver—and of- ten thet requires as much’or-more ef- fort than’ the operation, ef a big ‘susi- ness, * ME SEE TS ; EPITAPH Here lies the body’ 6f:Peter: McKnight, ‘Who. drank some: hore’ brew'"fore he 7; went.to a fightinj.. ines, iHe kicked on the’ winner, a hdmoe pug- : jlist, ‘ & Seen i And cashed in his checks’ at the end tt ft of a fist: ue ay | And now cores: thé season -whea baseball’s -stars;go: onithe; stage. to show audiences’ whatsgeod base!) players they are: +.) oe \ Five members of the Martins Ferry (O.) High: team-break their noses in one night of practice,.seys.neWsyiten. For .one night of: practice, we'd say that’s a good record. 6 Lien ‘With football only a few weeks old, we hear wails and whimpers of coaches at ‘Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Ohio State and other schools, bemoan- ing the fact that they'll have to re- vamp the team. The lines are weak, tho ends aren't fast enough, the for- ward pass must be perfected, and the back field in general is the bunk. But outta all this sadness and death comes a single light— “The tezm is coming along nicely,” says Coach Dobie of Cornell. down,” declares the Tacoma the New. York Evening Post, and algo a reduction in railroad wages.” To quote further: embarrassment the President has had was which of the two should come first. It would seem to be likely that he will take advantage of the present situation to bring about the two simultaneously.” ; This idea of simultaneous reduction in rates and wages is also advanced by two Texas papers. “The present rates of transportation are ruinous: to: productive industry and business; they must be substantially reduced, and a reduction of wages: must come simultaneously,” and in the Dallas. Journal we read“there is no good reason why the reductions should not be simultaneous, nor is there any good reason: why the removal of these humps ‘in our etonomic structure’ should be postponed.” To get an accurate reflex of the trend of public opinion upon the controversy between the rail- ‘\ yoad operators and the employees, you’ should read’ the leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, October 29th, which’ presents all'sides of the question. : ‘ In’ honor of General Foch’s arrival within. the next few days, the cover of THE DIGEST this week, is a reproduction in colors of a splendid painting of the General, made from life, in Paris, by the American artist, JosephCummings' Chase: Adiitional features of much interest in: this n Hi goes into a prize fight ‘ouse to see a prize fight fit, Ledger. By NEA Service. ‘ Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 24.--In the fore- ground: tact, harmony and leadership. In the background: temper, and alenty of it. z z That is a pen snapshot of William E. Crow, new’ United States senator from Pennsylvania, who succeeds ¢he late Philander C Knox. Senator Crow is 51 years old and has mixed in Pennsylvania state politics for the past 25 years, holding positions all the way from assistant district at- torney of Fayette county to state sen- ator and chairman of tie Republican state committee. Anybody who is “up” on Pennsyl-; vania politics will tell you that he is! a good “mixer,” in the political sense. His training has been that of a machine politician. He is given to quiet work and. delighis in pouring oil on troubled waters—except in a Pinch. One example of a “pinch”: At the national convention in Chi- cago last year, Senator Crow's wrath against Joseph R. Grundy, head of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Associa- tion, boiled over. He made a sensa- tional speech in a caucus of the Penn- sylvania delegation, with Grundy as his target. The feeling then in evidence w1s carried later into the Pennsylvania legislature, reaching a climax in th? -ousting of Charles F. Spangler, friend of Grundy, from the speakership of the House of Representatives. Crow {s:“long” on organization. As, state chairman, he has always fought MEET THE NEW SENATOR me FROM PENNSYLVANIA zi ‘ SENATOR W. E. CROW for the plans and demands of county organizations. The senator was born in Fayette county in 1870, attended public schools and Waynesburg coilege, and. had three years of newspaper work, befcre he was admitted to the bar in 1895. A Year later he was assistant district attorney and from then cn rose rap- idly to the state senatorship. ‘Hit was a. bloomin,’ bloody thing, be- ‘ fore’’twas hover wit.’ ‘e ‘it ‘im wit* the bucket at every oth: er poke, Then crownéd ‘im wit’ the corner post —this bloomin,’ bloody bloke.’ The referee, ’e stood-thore, lawghing fit to die, And I turned to the laddy beside me, and hi‘says to ’im, says hi: “Why don’t they stop the battle, me good mon, 'tis’a'fright?” “G'wan, you're otta bounds,” “this ’ere’s a’ chanipeen fight. 2. “The bag limit for’a cucik hunter,” says Bard, director of conse:vation of (Michigan) ‘is, 25 in’one day, but a hunter may have ‘im his posscssion 50 at‘ one time.” Li’l optimist. anda has’ lost $60,009 000 - an- nually. through failure to segregate platinum from other metals foand-in northern: Ontario. ‘ “It is no longer a matter for dispute, but a plain fact that railroad rates and railroad wages are both abnormally high,” avers the Nashville Banner. Railroad wages, the same paper continues, “are abnormal with either pre-war wages or the present cost of living as a standard.” “Freight rates must come down if the country is to ge ahead, and'wages must come down to permit rates to come President Harding, according to Washington correspondence in -_ “ig believed to hold that there should be both a reduction in freight rates “The two constitute a cycle, and the only { A FINE COLORED MAP SHOWING DENSITY OF POPULATION Of the United States Per Square Mile:by Counties and States, Based Upon the Latest Census rf Not to Be Overdone ‘The Right to Criticize Chicago — On the Job to Make More Jobs Silesian Riches Given to Poland German Marks and American “Gamblers” ue , Franco-German Team Work Amid Famine Testing Lenine, . The Greek-Turk Tug-of-War Democratic Rumblings in Japan Geography of China’s Politics \ Is the Panama Canal Too Small? Dangers of Some Common Things ‘Getting Ready for Next Flood in | — ‘Pueblo Selling‘ Land By Means of Air Views America’s Love for Dante Half-Price for Half-Length Art The Procession to the Vatican , The Church’s Return to Drama Claptrap in’ the Pulpit Natiorial American Speech Week Topics of the Day Many Striking Illustrations, Including Humorous: Cartoons October 29th Number on Sale. Today News-dealers 10 Cents—$4.00 a Year. Digest _FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary); NEWYORK = - umber of THE DIGEST are:= ORMENTING, agonizing rheu- matic aches are quickly relieved by-Sloan’s Liniment. Apply it freely and enjoy a comforting sense of warmth. 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