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PAGE TWO Development of Inter Collegiate Association of Amateur Ath- letes is Traced WAR CHANGED MATTERS If the present trip of Field H. Yost, Director of athletics at the University | meet | v J of Michigan, to the East results in an | Winning athletes from the meets of , y invitation to the Inter Collegiate As- ;the many different conferences are! eV ITATION OF YOST T0 EASTERN _- DIRECTORS TOSEND ATHLETES T0 FERRY FIELD IS FORWARD STEP: RR eee ‘the Associa 'giate ¢ontests was from the Eastern schools. | pects are the meet will-be held at Ch: {cago on a date ‘middle of June. Eastern meet last 5 ised to make the eet their objective this .year. | although’ the general proposition of tion’ fathering intercolle- | bitterly opposed | The pros- | approximating the | The Southern, teams | have promised to be presefit and the, | California teams who contested in the | ar have prom- ational Collegiate The , sociation of Amateur Althletes of Am- | the ones especially desired, so it may erica to hold its annual games at Fer- | be in fact a meeting of the’ collegiate ry Field at the University of Michigan and the invitation is accepted, it will add another chapter in a rapidly de- veloping situation in the collegiate r Jatioas of the country, a series of conditions revealed at that time. ° rector Yost was considering the issu- ; champions. {ance, which would Yost and his possible invitation to the ICAAAA and its possible accept- | bring all eastern {athletes who competed in their annu-} vations which have grown up since jal\classic to Ferry Field means that | the war, and made possible because of | possibly the~ Eastern Intercollegiate Di- | will be held in almost the same part of the country as the National Collegiate | ance cf the invitation when he left for | meet, and that the middle west will THE BISMARCK TRIBUN' — - / , the East and is reported to have held , witness the two largest ccllege track | 5 ss a number of conferences with Michi- | meets to be held in the west this year, | oroughly canvass the ‘admitting that the Eastern Intercol- | he started for New/legiate‘is larger than the Big Ten, the | the Coast Con- gan men to.th subje:t before York. The result of these meetings has not been made public. eThe beginning of the series of events that may bring what is gener- ally spoken of as the Eastern Inter- collegiates to the West had its incep- tion in the formation several years ago of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. It was primarily an or- ganization to promote friendship, to consider rules and to handle questions | | bb Lb) It was in some ways an out-} F growth of the unusua) success of the} A J of academic interest concerning ath- letics. Missouri Valley and Big Ten Con- ferences in their supervision of the; athletics of big schools between the Ohio river and the western plains. The East and especially some of the | larger schools of the East were slow | to become members of the organiza- | tion although at present most of the schools with any athletic standing | whatever are members of the associa- tion either in their own name #r as the members of athletic conferences. | i Service Football i Just at the time the association as- sumed considerable standing the war} came on and intercollegiate games were continued for a year only as a part of the training of men for the field. Following the signing of the) armistice, however, and as a means! of helping to keep the men in Europe from tbinking too steadily of the trip they all desired to take across the Atlantic, the A.E.F. athletic champion- ships and then“the Inter Allied games ' were instituted. In the contests on the fields of France, where college men of’all brands met as equals, with condi- tions of training and of travel at a i par, the Eighty-ninth Division foot- |’ ball teem won the A. E. F. Champion- ship. The Eighty-ninth was trained at Cemp Funston, Kansas, and George (Potsy) Clark, former Illinois, now coach at the University of Kansas, was its motivating force and: captain. Its coaches, Wirthington, Guernsey. and Prichard were born in the Hawa- iian Islands and Iowa, but had East- ern ccllege training. The Inter Allied games also brought conclusive proof that under equal con- ditions, the men from west of the Al- legheney mountains ‘were as good as the men from the Eastern seaboard. In fact the Inter Allied track and field team had for its stars, college men from California, Oregon or the Mis- souri Valley and Big Ten territory. It was practically from the A. BE. F. championships and the Inter-Allied games that the conception of a meet at which all of the winning college ath- letes of America should take part had its conception. It was presented as a future question at the 1919 meeting of the Netional Collegiate Athletic As- sociation. After thinking it over for a year, at the 1920 mcet at Chicago, it was voted that as an experiment, such a meet be held. It was alko the sen- timent at this meet that the meet i Missouri Valley or | ference meet, all questions open to de- ‘bate. ‘AMERICA NOW K _-TSSTANDING “The Farmer Is The Only Man Who Has Really Deflated,” Says Mr. Hooper “THE HARD PULL IS OVER” Boston, Jan. 27—Public sentiment exerts such a tremendous influence in | America that the moral obligation of! the railways and they employe to avoid interruption of traffic will make the United States Railroad Labor Board's decisions effective, Ben W. (Hooper, vice-chairman of the board, declared today before the Boston Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Hooper, G. W. W. Hanger, pub- lic member, and ‘W. L. McMenimen, labor member of the board, were guests of the chamber at a luncheon, where Mr. Hooper voiced the opinion that America had passed through “the winter of our discontent” and was now “standing on tiptoe, with the slogan of the vernacular on her lips, ‘Let’s 20!” } “The hard pull is over,” the for- mer governor of Tennessee said. “The farmer is the only man in the coun- try who has really deflated. He alone did not have the parachute of organ- ization to retard his descent and break his fall: The next time /this country takes an international joy- ride in the Zeppelin of war, the farm- er will have his parachute along with him and will mot be invited to step out on a storm cloud and slide down on a rainbow.” Mr. Hooper said he expetcted the number of railway employes to be largely increased in the spring, that revenues would be enlarged by in- creased business and that conditions would probably justify a reduction of rates “which is so essential to the restoration of normal business.” In return to normal, Gov. Hooper. said, the railroads had accomplished the transition without any general strike or serious disturbance, Both Cooperated “As a rule, both managements and employes have - cooperated cordially in carrying out the Transportation Act,” Mr, Hooper said. “This has not been easy for either side. The railnoads have had to contend with financial difficulties, and have been should be held in the middle west as\continually subjected to the tempta- offering the most equal conditions for all sections of the country. ‘The committee to handle the meet was aunounced as A. A, Stagg of the Unifersity of Chicago T. E. Jones, of the University of Wisconsin and John L. Griffith of the University of Ili- nois. The meet was held in Chicago the last of June and attracted the most representative body of college athletes in the country. Teams from the middle west and the south were present and individual athletes from the Pacific and Atlantic seaboards. East Not Favorable, It-had developed before the meet was held however that the East did not look with favor upon the propo- sition. Easterners, pointed out that the title of their meet, Intercollegiate Association of Amateur Athletes of America made it the national ‘meet. The Westerners replied that if it was a national meet it had never been held West ‘of Philadelphia and that the contestants had been almost exclus- ively from the states developed from the thirteen original colonies. Michi- igan had competed for a number of years and California ha@ been in the east on oné or two occasions. The meet as such had never Jbeen planned > sor announced on the plans of the track meet of the National Collegiate Ath- letic Association. At the 1921 meeting of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, held in New York during the holidays, it was vcted to continue the track meet, QUIT TOBACCO So easy to drop Cigarette, Cigar, or Chewing habit No-To-Bac’ has helped thousands to break the costly, nerve-shattering to- bacco habit." Whenever you have a longing for a smoke or chew, just place a harmless No-To Bac tgblet in your mouth instead. All desire stops Shortly the habit is completely broken, and you are better off mentally, physi- cally; nancially. Nit’s sc easy, so sim- ple. Get a box of No-To-Bac and if it doesn’t release you from all craving for tobacco in any form, your drug- gist will refund your money without tion of taking the bit in their teeth and trying to get relief by independ- ent action more quickly than the la- bor board considered it just and rea- sonable to give to them. Only a few carriers have sugcumbed to this temp- tation, and, in every instance, fric- tion and discontent have resulted. “The complaints of the employes have been that certain carriers, to avoid degling with Tabor organiza- tions, have disregarded the rights of the majority guaranteed by the Trans- portation Act, that certain carriers’ have evaded the board’s wage orders by,having receivers in charge put in- to effect wage orders of the courts without submitting the matter toe the board and that certain carriers have evaded the wage decisions of the board by contracting or claiming to contract certain classes of their work to independent contractoys. “Whatever may be the merit of these contentions of the employes, it is evident that they involve provoca- tive situations. Unier somewhat try- | | i J question. ice, propel the boats, | jeither amateur_or professional on the Omtvedt is shown just after “taken. ing circumstances, the enyployes have ,exhibited commendable self-restraint. | Labor Board’s Decisions ‘Respected | “On the other hand, practically all {the carriers have promptly, put into ‘effect <decisions of the labor board | with which they were not in thorough | | accord and have struggled patiently | and ‘courageously with discouraging conditions. ! “The question will occur to you, | will the fear of the condemnation of | public sentiment always secure the obedience of the parties to the decis- ions of the Railroad. Sabor Board, or | CHICAGOAN WINS AMATEUR SKI TITLE 4 slide. off.” Two trainloads of snow were in Inset’ is~another pciture of him. MISS BOOTHS: -PLAINTALKTO ~ YOUNG WOMEN | Advises Them To Buy Milk For) Starving Babies Instead of | will there come’a time when powerful | | motives of self-interest will induce one or the other to trample under foot the board’s decisions and over- | ride public opinion? “I would.not underestimate the po- tency of public opinion. It exerts a tremendous influence in this country of ours. My personal view is that neither the carriers nor their em- ployes have the moral right to disaon- tinue railway operation to enforce the demands of either upon the other.* “It must not be forgotten that there are some labor leaders and certain la- ‘for periodicals which persistently preach the disquieting doctrine that the toilers of this country cannot trust the courts and tribunals having juris- diction of their troubles. The Rail- Yoad Labor Board, if moved by a pro- found desire ti do justice, may largely counteract this destructive preach- ment, and that without slopping over like a neuresthenic parlor commun: | ist.” | | DAM PROPOSED ND TWIN CITIES Further Action on Application: * For Permission Expected St. Paul, Minn., Jan, 27.—Further action on the application of the cities of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Northern States Power Company for Permission to construct a power plant | at the government high dam, on the Mississippi between the Twin Cities awaited return of representatives of the applicants from Washington. Yes- terday the federal commission »post- poned action of the matter indefi- nitely. iL. C. Hodgson, mayor of St, Paul, who had been in Washington on be- half of that city, returned and an- nounced tiat further action by the city couneil would await the ‘return of A. E, Nelson, corporation counsel who presented St, Paul’s arguments before the commission. é George E. Leach, ‘maypr of Min- neapolis, is not expected home be-| fore’'the end of the week, and Rob- ert F. Pack, representative of the power corhpany is due to reach Min-| neapolis today. — Mayor Hodgson said he expected to' present a plan to the city council for a $1,000,000 bond issue to finance | the dam project to be submitted to| the voters at the May election. | Neil 'M. Cronin, city attorney of Minneapolis, said he expected St. Paul would line up with Minneapolis andy the University of Minnesota in forma: tion of the Municipal Electric cor- poration:to develop the dam power in the interest of the Twin Cities and the university. KIDDER PIONEER DEAD. Steele, N. D., Jan. 27—Word has’ been received here of ‘the death at McMinnville, Ore. of William. L. Ketchum, :68, Kidder county pioneer, who settled. in this section in 1881. SPEED-AND MORE SPEED He leaves his wife and four ‘sons. Powerful motorcycle engines are used by the speed fans of Lake Hopat- cong, N. J., in constructing these ice racers. Sharp cogs, which dig into the + 1 store, Millions helped aunualy. Face Paints and Powders i : | San Francisco, Cal., Jan, 27.—Wo- mer who powder their nose$, touch up their hair with a bit of golden glint or add .the bloom of youth to-their cheeks are positively dishonest, Evangeline Booth, national commander of the Sal- vation Army, declared while here re- cently. | Women use “makeup” to deceive, | Miss Booth said. “A woman has~no | right to fool the world,” “she added. | “The woman with blazing cheeks, in- | digo eyes and carroty hair is a cheat.” Many divorces are’ caused by. the fact that women have attempted to | deceive their husbands regarding their appearance, she thinks. Man, ‘she added, wants women.as nature intend- ed they should’ be. ‘ i The enormous sale of cosmetics in | the United States is a disgrace to the country, Miss Booth feels. “If our young women jof* today would only take the money they use for paint and powder, and buy milk for the poor- starving babies of the world, they wouldn’t need any ifice to make themselves’ attractive, she said. “In their_cheeks would be the hue of joy that comes from.the heart and in the eyes the light that comes only from giving service to the world.” * Miss Booth thinks moderation and utility should be the guide. when it comes to clothes. Followingythe style of the Salvation Army, she says, skirts | shopld be five or six inches above the | gronnd, \ H “Too many women today destroy | their true womanliness by immodest | dressing and they have ‘only them- selves to blame when their charac- iers are questioned,” She asserted. | | MANDAN NEWS | Commission Meets to Decide on Trucks At the regular meeting of the Man- dan city commission Wednesday even- ing. was spent with representatives | from ten fire apparatus companies discussing the merits of the fire | equipment which was offered in the Ten bids were opened and ~they ranged in price from $4,000 td $12,- 500, The commission did not how- ever, decide-on any definite truck but’ a special méeting has been called for | Saturday evening, Jan. ‘28 at’ which, time the matter will be fully dis- cussed. “ + The companiés ‘which have repre- sentatives here who entered their bids are: [he White Motor. Co., Mack Truck company, International, Reo, LaVerne; Northern Fire Apparatus company, J. N. Johngon company, | Twin City Motor Co., Waterous com-/ pany, and the | American LaFrance | company, i The chayee * Town Criers committee in of the skating rink at the corner of First street and Forth avenue N. W. had the rink scraped and reflocded Wednesday. afternoon and another” flooding .will'be~ given late this afterzeon. If the weather remains cold ‘enough to sufficiently ffeeze the rink before tomorrow jthe skaters. will be allowed to enjoy themselves again. It-is pManned to} have-a big light placed_at the east | end of the rink. a Mr. gnd Mrs. Martin Paulson have, received word thatthe body of their! son, Clifford Pauls6n, was forwarded | from Brooklyn at three o'clock Wed-| STOMACH MISERY, GAS, INDIGESTION, “TAKE “DIAPEPSIN” . ry i “Pape’s .Diapensin” the quickest. | | surest relief for Indi, ion, Gases, | Flatulence, Heartburn, Sourness, Fer-/ | | | | ! | nientation or Stomach Distrdss caused | by acidity. ‘A few tablets give almos' immediate stomach 1 the stomach is corre eat favorite foods without fear. Large! j case costs only few cents at drag ing at the city hall the entire even- |. bids which were opened at the 'time)|_ ot Twenty thousands. spectators saw Ragnar Omtvedt of Chicago win the nftional amateur ski title at the Norge Ski Clubs’ meeting near Cary, Ill., on Jan, 22... Omtvedt’s best jump was 125, better than any jump made by m ported to insure success of the meet. Re nesday and itis expected to reach Mandan Saturday. The American Legion has planned a memorial serv- ice at the Presbyterian church and this will probably be Sunday after- noon. H. W. Tackaberry left last even- ing for’ Frontenac, Minn., where af- ter a short visit with his son, Lester Tackabérry\ they. will leave for Ar- lington, Va. The body of Roy Tacka- berry ‘who died in the service in | France was returned this week and the Interment will take place in the national cemetery at Arlington on Feb. 2nd. re te, Ow Mrs. T, J; Logan returned yester- day morning trom Buffalo, New York, here she has been visiting relatives since before the holidays. Mrs. William iR. Keller pf Mandan is visiting in Fargo, the guest of her n ard daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Keller. * i if George F. Wilson returned yesterday | morning from the Twin ° Cities, where he has been on a business visit. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Brug- gemann, on Tue! a baby boy. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Schlitter on Saturday, a baby boy. Wea OB ee /“ATTHE MOVIES | GRIFFITH’S BAD SCAR AND HOW IT HAPPENED W. Griffith bears on his cheek a scar that will probably never disappear. it is the result of his bray- ery in saving from death in the ice- choked White River of Vermont, an ii tt who was in imminent dan- g washed down the streant n ficiod. D. sudd ina t! taking of “Way Down East,” which is showing at the Capitol theater, that the incident occurred and Griffith himself was so hadly. injured that he had to suspend all,pperations for sev- a while he lay in‘ a farm se under the care of a surgeon. His right leg was ripped open and both cheeks were badly cut when je fell} on the ice. However, he savéd the man. “way Down East”. has the most thwiiling ice scene ever presented be- foré a vd of spectators. Indeed, it is certain that~no. scene before shown is as realistic as is that when Anna Moore (Lillian Gish) is rescued AAR RAR . MAKES ’EM TALK i, Jimmie Bonner at 12 holds 34 shoot- ing trophies and7has veteran trap- f and shortly | shooters gasping “at his proficiency; so you can/ with gun and clay pigeon. He recent-! ly secred 99 out of a possible 100 and is out after new honors in trap meets in the vicinity of New York. w | amount of dafry products handled ac- -|the length and breadth of the land, XI RATES GIVE A BABY Constipation; biliouenese and like annoying illo will quickly disappear ANOTHER is always anxious to give the safest and best medicine toa constipated baby, but is puzzletwhich to select. Lether decide by the ingredi- ents onthe package, ‘Every battle of Dr. Caldwell’s printed plainly on the outside of the carton under the portrait of Dr. Caldwell; who wrote the prescription in 1892. You will find that itis a combination of Egyptian Senna and other simple laxative herbs with pe; sin. It will not gripe'the Dab and it is free from narcotics. cost is'only about a centa dose. While noone, young or old need take 4 drastic purgative cially careful what you give a Syrup Pepsin has the formula child. Some contain minerals, coal tar and other drugs that might the Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin are recommended b A. bottle sufficient to last 2 Pharmacopoeia.: family several months:canibe hadiat any drug store, andthe Half-Ounce Boitle Free Few escape constipation, so even'if you do not require a laxative at this moment let me send sou a Half-Ounce Trial Boule .of my. Sasi need take @ dr Pena FREE OF CHAR ike sal have it han or calomel, be espe- rin altien to De W Bcalhns Washington St., Monticello, i. Write mecoday. | SYR rove dangerous by over stimu- lating the intestines or depréssing eart. The ingredients o y the U.S; E30 that oq. wd when needed. Simply send Jon Sta | (Richard Barthelmess) on the brink of a falls. A moment later the fioe dashes over the brink and crashes be- low: The effect is overpowering. Of course, such a scene ‘could ‘not be-rehearsed, but the participants could be properly instructed: before- hand, And it was Griffith himself who did the instructing, Not only that, but he also are nearly everything before he would lét his actors risk their lives. He ‘would personally test each bit of ice that was to be used by the actors ag’ a resting place and so great was the confidence of each player in the director that there was never.a mo- ment’s hesitancy in taking chances, onée-he was satisfied that he could permit the scene to be photographgs. - JACKIE COOGAN HERE, Jackie Coogan, the famous young- ster who won a nation-wide reputa- tion in ‘Charles’ Chaplin’s picture, “The Kid,” comes’ to the Eltinge to- night as a star in his own production, “My Roy.” The picture has heen {highly praised hy eastern critics as a remarkable - dramatic _ achievement, and as 4 picture where grandfathers and grandmothers enjoy themselves jas hugely as the kiddies.. The pic- ture is at the Eltinge Friday and Sat- urday night, Jamestown, North Dakota leads all other North Dakota points ‘in the ording to E. W. Bennett of the Northern Pacific yailroad® specialist in from’an.ice floe by David... Bartlett | In Dairying, the handling of dairying matters for that road. He is in the state for the Kow Karnival at Mandan anf for cther conferences with the men who are interested in the c¥reation of lar- ger dairy interests in the state. “The great benefit of the dairy bus- iness at Jamestown,” declares Mr. Bennett, is that the raw material is brought to the creamery there and the manufactured product is shipped away in carload lots. Jamestown and the Yarmers ‘who’ ‘supply the creamery get all the possible benefit.” Mr. Bennett will remais in North Dakota several days. STEELE DEFEATS ~ JAMESTOWN TEAM , Steele, N.D., Jan; 27—The Steele high school basket-ball team defeated Jamestown high school’ second team at Jamestown Wednesday night by a score 22 to 8. Tomorrow. the James- town college Preps play at Steele. So far this season Steele's basket ball team has won 15 games and lost one to Mandan high by a score of 4 to 14. COUPLE MARRIED 50 YEARS Park River, N. D.,. Jan. 27.—Rela- tives and friends, coming by suprise, helped Mr. and Mrs, John H. Peder- son of Park River celebraté their golden wedding anniversary. A ,din- ner was served, decorations ing carried out in a color scheme of gold. Toasts were given and telegrams and greetings read. Guests presented the jcouple with a sum in gold coins. Mr. ‘and Mrs. Pederson are pioneers of | Walsh eounty, having settled near there in 1880. SSS eee AN ARMY MARCHES ON ITS STOMACH, SAID NAPOLEON } The Great Corsican Knew That Succes in Life Depends Upon Your Strength, Energy and Endurance. BY HARRISON VAUGHN When Napoleon led his victorious ‘armies through Europe, his worst ene- It was during the ‘mies were not the nations defending | bles. themselves against his smashing on- islaught; but he was confronted by the graver question of how to provide rourishing and strengthening food for {his soldiers. The Great Corsican realized long over a century ago, as has every com- manding general since, that men’s bodies must be perfectly nourished if they are: ‘to retain’ their natural strength, energy and vigor; in fact, that the very health of the human be- {stcmach. Unider-feeding, insufficient nourishment, means: loss of flesh, an- ‘aemia, lack of ged blood and subse- jquent weakness of the entire system. What such people need to enable na- ture to bring back their strength and | vigor; restore their lost weight, and {put them in fighting trim, with rich, red blood coursing through their veins is Tanlac, the powerful reconstructive tonic and body builder. A man wr woman suffering from sour stgmach, bad breath, biliousness, lindigestion, or gas on stomach, is un- fitted either for physical or mental la- lbor. Sufferers from these ailments. find life a burden; they look on the world thnough blue glasses, the joy and Fe- wards of the yiggrous, kappy, normally | healthy pera is, not theirs. troubles em! world, destroy their ambitions and make their lives dull and unhappy. How foolish to continue in this con- dition when on every hand throughout gists everywhere. > \ | People by the thousands are daily tes- jtifying to the remarkable powers of Tanlag in conquering stomach trou- This powerful reconstructive medicine builds up the weak and the despondent; gives them new hope and happiness anil a new lease on life. Tanlac’s name has been praised by hundreds of thousands. Testimonials frm. every corner of the United States and Canada have shown conclusively that even in cases where patients had almost given up all hope and where men and-women had beljeved them- selves doomed to a life of misery and suffering, Tanlac has overcome ‘their ing is regulated almost’entirely by the |troubles and brought back’ health, en- ergy and happiness into their lives. If you are not “fit as-a fiddle” in the morning and don’t feel better than when you went to bed; ‘if your breath is offensive and you have that bad taste in your mouth, your body is mt being nourished properly. What you need is Tanlac 'to restore you'té nor- mal so nature can.bring back/the flesh you've lost, put the bloom of health in your cheeks, the spring of energy in your step and the sparkle of happiness and contentment in your eye. NOTE-—Tanlac Vegetable Pills are an essential and vitally important Part of the Tanlac treatment. Youn cannot hope to get the most satisfac- tery results fiom Taniac without first establishing a free and regular move- Their; ment-of the bowels. Tanlac Vegetable jitter them against the} Pills are absolutely free from calomel and are sold gn a positive guarantee to give satisfaction. Tanlac is sold in Bismarck by Jo- seph Breslow and by leading drug- Adv. 57 5 One Passenger Each Additional Passenger... . CLOSED HEATED: CARS EXPERIENCED DRIVERS) .-. Prompt Night and Day Service. Rohrer Taxi Line 57 PHONE 57 ‘