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PAGE SIX, 8 TEATS FROM NEW BODY TO _ OBTAIN ACTION Only Strictly Nebraska Wesleyan es A } members of the North | collegiate’ conference get into action this week end, three of the tea portent. gam ‘Thanksgiving day. | etly conference game ng at Omaha of Creigh- i Nebraska Wesleyan, the idition to the conference ting last ‘spring. Des oine; will appear at Kansas “City in one of the few games played in that city this year, having as its, op- ponent the team from Tulsa Univer- sity . Saturday’s games® proved the strength of the Des Moines team} when it took the measure « af the strong Dubuque College team: while South Dakota State eliminated a good many of the teams of the southern end of the conference by} whipping Morningsside decisively. Morningside had previously tied Des Moines and Nebraska Wesleyan, The games gives added importance to the meeting of South Dakota, State and Creighton on Thanksgiv- | ing day. | In the Missouri Valley, but one game between teams of the organi- zation is listed, Nebraska meeting | Ames, The other teams have} either finished their seasons or are waiting for the turkey day hostiliti- a bunch of interesectional are listed for the final Sat- tussles, Notre Dame, a team Conference | et Creighton and | also resting for im-| By Billy Evens California is banking on three of its veteran stars, Erb, Muller. and Nicholls, to insure a win over Stan- ford when Andy Smith’s eleven elashes with its greatest rival at Palo Alto, Cal., on Nov. 25, On the coast the Stanford-Cali- fornia game takes on all the color of a clash between Harvard, Yale or Princeton in the east. This despi' the fact that Stanford for years has not been able to offer very stern opposition. While Stanford didn’t look strong at the opening of the the eleven has been brought a by slow stages. until“it is now bi lieved to be in shape to offer Cali- Aornia a real argument. | Stanford Engages Warner Coach Andy Smith Says His CALIFORNIA FIGURES TO REPEAT WIN | LEFT TO. RIGHT: CHARLES ERB. BRICK MULLER, DON NICHOLLS, is engaged the services of Glenn War-|. ner, famous coach of Pitttsburg Uni- versity. It was a ten.strike for Stan- ford and is certain to show results shortly. Warner is stilf*under contract at Team Is Stronger Than Last Year. i i ittsburg and is coaching: there this ae However, he jis installing his methods at Stanford. through. the medium of two of his former) star players, Andy Kerr and “Tiny hill, 4 Therornhill assisted Charley.’ Moran at Centre College last year. Thorr- hill is a line coach, and Head Coach Moran says it was Thornhill’s great worth with the fentgg forwards that enabled: them to outplay Harvacd and make a Centre victory posgible. Coach Andy Smith of California worrying about" the Prepara- tions that Stanford is making to eventually capture football honors on the coast, - Smith says his team of this year is even better than last | and that California wilt win sure. It is again the intention to bring a team from the east to California to play_on New-Year’s Day at Pash | dena. Unless Stanford should ups the dope, which isn’t probable, Cali- | fornia will again do the entertaining. | isn’ sprinters fh world in the fix , but that | the champions ure unbeatable in the ! last 50. | because fhe others are pent beforé the stretch , tennis and many sent thesame fea- G race horses are those th; i can keev an/even cling! y beats, tinre of ‘ul competition, Winning auto drivers are not the y that has been mecting the best. it can find all season, will go east to | the squad from Carnegie Tech. | ington and Jefferson, fresh from an unexpected trouncing at the | hands of Pittsburgh will meet De- | troit also battered without notice | by Marquette. Centre College, whose | loss to Auburn is the first defeat by | a team of that class in several years will travel south to meet | Tulane at New Orleans. The single | game between a team of the Miss- | curi Valley and a team from Dixie will be the meeting of Drake with | the Mississippi A and M squad at Starkville. Drake finished its M uri Valley season against. Grinnell last Saturday and goes south with the record of not having been ‘defeated. Its victims include Kansas, Washington, Ames and Grinnell of the Missouri Valley and the Colorado Aggies of the Rocky Mountain league. | Billy Evans Says | t ssful football_teams work out eir salvation much like certain suc- ful individuals in sport competi- tion. I refer to those athletic en- deavors where sustained effort is de- manded, Any football team that is able to} outplay its opponents in the first | half or even the first three periods and then goes to pieces is lacking mm a most necessary essential, sus- tained effort. If a team that steps, out in front by a wide margin early in the game, and then loses in the last period because acouple of long forward es £0 over, no great blame can be attached to that particular team. | ‘The breaks simply went the other It is a matter of history that most great teams do their best work in! the fingls periods of play. Often it ecms the opposition is permitted to r itself out early in the game, I had been told that Lafayette was the best team in the east. [ must loubt that statement after | ngton and Jefferson game, | h Lafayette led 13 to 0 at! se’of the first half, nly to be beaten, by a point. | Most of the great elevens that 1 atched, work on this basis. rvard offense, during the | Hauhgton, was | aged. Harvard | rous team isf the second Harvard, like other | ns, had a way of -com-| g her opponents to play them-} s out in the first half. | This feature of planning is not 2 original with football. It is found In baseball, pitchers always have much y id \they use it to the opposition when checking is needed. Chri Mathewson was this and y every | piteher has = always | pitched so that he could bear down| whenever he had to. Sustained bat-/ i re next to impossible itchers for th 0 impossible against great football clev | You find the same thing happen- ing in tr athletes. The great! dista runners are those that time themselves so perfectly that they would run at an even pace the | entire race. They would win in the last few Japs when those of the field that remained in the lead or at their Id drov back. The. winner, was runnig no faster, than at any other time but he was passing a, field that had been induced to run} Two boys of the California elevea | ri itself out. the Sprinters work same way. | QUARTERBACK Few football teams get very far | without a good quarterback. In Rarvara’s game with Prenceton the Crimson outplayed the Tigers as long as Captain Charley Buell was holding forth at quarter. th In the second period an injury forced Bueff out of the game. It took only a few minutes of play to realize his great value to Harvard. STANFORD TEAM BANKS ON BRAINY |:s QUARTERBACK —— “SCOTTY” CAMBELL During the remainder of the gare |\ed, Coach Fisher used: three quarters in an effort to:replace the damage done | court, by the Idss of Buell, but with no| by success, Stanford’s hope of victory over California in the big game of the year on the coast ‘centers in Quarter- f Judge of the said Court, and, Stanford | fh “Seal thereof at Bismarck, in rooters are banking’on him to stick} caiq district, on the 16th day of back “Scotty” Campbell. out the entire game, TWO CRACK. PLAYERS ON CALIFORNIA ELEV . LEFT TO RIGHT: NE SBIT, BOB DERKEY. ~ ht. to represent ithe coast, are who figure to in the Stanford | Nesbit and Berkey. Nesbit is noted Cen : or his. punti bik nd Berkey game, as well as the contest wit wath: RGllbya¥-a'grent Archie Hahn, one of the best college | the east if California again wins the | end. | BANKRUPT’S PETITION FOR <DIS- chaps who set the speed marks back ae the chaps who drive a steady ace, letting others pass them and bak their cars out while doing it. ILLIE HOPPE i HOLDS TITLE; York, Nov, 22—Willie Hoppe, ein the 18.2 balkline billiard chimpion. He regained the title last night in the final match of tne in- ternational 18.2 billiard champion- ship, defeating Jake Schaefer, title: | holder. 500 to 283. Hoppe won Tast | niht in the twelfth inning with an| unfinished run of 106. / ' —— roo * SPORT BRIEFS | -——? | Chi .—The signed contract of Graver Cloveland Alexander, ‘pitcher for the Chicago Nationals was re- jved ct the Cubs office. seo gicaron-K: M. Landis, staffed an investigated ‘of reports that Bill i mi Red rey, vitcher of the Boston Re oe and Red: Oldham of "Detroit, pitcher, were alleged to He violating the rule regarding barnstorming by playing winter baseball on “the Pa- fie Coast. *"cincinnat Austin McHenry, out- | Gelder of the St. Louis Cardinals, was reported seriously ill. F NOTICE THEREON onnen o OF, NORTH DAKOTA, 8s: j this 16th day of November, A: v.1922, on reading the: Petition for Discharge of the above-named Bank- r it is— gy TUR red By the Court, that a hear- ing be had upon the same on the 17th day of January,-A. D..1923, be’ fore the said court, at Fargo, in aid district, at ten o'clock forenoon; and that notice thereof be published in The Bismarck Tribune, a newspaper printed in said district, and: that ail known creditors and other persons in interest may appear at the said time and place and show cause, if any they have, why the prayer of the said petitioner should not be grant: it is further ordered by the An that the Referee shall send, nail, to al] known ereditors, cop- ies of said petition and” this. order, addressed to them: af their places of i ce as stated. Rien The Honorable. Andrew November, A. D. 1922. F THE COURT) \ (REAL: 2 J. A. MONTGOMERY, (eee . R. STEELE, : : Deputy, Clerk. 41.22 RGE, AND ORDER OF NO- CHAR eT CE THEREON : In the District Court of the United ste the Southwestern Division, District of North Dakota. ; In the Matter of Frank R. Kaiser, Bankrupt. No. 3491 in Bankruptcy. To the Honorable Andrew Miller, Judge of the District Court of the United States for the District. of | “North Dakota, Frank R. Kaiser, of McKenzie in the County of Burlcign and ‘State of North. Dakota, in said SS #29 on es e . : Skin Eruptions Are Usually Due to Constipation ~ , are. constipated, balay Poire't of | Nature’s | Jubricatine guid is pro, duced in (ie bowel to kecp the food waste soft and fiozirg. Doctors” prescribe Nejcl by 2 it acts like bricant and = AAR RE a medicine or laxative — so carhot gripe. . Try it today. ————reeee llating to bankruptcy; that |B - THE BISMARCK. TRIBUNE. | istrict, respectfully represents that on the 4th day of September, 1922, last past, he was duly adjudge: rupt under 'the acts of Congress duly surrendered all his property | and. rights of property, and has fully. complied with all the requirements \ of‘baid acts and of the orders of the | cov 21; toucning his bankrupteys ~~ je may ‘Wherefore, He prays that be uecreeu wy ehe court to Mave w fnl) discharge from all debts proy- able against his estateunder ‘said bankrupt acts, except such debts as are excepted by iaw from’ such dis+ charRed this, 28th day of October, A. D. 1922. isk RANK R. KAISER, u ee Bankrupt. | TICE OF STATE BAR EXAMINA- Ne TION * Notice is hereby given that the State Bar Board will hold an exami- nation at the State Capitol in the City of Bismarck, County of Bur- |] leigh, and State of North Dakota; commencing on the 19th day of De- cémber, A. D. 1922, for the purpose of examining applicants seeking ad- mission to the bar of said State. ‘Undertakers DAY PHONE 246.’ PERRY Day Phone 100 e ¥ I scene to all 0 a few is—Is ment AA LUBRICANT @NOT A LAXATIVE | Se ae Ri te i 1A The ‘following named have filed their spplisations for. permission’ to take such examination: Casey, ‘Stanley F., Rugby, North Dakota. : Dimond, Nicholas H., Grand Forks, North, Dakota. Dunn, Charles M., Presho, S. D. rank §S. Mj, Expansion North Jarvis, Paul Glen Harold, Peters- burg, North. Dakota. ait sman, Charles, North Dakota. aon, Sigrum, Rolla, North Da. Bismarck, kota, Sullivan, Emmet A., Oakes, North PaKSiefaon, - Axel M.;° Hillsboro, Tollefson, North, Dakota. iy Any objections to the participa. tion of any of the above named can- didates in’ the examination to’ be held aforesaid, or ‘their admis- sion to. the bar, if successful, should Through numerous wanings and re- vivals, the game: of croquet is trace- Hable back to‘ the ancient Gauls, ‘ in 1890. ‘ Holidy Cards ., We will engrave or print them for you. Now is the time to place your The Society of Daughters of the ~_ ‘American Revolution was organized '* d with the undersigned, Secre- beisileg the State Bar :Board, not Clerk of the Supreme Court, State USINESS DIRECTORY Licensed’ Embalmer in UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer in pty ARCK FURNITURE COMPANY Upholstered Furniture Made to Order. |e A TI not be successfully advertised. It may flash upon the 50 And merchandise that is right — merchandise that will satisfy inservice—merchandise that will bring cus- tomers back for another purchase is the first require- and flourish. orders. Samples submitted upon re- quest. : : ? Business houses of all kinds will find : this appropriate advertising. Send the holiday greeting in the most approved way—a printed or engraved card. os gto ‘¥or the individual wishing a more personal message we have a most at- tractive line of samples. ‘ than December 9th, 1922. ne es H. NEWTON, of North.. Dakota, ane oxettele “of State Bar Board. Sorerye 11-22-29—12-6-13 Funeral Directore|/ COME IN AND SEE OUR LINE OF - SIGHT PHONES 246-887 CHRISTMAS and HOLIDAY ! CARDS. BISMARCK TRIBUNE Job Printing Dept. Night Pone 100 or 687 “Is the Product — ———__—_-» el is a maxim of advertising that.a poor product can- with brilliance, become the talk of the hour, and appearances be destined to set new records, but unless it is and does what is claimed for it, no amount of printer’s ink and artist’s colors can give it permanence. nce in a while some article of merchandise will ap- pear to defy this rule, but not for long. Public response, at first, perhaps, quick and active, becomes slower and dlower. ‘Sales fall off. The business grows sick, and in months or a few years, the very name of the pro- duct is forgotten. Advertising men know this so well that today the first question upon which they must be satisfied before they. will. recommend advertising to any manufacturer the product right? ~~ of the jobber and the retailer who expect to endure ot ern 4 is Pa TT * * * here is no better assuranée of this kind of mer- “haniie than an advertising pledge tothe public. 7 \ Z blished by the Bismarck ‘Tribune, in co-operation with The ‘Amorléain Association of Advertising Agencies Titi mm - WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1922 in it a DAGEESG¢ EA GEEAEESOUTTOAGEUGAD GUGGTAQUOEATSVHEEHUEUATH SS TTIENUEET ETT ARETTAHL AUEEYGROTTOGUUAEOCOOOAUOQAQGROETOGESUOUTOUEQOSSEGESSEULUETAEOUTUUAATOOESEEAEUTLEE2E HUSOCQAUTANUNOOLOUESUUGEIUL sutmmeMN