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PAGE SIX CASSELTON 70 MEET LOCALS Casselton high will furnish the opposition to the “Demons” Friday night, on the local floor. This game will prove to be interesting, i first game this season i tern team, It has been three weeks since the Bismarck team has met an opponent on the local fioor, and a good crowd is an-| ticipated | Nothing is known of the strength | of the Casselton quintet, but they} are expected to put up a hard game. LEROY DEFEATS MOUG DECISIVELY Jamestown, N. D,, Jan, 25.—Russie | LeRoy of Fargo decisiv sily | defeated Joe Moug of Stecle in a six round exhibition here last night. Le Roy handed Moug considerable pun- ishment and knocked him through in the fifth round. h the rop Jackie ed out “ sec Nichols is 4 member of the Hurley stables, DEMPSEY READY TO MIX WITH GOOD OPPONENT New York, Jan, 24.—Expressing his serness to meet any aspir- | i for his “heavyweight crown, jack; Dempsey and his advance en- | tourage, including the champion’s | pet pedigreed bull dog, “Diamond | Dick,” Jr.,” reached New York yes- terday. y’s manager, Jack | due to arrive today and / ternoon a conference is| scheduled with Promoter Tex | Rickard at which negotiations for | the title holder’s expected program of action during the outdoor season may reach a definite basis. Rickard said today he would sub- mit two proposals to Kearns and Dempsey, on calling for a match with Jess Willard, probably June } 30, and the other with the survivor of a series of elimination battles among Floyd Johnson, Tom Gib- bons and Luis Firpo, the Argentine pugilist. The/ latter contest may | occur jn September. Dempsey declared he was ready | to meet any of these heavyweights as well as Harry Wills with whom he signed tentative for a bout six months ago, but ring cricles were convinced that no proposition for a match with the negro would be dis- cussed. The champion ig unlikely to ap- pear in any contest-here during the indoor season because f inadequate seating facilities of any available | site. i Uteritz Is First Michigan Quarter Picked By Camp Ann Arbor, Mich., Jan. 25.— When Walter Camp named Irwin Uteritz of Michigan as quarter- back’ on his third All-American eleven for 1922, he accorded the| Ann Arbor school an honor which} it had never before received, For | Uteritz is the first Michigan signal-caller to be elected for any ef Camp's mythical teams. Not that Michigan hasn’t had | Some good quarterbacks, for it has, but until last fall the dean of foot- ball critics didn’t see fit to recog-| ;. nize them in an All-American way.| Take, for instance, “Boss” Weeks, 1902 captian, and still con- sidered by Yost as the best pilot | he has had during the 22 seasons he has ben coaching’ at Michigan; | Fred Norcross, 1905 _ leader; “Shorty” MeMillan, star in 1910-| 11; Tommy Hughitt, who played| the entire Harvard game in 1914, with a fratured collar bone; afid| Cliff Sparks, sterling quarter in| 1916-17-19. All of the above men, were good field generals, and) there were others, too, but the + palm goes to little Uteritz, who in his two campaigns at Michigan| has developed into a twinkler of the first degree. For some reason or other, though, Camp has never been very much impressed by quarterbacks developé# in the west. In fact,} very few have been able to get a place “in the sun” is so far as any of his All-America teams were concerned. _ New Big League ‘Umpire Is Hero p~ , Of World War eine Chicago, Jan. 25.—Emmett “Red” Ormsby, who is to be given _ @ trial as a member of the Ameri: \ can jLeague staff of umpires the! ; “ha well, is a hero of the World War. -. Ormsby began his baseball | career as a pitcher and was meet- ‘ing twith much .succss when.'the Ui States got in:the Wo V Ormsby joined the marines, saw two years of servicein France, ‘and 4was-decorated for disinguished - While overséas he was gassed. e ing to this country he found his (ball-playing ‘ability greatly Hié love for the game { ey Steeplechase Thrills Here is a thrilling scene at the Crawley Steeplechase, England, showing Major F. Scott Murray’s ‘Gerald L,” the winner, taking the water ahead of Lady Mitchelson’s “Wafer.” .. Belgian Troops in Essen “We are not alone. Our , are With us,” Premier Poincare told the Chamber eputie s picture from the Ruhr ‘ict, shows & group of Belgian infantry mon on their arrival in Esgen. Royal Love Couple The Duke of York, second son ,of King George and Queen Mary, appears in this picture with his flancee, Lady Elizabeth Bowes--Lyon. San GEE Scions of House of Vanderbile- e a whirl at um-) ° ogg ets ee ee Saved | | 4 | T midocean, a seaman on the | freighter Eastern King was sud pew stricken. The 8. 8. Conte 830 Was hailed, the patient ere in a life-boat and an Pperation successfully performed. elcturo shows patient being hauled Aboard. Divorced . In a ten-minute trial in Salem @fass.) divorce court, Mra Con- stance G. Minot (above), grand- Lodge, secured a divorce from Grafton Minot, member of promi- nent Back Bay family. : Parker Weds Judge Aiton \B,, Parker, 71, tn. successful candidate for the preat- with the announcement of his elia Day | KIDNEY TROUBLE | ‘CAUSES LAMENESS | eps “A lameness followed me for some time, and I felt that it. was catmed from kidney trouble. One. bottle of Foley Kidney Pills had the desired effect,” writes H. B, Arbuckle, South )Barte, Vermont. Backache, rheuma- j tism, dull headache, too frequent. or burning urination are symptoms of } Kidney and Bladder Trouble, T° dered kidneys require ‘prompt ‘tréat-. ment. Neglect. emuses”sériows com- plications. Foley Kidney Pills give quick relief. b. ency in 1904, surprised his triends | LOM daughter of Senator Henry Cabot | Cn (7 "THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ; (AACA MMM 7 ‘Whiy are Some . e Storekeepers So Obstinate Tam an old-fashioned buyer of the necessities for my household. I go to the store myself. To me this work is not irksotie. In fact, I like it. -I like to look at the shelves so full of cans and packages of so many colors. I like to do this for the same reason that I don’t mind be- ing in a crowd. ye , When in a crowd I look for familiar faces. When I see them I am delighted. When I am in a store I look for familiar goods and when I see them I buy. Those goods have become familiar to me through advertising and I have noticed that the grocery men who have the most of those familiar packages somehow or other seem to always go ahead. I went into a store not of my owh choosing but with a friend who, among other things, asked for a very well known article of food which is packed in a ean, although she did not ask for any specific kind. I always buy.... ma appa I told her that was the kind she should ask for. The dealer overheard me and said, “Madam, I never sell'that article. I sell instead something very much better..... my own brand.” Then he launched into a five-minute talk on why this article was better than the one I had named. But some- how my friend had been convinced by what I had sug- gested and she did not buy that can which the grocer offered. And I thought as I walked out how stubborn and obsti- nate that man was. -He had lost a sale, had probably taken his first step toward losing a customer, and had certainly lost a good deal of time, especially since some pha people were standing around waiting to be wait-° ed on. ! If that grocer had sold advertised goods he would cer- tainly have had the brand I suggested and he would have . made a sale; incidentally, he would have bid us good day cheerfully and he and we would have been satisfied. Familiar faces are wonderful. To me, in my capacity as a buyer for a fairly large household, familiar things on the shelves of the stores I visit are only a little less wonderful, for those familiar things help me in doing better and more economically the job which I must work at every day. A . J Those advertised articles which I buy and which I al- ways buy. I know have been submitted’ to the criticism of. both competitior and consumer. This subjection to almost world-wide critical examination demonstrates to me. that. the, manufacturer. has supreme. confidence in his goods. He cannot tell a falsehood about the things he makes, becatise there are too many in. the world to find him otit.. : ‘ ‘ Constant. advertising’ of any product, proves’ that product has stood the test of scrutiny. Is it any wonder then why I, as one of several million women in my same position, prefer. articles with wih T am. acquainted to Rroducts. about which I have'nd. knowledge and about: whie manufacturer does not seem‘to have the cour- age toenlighten me? ; % a B lished by the Bismarck Tribune, in co-oppration tit the o an Asaelation of” avert Recwes beg é UAT THALHLLLE _ ; a THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1923 TT Ee LLL HUTUFEOELELUUEOAN TOSTOET STANT Sa AEE UATE Nt \ oe A ae a et