The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 24, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX AMERICAN HQRSE WINS IN “RACE OF CENTURY” “BV! That cry came from 60,000 throats pride ow » in America ned by Ben Irish, gentlemam farm The winner received $80,000 an |and when he retired it was the opin- Vion f many that that was one mark | Wagner for all time. A. C. Takes Crowd To Game: Farge, Oct. 2h--Agricultural lege students, sev hundred | strony, with more confidence in the prowess of their team than they have | felt in many will travel to Grand Forks, the home of the state university, on Saturday to watch the Yellow and Green warriors battle the | long-feared Flickertail squad. Results of a» whirlwind eal of tickets and boosters tags ye has assured the starting of a sp. from here at 8:30 Saturd morning that will carfy more than 100 students dnd the full 44-piece college band. New Limit of Draft Urged |; Los Angeles, Oct. A $10,000 dyaft limit is proposed as a com- promise measure for consideration} cific Coast all League meeting at Avalon, Catalina sland, November 13. Captain 1 vice president of the Louisville I ball Cub, prepared the plan which Osear Reichow, business manager of the Los Angeles baseball club, an- nounced he would submit to the) coast magnates. i The $10,000 limit is for class “AA” | clubs, embracing the t league. ‘The majors ked to drop | to draft fro and “D” cir- | cuits, The class “ clubs would be permitted to draft one player | from class thr from “B” and any number from “C” and “D The plan, Reichow says, willl at least pave the way for discussion | of a plan that may reopen’ draft! negotiations with the oars | Grid Games | Break Records New York, Oct. 24.—New attend- ance records for football are lik@ly | to be set this season, if the ly for the turnstiles at -s throughout the coun-! be taken as a criterion, AM, attendance in five of the ig gridiron en ments last fwéek apprayimated 000. The Harvard-Holy), Cro: 50,000; the “Blichig game 45,000; he F umbia gamre 38,090; the Princeton game 0,000, racuse-Pittsburgh) game ly. 200 other collegy footba that: afternoon, _ attracting addi- tional thousands, irklicuted the tre- mendous opulaity Xt the sport. 1 | Miller . Huggins To: Be Feted Cincinnati, Oct. 2 has been set by, the committce in charge as the'date for the testimonial dinner to be given by Cincinnati ‘fans in shonor of Miller Huggins, manager of the New York Yankeés, world’s champions, who. is a Cincin- jiatian. On~that night hundreds of fans almost all, of them knowing the diminutive lawyer-p lay e r-manager personally, will gather at a down- town hotel. and sing the praises of their, guest. he committee extends a general Witation to all baseball fans to at- cine Breaks: Lore Wagner Record * be York, Oct. A — 24.—Ty Cobb, fiery pitot of the Detroit Tigers, hi ded ‘sie ee sleet to his-all-time batting rec- ek @ mark almost Jost sight of in je closing battles ‘of the season and the smoke worlds | series ronslict that we and to the credit of Another record which the Detroit | ager pried loose from the former | hortstop was the making of yest number of hits. Wagner drives while 188 » 1923 season, him 3, CRIPPLE SAYS HIS CONDITION I$ BLESSING Hpectues as a Result Leading Authority on Anesthesia Prominent Editor BY DON E, P. DROHAN. BA. Service Writer, ‘Avon Lake, 0., Oct. 24.—A tooth- ach® or a headache and most of us are at war with the rest af the world. But here you'll find a smiling little spending his days in a wheel chair, wno regards a chronic ai tivn, such as his, the greatest ble ing Providence ean bestow upon any- one. And from that invalid chair he’s at humanitarian cripple, para- lyzed in evel carrying on the work he began when he hung out his shingle in Cincinnati cae decade. Despite his affliction — rather el cause of it, he insists—Dr. F, H, Me- | Mechan has become one of the| world’s foremost authorities on } anesthes | In addition, he’s one of the most | prominent medical writers of the day. He's editor of various profes- | sional journals and secretary of the | jciation of America Medical | Editors, Good “Samaritan.” i But he’s more of a philosopher, | more of a Good Samaritan, than he | an or editor, And that is | cting a bit from his ability | mine ripens . “A. perfectly | heaithy fellow quickly Becomes. ai | satis 'sed with his environment. It’s, %erent with the afflicted man. He | a be happy anywhere, no matter | at his surroundings are. This trouble of mine came only | a few months after my marriage. It:| followed my ministrations to a pneu-.| fnonia patient. It’s deforming arth- | riti “I've undergone tions. I've had some fi perience with an one reason I know something about | them.” Two-thirds of the hospitals in the country don’t know how ‘to admin- ister anesthetics properly, Dr, Me- Mechan contends, “All over the country, lives are being sacrificed by anesthetists who | “don't know their ‘business. But a| better day is coming.” ; Dr. MeMcechan says he lost the use of his hands writing letters to! the surgeon general’s office during: the war, trying to convince the| medical officers that anesthetics should be administered in. the base hospitals by doctors who knew their | i | 1 | “I won the battle,” he declares. “But it was too late. J couldn't use my typewriter after the fight was over.” Since then his wife has served as his secretary. “She's the brains of the partner- the doctor maintains, I'm only the hands and ” she insists. i: Chronic Traveler, Fot ‘several years Dr. MeMechan has been secretary of the Associated Anesthetists of the United States and Canadg., Annually he travels from ‘coast to coast, addréssing medical ebnventions.. Mrs. McMechan, of s Zev, belonging to Harry Sinclair, . ina race at a mile and a half at Belmont Park, N. Y., in the first da gold cup; the losex, $20.000. American oil magnate, triumphed. | ZEV LEADS AT START Warl Sandg kicked Zev (on the inside) into the lead the very ceed ‘ Here you see the American entry the starting barrier getting the Jump on the dnglish Derby winner. suburb, who daily murmurs a prayer f | of thanksgiving that he’s not “like | other m Not in spirit of the Pharisee, but as one resigned to jthe will of the Giver of all good! if | GERMANS STAND AS BAND PLAYS FRENCH ANTHEM rich, Switzerland, Oct. re was a tense moment dur the recent congress in. this the 1 national ii |when German and Austrian delegates jmet the French representatives—but it came out all right, for the Ger- mans arose and stood at attention while a band played the “Marseil- laise,’ the national anthem, of Franc: It was the first cycling ¢ nce the war, and envoys of all three countries down around the same table to dicuss the sport from an international standpoint. It _de- volved upon Mr, J. Breton, chief delegate for rance, to make the ddre It is the custom, for thé band 5 up the national anthem of the speaker's country as soon as he concludes. While Mr. Breton- was speaking the predominant thought was, what |.will the Germans do when the band | plays “Allons enfants de la patrie”? | What they did was to stand up, as” did everyone else, and remain stiffly | at attention until the music stopped. | | Everybody was greatly relieved. Sports are destined to bring the nations of Europe together on friendly terms quicker than tht ex- change of sugar coated acid notes,” Mr. Breton said later in the day, pointing to Walter Rutt, the veteran cyclist from Gérmany, chatting in an amiable manner with »Gabriel Poulain, the forty-year-old champion of France, MAN SMOTHERED. Aneta, N. D., Oct. 24.—William Me- innon, 60, was smqthered to death in a gravel pit near here, the gravel caving in on him and completely turying him alive while he was at work. Charles Lippert, his employ- er made a desperate effort td rescue McKillon but was unsuccessful, Beulah Lignite Coal is Best $4.75 per ton. Order now PY gia Transfer Co. Phone CHAMPIONS ALL course, always orapanies, him, h indeed, a real al st. Hit smile imcontagious. | ~ And the birds and the flowers, even the often angry waters of Lake tie; upon whose shores. he - has? even t0 While away his remaining ars, seem to laugh with him. So when: you're feeling, out of; ; just think of the little smiling Uae in “this | ‘quiet Cleveland By NEA Pa itl the came wi ‘pion eat thteo mot bere planned. Merlin, was a magician of world renown, And @ mirror was his stock in trade. Merely by glancing into this marvelous mirror he-eould learn anything he desired to’ know. He was able to réad’ the tisk, solve the , present and foretell the future with startling accuracy. Do you realize that every day you have a sort of Merlin’s Mirror placed. in your hands?: You will find it in the advertising columns of this paper. ry Look intq,the or ang you will find just the initiation you want on many things that concern you deeply — things that have 4 do with your own:personal eomfort, con-- venience and every-day efficiency. And bear in. mind that each adver-. tisement reflects as faithfully asa. mirror, the character of the organ- ization, the product, and the ideals that inspired it. It is an axiom of business that un- truthful. advertising: does: not pay: Honest motives: must actuate the con- sistent advertiser. The man who in- vests real money in building a “repu- \tation. for hitaself and his merchan- disc ckunot afford to risk any of it by leading. his patrons to-expect some- = thing he dots not supply. ‘ Read’ the advertisements to keep yourself informed. ¥ou-can: rely on the information they give you. the advertisemen ts

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