The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 3, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE SIX } ZEV, MY OWN MEET TODAY IN BIG RACE Conquerer of Papyrus Has Chance to Become Greatest Morey Winning Horse MET AT LATONIA Press.) Zev, winner of of cond time e state of h birth toda with a prospect of emerging us tt world’s greatest money winning ray horse of all time j 'The strapping brown colt, owned by Harry F. Sinclair of New York, tor, goes to the or able Amer. jean rival, Rear Adn Grayson’s My Own in the Latonia championship stakes worth $50,000 to the victor. Zev, if returned the vietor, will become the greatest money winning the horse in history, ng Isinglyglass of and Ksar of Fran the game developed there. winners of great sums/on the race} The Bismarck lineup at the start courses of the world. : left end, Robidou; left tackle, to date has won a total of | Fitch; left. guard, Kollman; center, $ than $15,000. gre Benson; right Anderson; tl ’War's winnings, whi right tackle, 2 right end, re ; held the American money | Perkins; quarter, Olson; left~ half, winning record. ete Aiaailed Day; ae (finiberk, The races at the gruelling test of pert. Substitutes were Garske for Dee eer ececre svuclling teat ot on, Erickson for Robidou; ree quarters attracted ters in addition to Zev and My Own, none of which, in the opinion of experts, has a chance to measure with them. Other en- trants are Rialto, owned by Mrs. Payne Whitney of New Memoriam, the property Weiddmann of New Port, K; jor Hay, whose owner is Hay, one of the presiding stewards atthe Latoni. eting, whose turf establishment nt Frankfort, Ky je the Roneoas colt in the Kentucky victory and against Papyrus, will be in the | saddle on Zev this afternoon while | Earl Poole will ride My Own} RENAULT BEATS FLOYD JOHNSON) Secures Technical Knockout in the 15th Round New York, Nov. 3.—Jack Renault, rugged Canadian heavyweight, tled Floyd Jonnson, Iowa battler, in- to defeat last night in the fifteenth and la nd of a furious, specta- cular n Madison Square ar corded a technical knock- second tossed a ring after the Iowan twice in the final adian’s batter- tho help- z ashes about d, was on his feeet when the staggering back by instinct y he had lost only after most courageous ring witnessed in the historic Garden arena The finish came with but 3 of the final round left Johnson, by sheer grit, had p to weather a terrific bom for the last seven rounds. The young Towan was on the verge of a knock- out in both the ninth and tenth rounds, groggy under Renault's cool, merciless attack, but just when it seemed he was about to go down, he rallied spectacularly and actually fought Renault off his feet with de- termined, if futile rushes, in the 11th, 12th and 13th round. Renault, jarred but app hurt by the furry of his kept a steady strean ‘of ing from deep gashes end cam to the fr. one of the exhibitions ever rently un- 's blows ood flow- under John ral Cary ‘.} fea | of ripping h§n. The Canadian unleashed a slash- ing drive in the 14th, sending John- sen about the ring under a fusillade hooks and uppercuts to and body. Somehow John- aged to weather the st 1 in the 15th round he tried ga rally, but his punches bounded aul, harmlessly and he soon attack, Only the Instinct of 2 hting ie Johnson on his BAAS. SECONDS WIN, 26 TO 0 Take Wilton High Team Into Camp in Game Played There School's second Iton high team afternoon and re- a score of 26 to 0. touchdowns, one in the first, in the third and two in. the scores, kicked in the last rth accounted for the goals two cd mostly Wilton team was its third game, football be- sport for the high school. center, was the straight cd the fighting qualities of the ton team and declared there the making ‘a good team there. ¢ tuken up for the first time this year in a number of h schocls north of here, and the 1 athletic authorities hope to see} son’s left eye, his nose, lips and'| outstanding; ilton team. ef the Bismarck the lecals to Wilton,| ATIRIAM HOPKINS When Is a Flapper : Not a Flapper? for Boelter; Byrne for Day. The Bismarck high first team is playing Garrison high here today. WOULD TAKB ZEV TO FRANCE. (By the A ted Press.) Paris, Nov n offer to match Epinard against Zev in a race to be run in France next April or May will be for ded to Harry Sinclair by the French Jockey club should Zev defeat My Own and the other cracks at Latonia this afternoon, EAGLES BEING SLAUGHTERED Bird Which Is Symbol of Liberty By Harry B. Hunt _ NEA Service Writer Washington, Nov. 3—The Ameri- can eugl mbol of liberty, free- dom, independence, is threatened with extincti If ent inroads on these birds are permitted to continue, the only| place where future generations may find them, according to the American Nature Association, will be on the great American dollar. And—strange paradox—it wil be the dollar that wil have been re- sponsible for the eagle's disappear- ance! Wholesale Slaughter For up in A a, Which is the last foothold wher merican eagles are ‘|now to be found in ang numbers on American soil, these birds of free- dom are being slaughtered by the thousands for a territorial bounty of 50 cents each. Under pressure by the salmon can- ning interests in Alaska, the terri- torial legislature da law offer- ing half a dollar for each eagle kill: ed. The law provides that the gun-| ner ean get his money by cutting Voth feet from the bird and produc-| ing, them, together with an affidavit,| before any Alaskan commissioner. | Since 1917, 36,000 eagle feet, cut froin 18,000 birds, have been checked and accounted for on the bounty rec- RUTHLESSLY, ; Observers See Extinction of 4 love you, £ Miriam Hopkins Finds That It’s When She’s In Love Not even a flapper works at flapping all the time. At least so says Miriam Hop- kins, who earns her living by flapping six nights and two after- noons a week in “Little Jessie James,” the Broadway musical comedy of the moment. “Aren’t old folks silly?” mused Miriam, dimpling into the smile that’s already famous up and down the great white way. “Can’t love you,’ Isall that Z ean Say-—m they see that flapperism is only skin deep—that is, clothes’ and manners deep—and that when anything really happens to a girl, like falling in love, she becomes as old-fashioned as her most Co- lonial ancestor?” . “I Love You, that a super- ~ modern flapper sings in ‘Little Jessie James,’ is the magic that sooner or later will transform any flapper into a stammering, blushing sample of. prehistori¢ girlhood. “And yet tie silly old folkg keep hiring psycho-analysists te explain their unfamiliar young to them!” ords. .But, says the Nature Maga- zine, broadcasting the warning of the association— Blame Packers “It seems safe to say that instead of 18,000, probably 25,000 American eagles have been killed since the campaign began. Some were wound- ed and not caught. Many have fall- en into inaccessible places where they could not be reached. A large number have been shot for sport by people who have not collected the bounties.” The depredations of the eagle on the Alaskan salmon industry, these nature enthusiasts\ insist, has been largely over-stated by the packers who sponsired the bounty law. ..“At certain seasons of the year,” they say, “fish in Alaska are abun- dant and the bald eage undoubtedly lives largély on salmon. But it is a well-known fact that salmon die af- ter spawning. “The banks of streams are. at times lined with the bodies\af spawn- ed-out fish. And it is these, in great part, that are carried away and eat- en by these birds.” Ask Schools’ Aid An appeal to save the eagle, Amer- ica’s symbol of iberty, is to be broad- cast in the hope of stirring public demand for the repeal of Alaska’s bounty law. Bulletins wil be sent school principals and elasses will be asked to unite in protest against the destruction of America’s national bird. “The eagle stands firm before very earthly power except the hand ‘Of man,” the association points out. “He is off symbol of courage, our ideals in the future to be représent- ed by a defunct species? “Grant that the eagles do diminish the salmon pack by a few cases each year. With the recorded slaughter of 18,000 eagles in five years Alas- kans may be sure there-are not enough left to affect their supply of fish and game. “The eagle, symbol of liberty; must continue to live under the Stars and Stripes!” Apple Pomace Equal To Corn Fodder Washington, Nov. 3.—Apple pom- ace, the residue of ground apples after the cider has been pressed out, can be profitably used as food for wintering cattle, the Department of Agriculture announces. Thousands of tons of this pomace is wasted each year.» When moist pomace can be used freshror ensiled it yields a cat- tle food comparable with corn silage, Its most*profitable utilization depends upon its preservation by dehydration and producing it as a gommercial food. Feeding trials:with dairy cows proved dried-apple pomace to be equal pound for pound of dry mat- ter to godd corn silage. The mate: was fed wet and replaced the corn silage in-a ratign including grain and hay. , ee LARGE EAGLE SHOT. Sheerwond, N, D., Nov. 8.—A_ bald eagle which was shot by Ralpe Taute of Grover measured 6 feet 10 inches from the tip of one Se to the other, The bird is one of very few that |, emblem of freedom. Are Amerlean | are known to exist in this section. aie etter BLUEN' a's column 4 the first race for the Fisherman's oe off Halifax. Photo shows an wat fe ajrplen. WINS FIRST! e in the sky.’ CE Cas ET Courtly Sir Walter Raléigh—cynic, ~ ~ savant and first-class fighting man— desired a favor from good Queen Bess. A puddle in the queen’s path made his opportunity. Across it he flung his costly cloak. Her majesty, Te at his devotion, trod.on, dry shod, and Sir Walter’s unique self- advertising produced results. : Though most advertising is less ‘spectacular today, ‘it is far. more serviceable. . every-day pathways of each ‘one. of us. Because of advertising, luxuries - and necessities that dice would have Roe s eon worth a king’s ransom are yours at little cost. Advertising pits mer- i chant against merchant, sition : against artisan, manufacturer against manufacturer. This esc tition brings out the beat there is i in Shee everything for your poragnel hanchh You wouldn’t know bout many : boots. of modern life were it not for advertising. That is why you are not faking full: ‘advantage of the better things i in life today if you consistent- e “ly overlook whe advertisements. fread advertising and : keep : serkitenerrmunmateKce mcr asmmcunmtvendntt Hileises. senescent OPO SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1923 It smooths out the * i ara SV Wa by 1tiw « Grogs reast of the times

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