Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE SIX FARGO HIGH'S HS | “TRAM EASILY IS SUPERIOR Defeats Minot High School's | Scrappy Eleven Here For Title, 26 to 0 | VICTORY IS EARNED) Fargo Team Wins Praise For! Machine-Like Manner in Which it Plays There were about 2,300 people | at the championship high school foctball game here Friday after- | noon, Coach Edgar Houser of the Bismarck club said after check- ing the returns today. h school students were admitted for half price, but the receipts were about $1,500, It ix expect- od that the al high school athletic association will net $360 to $400 on the game, the ex- t amount not being known at this time. Fargo High S ball machine, wi if State Champions, when Minot, budd ing forth with her first champion ship hope in eight years, went down to a 26-0 defeat, in the state titular match, staged on the local field yes- terd: afternoon, | Excellent generalship, coupled with speed, used to the right advant- ccounted for the one-sided vic ry for the Fargo eleven. The Magic City eleven fought gamely to the e but their efforts were for naught, | nst the driving attack of the | ol's superipr foot- in crowned wo touchdowns in the first quar- ter, put the game on ice for Fargo. Fi long pa nd ran| r the first counter, hing line bueks accounted touchdown. Minot in the second und. third q and held the Midgets scoreless the last quarter added two more | d Boles Fargo's total to ds second tate posi- red-headed Dunnell was the man for Minot while Kelly and Ams ler, showed up well in the line, H The Minot team was loyally sup- ported by fans, who came to Bis- ck several hundred strong with and. There were many Fargo rooters h Iso. fine for football, It ate that the game was , as there wa ported to Ree te thiecineh ‘ot snow on the ground in Fargo and it! several degrees colder in Minot | in in Bism The 00 hereeand the fact! ame was a financial sue- ally pleasing to the moogeme) nt. Bis- | supported the | rooters from Fargo, dan, teachers and people from many other towns swelled the crowd, Thi attendance might have been large. had not some people in nearby towns | been in doubt as to whether the game! would have been played here. i HORNSBY MAY — NOT I BE SOLD St. Louis, president of the today n Breadon, | Nationals, | denied that Rogers Hornsby, lugger, would be traded to the | jonals for Hack Miller, and about “$100,000 in h, Mr, Breadon added that every in- dication was that it was impossibfe to get a satisfactory trade involv- ing Hornsby and consequently it was | ely that thestar would be back at | nd base for the Cardinals next season, KRAUSE WINS Ellendale, N. D., Nov. 24.—Bat Krause of Fargo gave Bennie Farness | of Montevideo, Minn., an awfulalac- ing in every round of their “en round encounter, here last night. Krause closed one of Farness’ eye early in the fight and it hampered! - ‘Farness’ work. Krause’s work was so pleasing to the fans that thé promoters will] match Krause with some tougher op-| ponent in the near future. . FRAZIER AT GAME Boston, Nov. 24.—United States Senator Lynn J, Frazier of North Da-|, kota, Whogvisited Governor Cox at the ‘state Nduse yesterday, wil] at- tend. the Harvard-Yale football game today. The senator, in his younger days, was a football star, having been captain of the University of North Dakota eleven, for two years, HALL, LEROY DRAW Fargo, Nov. 24.—Roscoe Hall. of Des" Moines and, “Russie LeRoy of Fargo, _ lightweights, fought ten slashing rounds to a draw at the au- citorium Jast evening before a small but appreciative crowd. Wi ig was a real ete a i For 15 HEFTY HARVARD HOPES OUGH, —UPP. ARD. RIGHT, DU st of Harvard wen fro anner that marked ithe Blue's w the ANe LOWER » Harvard will enter the ggles, with at inceton, but not in the con- er the Tigi Harvard 1f-24-iw hopys for great things from the athletes pictured a , Greenough, Busuman, Hubbard and Dunker, oie mee | . aaa scrap and the us many opinions | in. Call evenings after 5 o'clock, to the outcome are possible but | time Sunday, 405 5th. Phone after thinking the whole thing ever, a draw is the best that can be done | pare for either boy. wa East 3 St. Paul, } -Formal an-| in nouncement that he had purchased | a “substantial” interest in the Min- | neapolis Baseball club of the Amer- | able an Association was here to- | by Michael J. Kelley, for several years manager of the St Paul club of the same league. The ama in the trans- action ublie purch six s several of wh Belden, president, and lake, secretary, will retain shares of stock, ae Reports of the change by Kelley . Paul fans. e distinet peri- ods Kelley been with the Saints and he had won five pennants, John W. Norton, president of the St. Paul club, was surprised to learn of the deal. Up to noon today, he said, he had not heen officially ad vised by and until he does ke will withhold formal ‘comment. “I was of tht opinion that Kelley |! t° and I had agreed on terms for him ae me to t. Poul wext year,” said | P¢ | Norton, He would not indicate at | Mit this time what steps would be taken to select his successor. Kelley will d t the Millers from the yeni next s ing th cutive’ Petrolle of Jamestcwn won the deci- Jin their ten round bout here last night, Petrolle did all the leading and kept the St. Paul lad on the de-| The | fensive. i of Fargo knocked ou Joe [ot their semi- andup. Tvo Late To Ciassity |FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room in modern ‘home, 404 10th St. Phone 914. / 124-3 FOR RENT—Room in modern home, suitable for two, $14 2nd S Ths Phone 544- 1-24-30 | Ae a sure financi in the trust -A fine overcoat, priced Bo: FOR RE Coolidge Kelley of the transaction; might properly the pre: Madden, y ressonable, at’ the Chicago | phig i aie Shining Parlor. 11-24-3t | 628,960, FOR R two-room apartment, furnished, outs'de entran Main, for two. Washington, feels that government at a vate interest r that the Uni Sta assured of a war time supply of te, and a peace time supply of | the day when the committed: ap- cheap fert r. White House officials in present- statement “of the jew, today and Representative Illinois, were harmony in the matter of leg Billy | Which would bring about * | tion on the Warrior river in Alabama} the spokésman with dignity, dis- sion over Irish Kennedy of St. Paul|f 8 duplicate of the Gorgas stream! playing a large, flat slab of stone power plant recently sold to the Ala- bama Power Company. ident 396, Golden Vall "INTO MILLERS. T—One renovated Ph statement a BANK *CONDITIO: York, Nov. 11-24-1w nice front room modern home with light housekeeping privileges, suit- hone 1091-R, 11-24-tf£ furnished room. Phone 627-R. 11-24-3t WANTS SUPPLY OF NITRATE President Coolidge’ Interests | alone,” sald Kitty. Himself in Problem Nov, —President Muscle Shoals be operated by the 1 or disposed chief exe- asserted that construc- did not re whether Mr, Coolidge preferred gov- ernment or private operation of ‘the 1 the seventh round | Muscle Shoals propertie resented the president a: it was a matter of gre ancy for the United Stat s, but it rep- feeling that, st_import- to obtain supply nitrates apd that some 1 allowance should be made of either type of opcta- tion for extensive experimentation. 24.—The actual condit'on of clearing house banks and mpanics for the week showed 8 jh reserve of $10,108,53 1 decrease:insreserve of close' Tribune Want Ads Bring Results three, bac schedule, it ig po! (hy pect Penn ale be. ne tae of ing Day, and it looks <ing the first TI as soft, CRACK CORNELL GUARD fea naan like. a gi ore Dobie’s gresit.‘team wil be ranked .. While some ofxte experts | Soot Cornell has” it, as Bi payed: & hand- with -Colgcite, hes Algood defes No Tombstones for Kitty By CLARA DELAFIELD | elderly frau lived in a qoaint old-| | fashioned little cottage in an ob-| | scure nook of the great city. They! | had boughf it with their eavinss.| | They did not care engine noe] | Its being quaint; what they liked | about it was that it wae houtellike, | Retired peopla with a little tn-| come, they chatted ith. thelr | neighbors in equal circumstances | and had the time of their lives for} several months. The cottage had; been built ‘a century before; and ; the garret was all choked up with | trash, which some day Mrs. Salli: | |; Van was going to clear away. But! she delayed in the satisfaction of | practically sitting back and enjoy: | | ing comfort at last. Then came the dreadful persecn- | tion. A committee of leading citi-| zens called at the cottage obe, da¥. But let gitty Suliivan tell! \ ‘her own story. | “go far as I anactauhal Mike,” ) | she said, “there was a poet feller | named Grudge once lived here, and | they wants to buy the cottage et make a mooseum of it.” “Not in my time,” sald Mike, Not in mine,” echoed Kitty. _ They thought no more of it, but meanwhile the knowledge had been | spreading through the town. There was a sort of temporary craze about the poet Grudge, who had lived there in Obscurity so- long before. A manuscript of his changed’ hands for a thousand dol- lars. New editions of his books were being brought out. It would all have been very surprising and gratifying to Grudge, had he been alive, and perhaps his ironical shade did watch from beyond the Styx and wonder a little, Soon visitors began coming up to the cottage all day long, bepging | ; to see it. At first Kitty used to show them over. But she soon got tired of that. At last, when they | refused to understand that it~ was} a private home, she took to shut- ting the door in their faces. The climax came one day when the committee called again. But this Is anticipating things a little. Kitty had had her cleaning-up day | | at last. She went up into the gar-! ret and gathered together ‘at! the miscellaneous debris, bits of furni- ture, papers, old books, that had been lying there for countless years, and carried it all out to the back yard. There a fire was set by Kitty and | Mike, and in a short time the rub- | bish was consumed to cinders. | “Thank hivin now I'll have a clane house,” said Kitty. “'Tis a proud wumman ye/are,*| said Mike, looking at her in ad- miration over the bow! of his pipe. “'Tis a happy wumman Id be if them visitors wad let the hquse “Ye'd think they'd all gone mad with this talk | | | of Grudge or Fudge or whativver his name moight be.” “Spake no evil of the dead, wumman,” said her husband...» “Sure, I'm not blaming the lad at all at all,” said Kitty. ‘May. be if they'd treated him ia: | when he was alive they woul , feel their conscignces tickling so now.” Now we come back to theiclimax, | peared again at the door. Kitty an- swered their knock. Her face dark- ; ened when she saw them. “Now, it’s no use your coming here to see the rooms Grudge or Fudge lived in or died in—” she be- an. i “Madam, you mistake me,” sald with something engraved on it. “Mercy me, it, is a tombstone ye'd be putting up'to Grudge?” cried | Kitty. “No, madam, this Js a memorial tablet to state that Mr. Grudge, the | famous poet, once lived in this house,” rep’ the . spokeaman suavely. “It Will look neat and or- namental if it {s affixed just be- tween those two lower windows—” “So It’s fixing tombatones between my windows you'd be doing’ now, is) ut!” screamed Kitty. “Now git this through your dome, ,'Tis Sullizan lives here, not. Gru Last. Frl- day I went: up to the ettic ‘oe 1 come upon all of aeons 8 and poetry and books: and I burned ‘em in the And that’s the end of Grudge. So you can jus} reer take, Grudge’s tomb: stone out of With that, shee slammed the door. (@, 1923, Western Newspaper Union.) MADE TO MEASURE all wool SUITS AND OVERCOATS $82.50 Satisfaction Always, — National Tailors & Cleaners 5th St. Opposite McKenzie BISMARCK |, STORAGE: COMPANY Storage’ of all kinds. Rates .on application. DEAD CAR STORAGE $2.50 PER MO. Office With Lucky Strike Co. ‘Phone 82 909:Main St. Honest Mike Sullivan and his! |§ ¥ 1 . i Suddenly. ‘the flaming finger of a day. The course is clear. \ sg Advertising is analogous searchlight. beams across the pages of thi pointing out iia shining Gleaner just where to go for cieien you want, \ The Searchlight The mariner stands on the bridge of’ his ship, peering into the dark. searchlight “flashes out. The sur- rounding waters become bright. aS It throws its, broad ‘and how much vou will have es pay. In theY advertising columns you can-find the wares of every progres: : NN ‘to the S paper, sive merchant in town. You can read : < are =a, the offerings, compare the ‘op a yates, check up itis statements mith, your previous shopping experience, and then make your selections 0) Pi pte ee ad a ‘There's s : no wasted time, no hnaodlebe toot work, no ingonvenienee. t The - mariner wisely follows, the oh 4