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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Sports FAMOUS COACH SUCCUMBS TO. INDIGESTION Haughton Dead One After He Is Removed To a Hospital Strib run was rest of [nu capable of appa the game EES DOUBLE _ | 2’s Conquerer Forced Into Retirement by Eye — {in th n game is -reaching effect, ms on the Hlinois sel re worrying more than | about him Trouble d ing game of the season coh ska line sewed him up pretty well. Then came the Mich- | acre, is ured able one of the coached by player, He is one of the Zuppke, It is a certainty rack his brain for ito preserve Grange Zuppke realizes t star like h look mi tness. well that a £ full hty good. Zappke has ale hand in ¢ 1924 season Last showed his pr m for the Grange was the jet the ball to Gra thought. He s practically every et tall, he w the receiver forward — pass. su Tine target for the Last year Grange ran wide two da eleven had ad efeat to Wile Col | his former his teams to with the 1916 ranked ridiron histor ts real te pared hi Saturday at Army and Dartmouth the ost ambition it b had be t nex Corn also on which foot- ia in were ed since bal ed at Colum! 1915, Drew Record Salary Haughton te April 1923, ne Cotumbia of m the ason, Hi been for record Prior footh char to have thought to be cont $15,000 a for x football couch ivent had beer price Columbia the worked slowly to| Is, His and his 1 ng. The e particular at Pennsyivan howed in e Williams game eleven displayed k which proved to be of the present se: h_ possibilities reputation a foot-| established at Har vard unive where he took charge another ailing football situation in 1908 and built up the most re- markable system known to th up to that period. From the time that his teaching took hold — until 1916, when he left, the Harvard cle- | vens we umong the most formida- ble in the east. His 1914 and 1915 teams ad to Yale most] crushing « Pr rec the hands of to e new ¢ the fundam y was fair suc- 24 only pre this y defeat squad wa ly the 10 to 7 two weeks provement, bu the Columbia pow a the b son and heavy Haughton ball some coach ww: uistered su ts ived a Cambridge rival, ti Vi MeFarland i y a retired tin H ond, In ital Alexa Stirling de th tournament gol she has quit Edith ( Dexter, ster mini her th brother team in this country. brother, id Jack Britton on “pickers” among the ri is seldom on a lo: the stars. of best | ack | ni Tris Speaker is one manager who encourag big le golf among ard has done more to put boxing on a respectable footing than any man in the by Mike Gibbons has turned and is writing the history o: carecr for a magazine, hi Two of the Washington champs, Muddy Ruel and Sam Rice, | made the trip abroad with the White | Sox and Giants. i Gene Sarazen is numbered among} the big army of golf pros who will] spend the winter, if nothing else, in| Flori | joslin of Washington, in home runs in the world ‘Goos hitting thre: series, tied the record held by Babe | Ruth. 1 i { i Batters with fat averages do not always shine in the world — serie Stanley Harris, for instance, not a great hitter, won three games through his batting efforts. Izzy Zarakov is the name of one of Harvard’s best-looking — backs.! Once upon a time so unusual a name wouldn’t have had much of a chance to break into a Harvard lineup. Babe Ruth says the Yankees are the one best bet to win the Ameri- can League pennant for 1925, He says last season's failure was just the tonic needed. Major Cavanaugh, Boston College coach, says the “Poles” make the greatest football players, Rather a dangerous statement, since his team} is largely made up of fighting Irish. Dr, Eddie Q’Brien of Boston is the most sought after grid official in the} country. He is generally regarded | as the best versed man ix the coun- try in the football rules and always applies them with good judgment. Since Cornell’s long string of vic- tories has finally been broken by the Williams defeat, Coach Doble must win the Pennsylvan | Billy Evans Says play \bench real | thin | thin: © | threat, VERSATILITY ing led by Lee Frank, one of the y Last year Frank was guard ‘Jform sk ir game to have This year hé’s backi at. guard, at all Through sheer speed, aided nterference, hes tried leave rival tacklers in his wake This y Grange has perfected ¢ the ball, He dof running wide, has him cutting in. Grange longer a one-threat athlete but seve much to the con- ation to Zuppke no STORIES ARE SPREAD Bismarck High in Poor Shape For Saturday’s Game bat- | ent bout won of h ling, stories emanated from the Bismarek High School football with the contest with for the southwestern school championship y at 3 o'clock here. only comparison available is ‘in the games with Mandan, Bismarck | beat Mandan 6 to 0 and 14 to 6 while || Dickinson lost to Mandan, 6 to 0, aturday, after the team | progressed with training, Dick- ie-|inson defeated Mandan,xg0 to 6. E | It is doubtful if cither Shepard or y that! Boelter will be able to pl: tur 5 iday, on account of ingrid whit {Bender and Scroggins both dee in |poor condition and may not start. game} Tough luck has followed Bismarek itplayed!all season. Register and Hillman, win, yet)two of the most promising members was hard-|of the team, were put out of the would indicate. /game by injuries early in the in whieh | son, in kickoff) ‘The Dickinson team will arrive in touchdown, | Bismarek Saturday monring, and it complexion of}is understood a band of rooters will come, fully expecting Dickinson to player to turn{cop the district championship. And no = as wa] SE ATPLE AND touchdown, b district set for and deserved n of to uperiority core f the da: ards for entire ° teh me me SECOND TIME remarkable onal WL havoe an eleven, It tended oh Pr substitute on the cattle, of Oct. 28.—Seattle, cham- the Pacific Coast League, . Paul, winners of the Amer- Jican Association pennant, were to jeppose euch other here today in the jsecond of a series of games to de- |termine the championship of the {minor leagues. The Indians lost the {first tilt with the Saints Sunday, 12 3 to 4. The winner of five out of ie |nine cont takes the’ champion- Illinois |ship. It rained yesterday. Mich t ee a ; STRIKE-OUT run caused every Michigan team to Grange any oth: on the gridiron, them G the field, ev The m n haunte the rest with them that ughout player wa dee mue obl No that doubt of Il, Oct, 28.—A ndoor baseball is wave been set in the Ca jindoor Jeayue last night when nest Rink whiffed 21 men in a 7-in- ning game. Cairo, strike-out To be- ingce Ww con of that £ HIS STRONG POINT Walter Camp's task’ will be casy | this fall. 1 he has to do is name ‘ and his All-America jeleven is picke | It is said Epinard made a lot of friends/ in this country and geess most of them are book-makers. Modern football n game. In the case of Grange {yeu can never be certain whether ‘he will run 80 or 90 yards for a | touchdown, Zeppelins are all swelled up with j their own importance but unlike | accidental champions they know no | better. wouldn’t come to also a matter of putting cup never | The mountain | Mahomet. It is | record that the ; comes to the bi | Fulton has been matched with Firpo. The idea being to see whether Fulton will fall forward or back- ward. Coaches trying to figure out a | way to stop Grange can sympatiiize with pitchers who spend the summer | months hunting Babe Ruth's weak- ness, Connie Mack coughed up $100,600 for a left handed pitcher, It’s ,#hout time Connie was taking some- | thing for his cough. | The frost is on the pumpkin but it is nothing compared to the frost j that has settled on boxing in New LEE FRANK | York, This year's Pittsburg eleven is be-/ Benny Leonard does not intend to fight again as a lightweight and the boys wonder what he means by again. x eee ost versatile linesmen in the east. used from end and played with uni- Nl throughout ;the campaign. ent throughout the! For that reason | higan did not play as well as it is} Incidentally the success of Grange | going to Other ever | football | me's greatest. | most resourceful mentors in the game, Bob | that Zuppke will} and_means| Grange can make his| ap | RECORD MADE i will be foreclosed by a sale of the] eeeeeerammanmem 2 The Nut Cracker —— we | is a very uncer- | Beating the Army has come to be} a custom with Notre Dame like, of Mr, and, Mrs, Stanley- Faraizel Women speakers from every) the flying squadron sent into Maine | walk in life have volunteered their| did much to swing the woman’ services to campaign for the Re-| vote in the state election. In every publican party. They are carry-| address delivered by women speak- ing the message of the achteve-lers the fact is béMg driven home ments of Coolidge and Dawes and! that there are 27,000,000 women \the Republican party from coast/ eligible to vote in November and to coast, some addressing as many, every effort should be made to see _ as four audiences a day. {that these women vote. There | Mrs. Florence Riddick Boys, who! will be 2,762,475 young women lis routing the women speakers eligible to vote, who will assume {from the national headquarters,! the duties of citizenship for the Chicago, has enrolled in the first time this year. neighborhood of 200 speakers,| Pictured above are three out- while Helen Varick Boswell, of the| standing speakers who are cam- speakers’ bureau, Eastern head-| paigning in the middle west, Mrs. quarters, New York City, reports, Harriett Taylor Upton of Warren, | more than 150 active speakers. |0.; Mrs. Charles Sewell of Otter- A flying squadron of speakers'bein, Ind., and Miss Eleanor Is being sent into states where the, Barker of Indianapolis, Ind. contest is the hottest, and reports) Mrs. Upton, who 1s the principal | show that many a convert is being speaker at a series of campaign won as a result of their oratory. Political Schools conducted in the Mrs. Guy P. Gannett, National state of Missouri this month, led Vammitteawoman from Maine. xava the Republican women of the standing on four ace through the nose. left hand Sun became caught in the gears J of a gasoline engine. The boyt was | wearing a mitten at the time. his when his hand Tom Sharkey denies that he was fihter of the old 001 IN BIG TRADE Chieago, Oct. The Chicago N: club acquired Walter second baseman; Charley Gsimm, first baseman, and Wilbur Cooper, lefthand pitcher, all of the} Pittsburgh Nationals, in exchan; ze | tor Vie Aldridge, righthand pitche George < m, second baseman, and Albert Nichus, first baseman the latter tecently purchased by the Cubs from Chattanooga, No money was involved in the deal. he trade is the biggest of th ter season and according to President ; William Veeck, of ‘the Cubs, one o} the largest ever put*through in th National league. win-| | NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE: | CLOSURE SALE BY AD- \ VERTISEMENT | | Notice is hereby given that that, certain mortgage executed and de-! livered by Wilhelm — Frederickson! and Christina A, Frederickson, his wife Mortgagors to August A. John-: son, Mortgagee dated the 5th day! of November 1919 and filed for cord in the office of the Register} of Deeds of Burleigh County, North | Dakota on the 14th day of November 1919 and recorded in Book 144 of Mortgages on page 528 und assigned by said mortgagee by _an_ instru. ment in writing to N. O. Ramstad i dated the 29th day of November 1919 and filed for’ record in said; office of the Register of Deeds of; Burleigh County North Dakota on| the 24th day of June 1924 and re. corded in book 175 of assigaments on page 145 and by him assi ‘to Martin Bourgois on the d_day | | of i June 1924 and recorded in book of assignments on page 144 cigarettes said premises in such mortgage des- | cribed at the front door of the! court house in the city of Bismarck! in the county of Burleigh and State! of North Dakota at the hour of ten] o'clock in the forenoon of the 7th! day of November 1924 to satisfy! | the amount due upon said mortgage jon the day of sale. The premises | | described in said mortgage and | which will be sold to satisfy the! same are situated in the county of | | Burleigh and State of North Dakota and described as follows to wit: East half (E%%) of southwest quarter (SW%) and west half (Ws) of southeast quarter (SEM) of section twenty eight | (28) township one hundred forty | one (141) north of range eighty | That the interest due on the note secured by said mortgage is past due and unpaid and the assignec| has elected to and has declared the whole sum due. There will be due on such mortgage at the date of sale the sum of $1969.88 in addition to the costs and expenses of sale. MARTIN BOURGOIS Assignee of the Mortgage. |! F, E, McCURDY, Attorney for Assignee, Bismarek, N. D. (9-30—10-7-14-21-28—11-4) MANDAN NEWS NEW RURAL ROUTE Authority has been obtained by Postmaster A. B. Welch forthe es- tablishment of still another new rural mail route out of Mandari | which will serve the well settled and | prosperous community of the Cus- | ter Flats country and neighborhooa |to the south of that locality. ‘The |Tength of the route will be 35.5 ‘miles and deliveries will be made | tri-weekly, leaving Mandan on Mon- days, Wednesdays and Fridays. at | 8:30 in the mornings. FINGER LOST Stanley, Jr twelve year old- son fered the loss of the first finger | i i for pipes and Women Speakers Volunteer. Services To Campaign For Republican Party; Every Walk In Life Is Representea nese scnits country for four years. She was appointed vice chairman of the Republican National Committee in the 1920 campaign, which office she held until the Cleveland @con- ention last June, when she was succeeded by Mrs. Alvin T. Hert, present leader. Mrs. Sewell, the wife of a real dirt farmer, is well known through the west and middle west for her work with farm women. She ts heading the squadron of women speakers, which {s carrying the mes- sage of the Republican party to women living in the rural districts, While Miss Barker has never been an aspirant or candidate for political office she has always been an active worker in the intcrests of legislation beneficial to women and children and for the upholding of the principles of the Republican party. She is a practicing attorney in Indianapolis. AMBER BEADS With the beige colored hat or dress, earrings of amber and a large string of amber beads are charming accessorie TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1924 -, Texas Cattle Lost To Foot and Mouth Houston, Tex., Oct. 27.—Highly valued, purebred Brahama cattle are being sacrificed with scrubs in an effort to check the spread of foot and mouth diseases in this region. Thousands have already been slaughtered and, although there has j been a lull in the fight against the plague, government inspectors are prepared with aifle and poison to destroy additional herds where the slightest infection is discovered. This is the second foot and mouth [outbreak in the United States this year. The first was in California. The infection in Texas is believed to have started some time during September, by its entarnce from South America through a gulf port. Galveston and Harris counties, and parts of Brazoria and Ford Bnd counties were first to be quaran- tined, and this form of control has i spread to other districts. Expert on Job Dr. Marion Imes, government vet- vrinary expert connected with’ the Bureau of Animal Industry, i: in charge of the foot and mouth erad cation work. He has with him government inspectors, Texas veter- ns and a corps of Texas rang- who are trying to keep.) the sgue from spreadin: The greatest loss is believed to have been incurred by Rev. William | Stat astor of the First Presbyterian church of Houston, and one of the leading Brahma cattle breeders in the United States. It was on Dr. Jacobs’ ranch, 20 miles seutheast of here, that the disease is said to shave been discovered. $100,000 Loss Dr. Jacobs’ herd of 450 Brahmas was the first to be condemned. It contained stock ranging in value from $2000 each to $5000, and was valued at $100,000 by its owner. With the rest of the herd went Syrio, considered the best Brahma Bull in America, for which Dr. Jacobs says he would not have taken $5000. Besides shooting and burying in- fected herds, the government men ale spreading poisoned bait freely through the territory for the de- struction of coyotes and other rov- ing animals that may act as germ carriers. POLISH CROPS’ LOW More than a third reduction in this year’s bread grains in Poland, from last year’s crops, is reported. Potato production, however, has increased and may, to some extent, offset the cereal deere: . Pipe tobacco that really is pipe tobacco diiaed 2 —rich,yet mild 22 2 SINGING MARY Mrs. Mary Clark of Huntington, W. Va, has gained — prominence through her original methods of conducting her campaign for secre- tary of state. Her stumping cam- paign is unique in “that she com- bines mountain-folk songs with po- litical oratory. People call her “Mountaineer Mary CHILD CRUSHED BY WAGON Mapes, N. D., Oct. 28—Wallace, 5 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Au- gust -Estvold, killed when was run over by a wagon which he had been playing. indicated that he tried to climb upon a wheel and caused the wagon to move and roll down an incline, with the result and that he was thrown under a wheel und crushed w he around It was ‘““Wellman's Method” does the trick ae a2 Coarser cut, too se —Rough Cut 2 thats why it burns slower - and smokes cooler =e No tins, 2 ked in foil herefore 10¢