Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | iN | ports! } HIGHSCHOOL ATHLETICS ARE STILL BANNED lead Lay: of Carrington hools Bown Rules on Which Will Resume ton, Nov esumed hool when the illing to show scording to reir studies. is y Paul H. ‘hools, Ath Carrington hit tudent athletes are | they will piay | d keep up > in and t uperintehdent 0 te the op principal, Ger- | ,» und members of the BACK shool bo: When interviewed on th, Shaving a basketball te gh school thi Mr. ag firm in his stand taken when seq to permit the existence of N te: at would not obey | yr aining rules, keep up in studies and | for the ood ead of pe DN m and t iset. to 2 community to they were conducted along at bencfitted the players instes juring them. By this, he explains, at he meant that the aim of ath-/ ties is not only to win games, but]? develop character, good sportsman- | ¢h¢ ip, sound bodies and unselfishness. | Believes in Athletics “The trouble with our high school higtics, I think, has been that the! rst’ incentives have lost their farm for the participants. The in-| rest must come from hin the[ amy itself if going to carry it {missed tywhere,” Superintendent Nagel) Werld tnt on. “The king of athleties that) ton-Y terests me is that which ithin the players enthus ban, hard playing. [ want to tboy y the game on its merits d feel that what he practices to- y will still be with him when he} a grown man in the business brid. If he can play the game to- ‘dy he will play it in later life. s“I am for anything in the world so} ng as it pays out not only in dol rs but in good citizenship,” Mr. mgel said. “I believe in athletics Rd will do all in power to help e boys if they will stand by the| s and keep th ons up tol .” He pointed! ore than 60 boys nd that there! splendid team would follow the wn by the high) orth Dakota. prospect moat the Vig time ard Back i had é break v rjalleged Princet! luke for see vr the ” Vootba it is ha score. known not well the two pointed In out Roper magic it had. The was a the ele var. It school, pility of , if the laid ue of Mgulation Shool le ,oeal High | 4 School Takes | tt First Game hiv lived u In ad sorted t found Y thing. Bismarck High School's tam defeated Hazelton’s 46 to 11. was fairly fast emst half ended 12 to 9 in fi sket yy team last | | The or of like nd w such it fi Lob: ogister . for Bismarck, Lobach be. high point man for both teams @MBismarck’s lineup was as follows Rwht forwards, Olson and Brown; | as and Lobach; and Russell; right | left guard, Shep- on. ° er ns? The JA couch busting plicated Knute the Adn for the ch Billy first game of the sea- locals, 1 . Sar Evans Says (oS (Certain form reversals are almost ep Possible of explanation itoretinceton’s great showing against nrvard, followed a week later yghoor game against Yale, is one of | m. | rinceton defeated Harvard most cisively 34 to 0. Harvard was most a 2 to 1 favorite before the pgne. | y. pln overwhelming the Crimson and finceton showed a strong line and | Jay | brilliant running attack, The | pairgers had two backfield combipa- ns equally brilliant. | MiPrinceton, because of its great daystk against Harvard, was favored | sista many of the experts to beat Yale. | Nefsinever had a chance. | Although Yale won by the rather Jobrrow margin of 10-0, Princeton ‘Traips outclassed in every department at th play. law 1 Why should Princeton, a snarling ‘Mrger against Harvard, simply curl ed-to against Yale? Form followers whileve been pondering the question dentier since, | MriAt the Yale-Princeton game 1 eral dined that all was not well be- homezeen Harvard and Princeton. For several years it has been ru- Mrvored that Harvard was seriously door ynsidering the dropping of Prin earlysn from its football schedule. them Two years ago this feeling took; ynerete form on the eve of the. Mrsarvard-Princeton game, when a | spent-rtain Harvard star, at a mass- | old Beting, took Princeton to task for j day./ methods pertaining to football _ and off the field. ORE it was rumoréd before the 1024 Mon@hughter of Harvard by Princeton, h ¢ in case of a Harvard victory, nceton would be eased out of the Mimson picture. fierce Princeton attack in that ime may be explained by the re- [ tment the proposed dropping of ingeton stirred up. ‘Suffice it is to say that no Prince- | fi ROW ay{fon team ever It r nee nth nd Yale n the mat In some quarters it i roug’ nis m all is ardly would be by in uni Unquestionably for physically and mentally. cla unco The Princete dif ven ev stale when it came on the field and p to got under way ditio: o the fu le h inst Harvard, 'N re, ~The Nut Cracker : M matte 1 of bus i peop! Ro Mr. Rockne may not be the great- OUT OUR WAY ti because IF you CAN NAME A BETTER TEAM THAN THIS, GO TO IT! TO RIGHT: DON MILLER WI LAYDEN, CROWLEY, ER, WALSH, WEID FE UHL! CH With the defeat en in the ¢ ral to nominate of Mlinois by td rise to con ‘ Dame Minnesota. © behaved in a Har- | ele t was the the chan John Har lipped ote ponents ent Kunte Rockne's t | while th ‘ ure still in the 1 4 tie modern g m ym customary defeat, Prince apy lule next season, ton-Yale and place ; thi the he who never and transform comb kne that St. them three ion full order int all and basel f ning prog: ppe: Princeton of groce Mr. Rockne i 1 who can tuke eleven unfilled ae aa Me | forms, in fairly presentable | Penrice ‘ | dition, and make Walter Camp bre; nd Harvard have | gown and sob, “Enough, enough! only ery year he loses from fi Wt and bobs up the lowing fall with a gang of crushers strong 1 to per an unmuzzled tra ing ent of politen Around Rockne are bu of m or magica j wizardry. gent simply S©j knows his onions and on the face Harvard | of the returns he seems to out on that | know the than is a well- } the rest of the east that all is | football between | Moral versities {whieh ar e ron, while coach uni- won the kind of owner | of the tear interrupted tings, le however t that no d He said t with plans the hinted that on the part of ible for the the Crimson } nh play it no le ¥ retaining t ick AML stify s a parlor ible way ertheless thal of tend the Allen w victoric nol to ‘The 1 are something ated in the Rock- cher hting Irish, in- cluding: the rtzbergs, the Choy game, | nskies and the Covele re sent out to return with their headguards h Bill | or in them, gridiron | Saints aga urd Prin iit no was the kies, ing Harvard, Co: vered all hi team gave Wilton School, 18 tise baske to Rochne’s s s to try anything once, He doesn’t wait to see how a square cornered derby will look on the oth Har- jer guy before trying one on his own noodle, everything | One answ | his willl it met Yale tion from team erent age that overwhelmed | I ery evidence of bein era of the ele hit, et a lot of Roehne’s rival the rules under the trie lig the looks after game re 2 the Notre Dame cathe- th Bend, Ind,, it is a foot- When you've seen have seen eve ny Harvard, e for every- |dral in one both ae eton played | thing. to be beaten | > it had no ae Teams Clash or you within th Pri fused inst o dow of the d of your judgment by Dated this 18th ae Nov. 29.—-Ar the most color! 1 spectacles, will, clash in battle today to break the nthe es which dates Baltimore, nd Ni: f K. ROCKNE of naming the r-clipping | somewhat com of the difficulty! in ties, have in pronouncing! the Polo Ground ne the right way to gain the | ended hostilities with « seorel ser A has captured) have ended} in the mud at} Uni » rivals fought jes but s tie, e eleven while the ¢ ‘in ed Vanilla sed in wous heights, vb “St. Paul Team May Be Kept By J. W. Norton With two of the urties bidding for the St. Paul default in the complain colleges DREHER. » COLLIE FRONT RO and failure of tendency seem on football team of the tie playing 1928 football Rockne is consid of the for the ranchise negotiati out run Nor. of the local Amer n As: ation club, would be at the head in in 1925. said last night tha 1 no new development e of the Saints, hat it was now eal would be consumm hat he going for next season just "1 ih he franchise. len, manag here to and conferr- Norton just before the or Nartford, Conn., to at. baseball meetings sured that present indi. e that he will manage the in in 1 | WILTON BEATS MANDAN HiGH|; defeated Mandan Hig! to thal » Coun Burleigh. District th Judicial District. summoned to th ur answe at his office in County e of North Dako after the s of this summons upon you, y of servic lure to will be taken again for the relief d and in t Bism day North Dakota t, 1924, rH, y for Plaintiti, require! sin the women nd universit growing pportanc By William: any sale sing slowly with the third, it red last night that John W. He added probable ited. ad s he | would if he had definitely decided on y of St. Paul in there, last night in a prac: North Dakota Is Seventh in | Stock Judging, Chicago, Nov. 29—The junior stock judging team repres state of Kansas was a’ first | place in the non-collegiate livestock | | judging contest held here as a pre- | \liminary feature to the international livestock exposition which is to open jtomorrow and continue until Decem- | jber 6. Twenty one states had t lentered. The Nebraska team jhonors with Oklahoma | Minnesota fourth. The Missouri team took fifth pl and the others followed in order: | | Colorado, North Dakota, Indiana, Ar- kansas, Michigan, Wisconsin, Penn- , Iowa, Virginia, Ohio, Ken- West Virginia, Illinois, Geor- Tennessee and Nevada. Each team, representing an agri- cultural high school or some club | organized under direction of the fed- eral or state government w elect- ed on an elimination basis in stock \judging contests at theit respec tate fairs or under auspices of th tate agricultural college. live- | nting the | ms: took second | third and ce _N. D. Employes Risk Lives To Avoid Accident| i Seqnenire | i 1 Carrington, N. D., No ye ‘Two | MANDAN. NEWS |men, driving a state highway truck, | | |risked their lives Tuesday eveni ——__—_____ a |when they drove their heavy | mobile over the side of the rather than hit a man and hi ng the main road one mile east W: HUNTSINGER, RIP MILLER. | \ = FARM HOME BURNED | Fire of unknown origin complete- ly destroyed the farm home on the J. A, Locke place two miles south of |of Dover. Hensler during Wednesday night} H. L. Bean, and Charles Dunahey causing a of approximately |both of Bismarck, were severely $3,000, on which insurance of $1,800!shaken and bruised and their high-/ was carried. way truck was badly damaged as a| Mr. and Mrs. Locke were sleeping | result of their act. They were driv- | in the original log homestead shack |ing east on their way to Carrington | lose by and were a ned by the | when a team started across the road | oke and flare of the flames, How- jal the intersection. The driver of | ever, the fire had spread to such an|the truck slowed down, and when xtent that all they could do was to;the man handling the team reigned ; stand by and protect other farm in, continued. The driver of the} buildings, ‘The home which burned |team changed his mind and whipped was being made feady for a tenant up the horses. In an effort to save t}who was soon to take over the farm.|the life of the other man and his Ss horses they went over the grading. The men spent the ‘night in Car: rington and left Wednesday fo Jamestown. The cab, radiator and cylinder head on the truck were | ruined. The truck heavily load- | ed. Bean and Dunahey said that the driver of the team did not re- turn to what happened to the occupants of the overturned car. FOUL PLAY | IS SUSPECTED, | ington, N. Foul | play is suspected by offfdl@ls in con- nection with the findiny “At Minne- | apolis of the bloodstained a John Goings, . 45, single, m since Noy. 18. Allen R. Hall, F county sheriff, is assisting twin city and other officials in trying to lo- cate him, Goings left ington Noy. 17,| vhile carrying more than $300. He | was accompanied by Ed Helm, who, ; authorities s: is a former convict, and by a second man, B, Clancey. He stopped at Jamestown where a | brother, George Goings, warned him | he ng chances, Offi s say that a man answer- | ing Helm’s description escaped after trying to cash a traveler’s check in Minneapoli Helm’s wife is under ance at Minneapolis. has worked in or Carrington for the last 15 He was employed near here as thresher this fall. sn "OR ASSAULT choil, charging that he | up and assaulted by Ja- cob Landeis, who, it is alleged, used or threatened to use a knife to stab | him, appeared before States Attorney L. H. Connolly and swore out a war- rant for the a of Laude men hed asher following un argument the price of automobile tire. The hea be held Saturday L, Olsan. | HELD Michael was beate | see F over | BREAKS SHOULDER Hal Wall, plasterer employed by | linger and Hanson in the con- ction of the Connolly Motor com- pany, suffered a broken shoulder on Wednesday evening when he fell from while at work on the ceilin; ing installed. | h | } d eS t HAVE YOU EVER BEEN THIRTY? once careles ark that a woman is most . Any won also the time ng records, a cold creant |can tell you that it's y a set of redu and the be more awful than be- it’s being 31, It's the Tdeath of your real youth and it's a {death in another way; you have to face it alone, NOTICE AND CITATION, HEARIN OF FINAL AC TRIBUTION OF ESTATE, \STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, | County of Burleigh.—ss. | | It i when you must for- lever decide whether to have a week- jily mud pack and meet the flapper on her own ground or turn to the more serious things of life. In County Court, Before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. In_the Matter of W. T. Haynes, Deceased. M: I. Haynes, Petitioner, gail Oivrorse, Ada De a Blanc J. R. Haynes, Ell Schroeder, Robt. L. Hay ar] Haynes, Olive E, Wright, Respondents. the Estate cl Behind you are the carefree twen- | when nothing mattered and | 4 of you the splendid idle | when nothing matters any- | But right here ix the moment ‘when if you aresfrivolous and wise u will weed all the baby blues i pinks from’ your and become an in- ie: above named Respondents You, the said Flora Spire, Oltrogge, Ada Deedrick, Edith Hay- 'y Blanche Meyer: Ellis Haynes, Schroeder, Robt. L. | Haynes Haynes, Olive E. Wright, are’ here- by notified that the final accoun| of the administratrix of the estat of W. 'T. Haynes, late of the city of Tama, in the County of Tama, and State’ of Towa, deceased, has been mS {rendered to this Court, therein | showing that the estate of said de- S—ANSWERS n : I've been married | eee for final settlement rs and, although I love y husband, V've been most un- happy. We live with my husband's arents and whenever we two hay sagreement they side with him. | know they dislike me. What would jyou do—leave? GRACE M. } Of course, | would, but I'd take |my husband along, too, No house ‘is bigeenough for two families. And You will lay more subtle brand of perfume. You will learn to flatter the eternal masculine if you would still have an occasional heavy date with him, a QUESTION count be allowed, the residue of estate be distributed to the Persons thereunto entitled, her ad ministration closed and she be d charged; that Tuesday, the 16th day of December, A. D. 1924, at ten o’cjock in the forenoon of that day at the court rooms of this Court in the court house, in the City of Bis marek, County” of Burleigh, and State 6f North Dakota, has been duly ITS THE FELLER THAT GETS THE LEAVINGS THAT, GIVES “THE SINCEREST THANKS. 62 LM 2 TR Liaw $1920 BY WEA SERVICE WC appointed by this Couyt for the set- tlement thereof, at which time and place any person interested in said estate may appear and file his ex- ¢geptions, in writing, to said ac- count, and petition and contest the same. And you, the above named re- spondents, and. cach of you, are hereby cited and required then and there to be and appear before this Court, and show cause, if any you have, why said account should not be allowed, the residue of said estate distributed, the administration of said: estate closed and said Mary M. Haynes, be discharged. ted’ the 14th day of Novem! A.D. 1924. the Court: EAL) és) I. C. DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. 11-15 22-29 while all married couples have lit- le tiffs they're soon over when there's no audience. Déar Miss Grey: What shall I do when the man I'm in love with wants to kiss me “goodnight?” We are not engaged, TROUBLED. “Tell. him you'ze not going to heapen yourself by kissing any man \but the man you marry. He'll think much more of you than he will if you let him make love to you casu- ally. : | 1 i | + Dear Mise Grey: I have a sister 28 years old who is going to marry a man only 25. Don’t you think he’s too young for her? BOB. Three years isn’t enough dif- to make any difference at The fact that they're’ in love each other is the important of with thing. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) For Sale—Chaiee Caparie |) ers, Importell German Rollers. Jacob Bull. Dickin- Usskquan Si j drama w: of | vs. i Haynes, | The State of North Dakota to the] bution, und petitioning that | SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1924 HELP WANTED : : go of 140 Fair Answers Come From Erin, Poverty- Stricken By Long Rains Car, Margaret E: BY NEA y York, seemingly ¢ bleak west ing to Amer of maid-se not seen in Ac vant the und ‘tony of family was ast of Ireland is n shores such a flood} as this country | a generation, | rgo of 140 problem x from so Fe a fares and 2 nswers to the se cently arrived up alone, rom Donegal Bay, north of Coun- Sligo. to the River St , south the haired, e ughte eland’s farni s are in} ed exodus, | 1s though the “wee folk” | some tra It seems. of the Ir we hati M West Ireland is no end- ed from », long. v2 ential destru dave and Clare, Connaught the same | eing played in a thou- | sand homes, each unbeknowns? to the other. With the mournful mono: “‘T DON’T C. That’s ing, and the ground leys carrying to great poverty upon Mayo, ( All through come Innded. emed y os though Yo ain't goin’ had swur giving assur to rain no ARE WHO PU ew it © ME! What Department r Millionaires’ Sons, Stere Starling at Bottom ime-Coach Says By NEA Alban 5 clock mechanical sonally upon No democra face A. time- | tic device. It looks out imper- the punchings of the shop gill und the prize salesman. It would make no difference instance, that the sons of two multi- millionaires had become: regular vis- itors, punching in and punching out. And that is the Mellen nd Ch would have bo! the world view the bottom of the } clerks, counter is isiness ladde or what-have- to be are secking to be, in all re- ons of their fatheys. Now thers happen to be Charles Sabin, internationally , known banker of New York, and Charles |Siager Mellen, ex-president of the New York, New Haven and ilart~ ford, now of Stockbridge, Mas: So it no more than natural that a stir would be caused when they appeared shuffling boxes in a tock room, or sceking to convince a} ustomer that a blue tie would be; preferable to een on But, they recall, their fathers started in small jobs and worked up, why should nat they? So they have \taken a modest room in a boarding house, double up in it and ¢ ry to keep us going.” ure, I like it,” s len, a graduate of Williams College. ‘Why shouldn’t 1? ‘The only way get a business training is to the thing from the inside and to s-e| all angles. My job is anything they happen to give me that will te ich me something. Yes, we keep the regular store hours and ask noj favors.” Thus far they have swept flours, Also, whether they were con: of it, they have created no end of chatter among the store virls. For wherever there are Cinde there will be dreams of golden couches and fairy princes. CHARLI H. SABIN, JR. iron or been in: rs, ide a corral for Many of them {a branding iron on the nearest approaghe J horses possible, haw badlands at will, unmolested ROUNDUP TRACK IS PURCHASED Killdeer, N. D., Nov. 29.—A deal was just consummated whereby Sam Rhoades became the owner of the 160 acre tract upon which the Roundup was held at the Killdeer Mountains last year. Mr. Rhoades will fente the entire acreage with a good fence and otherwise improve it. The land_was owned by Mike Cuskelly. Sam has already bought forty head of horses, most of them being! the Porter bunch, notorious as the! worst outlaw critters in the west. | roamed t hampered and summ Sam assures the whole wor! the Roundup next year will ter and bigger than ever. CALL C. L. BR Music Sho Mandan, Write tor Clreut json, N: D, Box.728, None of them have seen a branding | awe: iss