The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 3, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ° Fr OOTB. ALL PICTORL AL Mecting Bu on Drop Kick port KIEBERT CAN BE USED IN MINOT GAME Coach Instructed to Use Star Fullback Unless Cificial | QUESTIONS i 1. When ball is kicked out of j bounds on a punt, which one of the officials determines the point at j which the hall left the field? layer commits a foul when her ide is in I, then later recovers the hall afte \the official has stopped play. What | happens? | 3. What is considered clipping by the officials in charge of the game? Order Is_ Issued Ae Mane hea’ Untéanian abaND: ARE lthe point where the ball goes out_of {bounds after being punted. The i i 4 in starting play shall be so i « : Hi “ | fa player comme a tou) i i neither side in 4 f Hi HM aunt i C Il, it goes to the offended side inti Mh ath tra itt tact with ball where the foul was we at Mi is necessary . inl i il as it strikes the 1. Throwing th from be- il i Hh f Hh Hh fT ground in order tof hind across the 3 (below Hii ce “et distance and] the knee not carrying Ma ag e the ball, is the rule wording of the clipping. The penalty urds from the spot of accuracy. Note how close foot is to the ground prior to meeting the ball This pieture posed for by Charles Berry, La- fayette, All-Amer- ica end, 1924, a ft ti PAT j Ir : \ Hi iy oh oa ; in — ne ah it i! " ; Hii it hit iy i i AN i t i ‘ Mh it Hn yy i ‘ i i In it AN ossession of the | GEORGIA TECH LUMINARY | Ivan Williams Stars in Backfield of Famous Eleven | star performers. IVAN WILLIAMS He's a halfback on the Georgia Teach team and one In the recent game with TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1925 | yolden Tornado | | , Weighmaste Biggest Octo The motion city commis by Com n, instru t urer to nd reco Casselman to see that in to th by the po! The comm $1,000 from ways, to provi ® of paven | the busin Upon Fra qu of k Johnson the period « His repor the eleven of 5 did) much State, Penn CITY ORDERS POLICE COURT BOOKS AUDITED 5 = ey 5 2 d seconded by © ed the city ent in certaiy J. O. Fredericks, Marcovitz ec Harris plies Nilson Crane Co. supplies Waterworks Dept. water .... Atkinson, | supervising work of stu detention’ hospital ine Modern Dai Green, Tweed 'é Waterworks Dept., express er’s Report Shows ber Business abor . el, labor ... st night, on | issioner Wachter missioner Lar- r auditor make an rds of Pol immed led repo audit John Roop, s} Ehner Brow Robert Phe} M. Ber ide for the repair- f "Con names 12.00 |lowing were drawn from 5 Bismarck citizens eligible 19.00 jury se ut ” Bernstein, H. m A, R. Hoffm: » iH iY Mellon, B. K. Skee! 6.00 Robidou, ‘1 ‘ he report of J.D, Wakeman, city G.00 hmaster, for the mouth of Octo 4 300 ber showed the 1 October bees 400 ‘business at the. ci in 2°00 é 4.00 t fale sfer Co, hauling Coal Co., - - : te “ Tomorrow: Hold-|i 'y the southern outfit to victory. In 1924 he was given honorabl : : : ing Ball for Place is a back and this meitat ane ‘ars at the height of his gridiron Onions Carpent . 5 jones : He = = Horses Noxel HOME RUN KINGS jto take much of the kick out of Cattle Two drives for the cireut in the | sporting events for certain people. Enforcement How. 2 ** lworld series of 1911 caused Frank| There are a lot of folks who fatermelon , | Bakes of the Athletics to be herald: |to wend, their homeward after | League of State Wheat the re ed as the “home-run king” of the | seeing their ite beaten. feeling ; G dats eens oh say __ universe. the most taiked-about man | that it would have been different if| Will Disband «.;, hip req = lof the year. the officiating had been anything Flax ieliy a Superin | Those two four-sackers were made | other than rotten. Nov. 3.—(A) | Spelt o evening White of Min I jat the expense of the late Christy| In New York the fight game has | enforcement | Bromus rs haheeiaamaies eres ‘Time dan, Bismarex | Mathewson and Rube Marquard, fa-| suffered much of late because of de- | league nti-Saloon | Potatoes : | woe Bee iwsten xe informe: 5 E g mous southpaw. Both of them made ‘cisions that have failed to | League of Amer » over the | Cabbage seen eee i ; WG 7:45—Orchastra se- Coach Colli neluded iL A} sy AOE. | possible vie for the Athletics. |This, despite the fact two work which has been hitherto done Old Metals . 31 WEAI name in the | aye 4 In the 1925 ‘series between Pitts-| work with the referee in in North the enfor c Paper for the Min ich — — burg and Washington, played 15] an agreement. It seems there is| ment . Griffith, presi- f ee ‘ coEMinot f years Goose Goslin of the| much more kicking than in the ‘old | dent, announced Mond : Base WER CID) Ww | ‘aylor of the LaMoure Chronicle Says Football Is a|Senators made three home runs. yet; days when the referee had all the| Acceptance of the in on by : wor ae toate eaten . his super-swatting received little | say | the 3 aloon league will mean the | a 7), ( be AR 19), Communistie Game—“And Specti Cheer the more than passing attention. Recently the New York Commis. | disbanding of the enforcement H » WSA The reason, Baker made his in the| sion rendered a decision on a much | league, Mr. Griffith said. Th 1 ) $—Ga or Dastardly Acts,” He Si {days of the old ball, while Goslin’s| disputed point that is interesting, | tion was determined upon j (380.4) 4 and . i in a sense, were due to the lively | fi It relates to a boxer | held some three weeks : : 1 salient — ball and the trick stands, hastily} being knocked out of t nouncement been until | Marbie Ll ieee aoantral Time eum, ame is not| Constructed to make room’ for ad-| All New York refere preliminar been) ' WHAS (399.8) 7:80 Concert pro- and that a cer-| ditional fans. instructed that hereafter when accepted. Total numl a A 1 z id finesse is!, It was almost a farce to allow a boxer falls out of the ring for a has yet been receiv: 0 Bills Atlowe z tit f . i . : cholly 2 mat.| home run on some of the drives that reason and is assisted back by any | Saloon League the belief the | against t 9 -Concert am. With Star Fullback Out of Lf went in on the fly but to permit the;one he shall lose the decision, invitation will be accepted, Mr. Grif- | ae j 4) 9° Musical pre 1 5 ae [batsman to make the circuit on af ae fith said. egurrent | (370.2) 10 2 Game, Bismarck Trims " bali that bounded into the stands! Had such a ruling been in effect | “Under the new conditions which i Go. 1861N Leek | iy SOA eee « ae ‘ utter of “inter-{took away much of the glory from|Wwhen Dempsey fought Firpo, the | have a a result of the A a| cal (374.8) 10:15—Danee con- Mandanites 33 to 0 tt . coming to nave|# real clout, such Joe Harris champion would have lost his title|tion of the national — pro! tere 00 | cert tas to write a very large! no little signifi tore. made in one of the games at Wash-'to the Seuth American. Several | amendment we feel that the & ace DEE 104 ti 11 Orchestral selec- hould tide it What T Jington. seribes chaperoned Jack into the ring | which has hitherto been done s) supplies 10 tions ‘ eee ' Ww ‘i et Iam not wholly resign- paneer after Firpo had knocked him out. state enforcement league may labor ae (865.6 0 11:45—-Nighthawk Let us suppose a ball| Twelve home runs in a_seven-) es properly be turned over to the Anti- labor | Frolic i i : obviow asume that Cuyler or| game world series tend to make > Saloon League,” s id Mr. Griffith. | N. Ig vail WFAA = (476) Midnite enter- there i shed high| joke out of the fall classic An ordi-/ | = _ \d. Klein, labor al taine basebs ald ‘a nary fly ball can at any time spoil: “J/y | Names instead of dates are sug-|W. Koenig, labor ........ a ‘ ime a well pitched ball game by drop-| |gested by motor-ear manufacturers | A. W. Lucas Co., supplies jg tt | KGO Goneext) ‘pros ; just as ping into the short stands for a |to distinguish different models. The | Cook's Grocery, supplies 20.00 | gram. : football i Ke the catch,| home run, | object is to prevent autos from be- | Mr Robidou, rent 5.07.00)" KPO (42 Garielibe: and Iam not yon the opposing team who fee | ing “dated” to their own detriment. |S. Sloven, supplies 6) 20.00] KFT (4 tors, either ted himself behind. a tele- EXCELLENT IDEA 2) | cose pita sis 2s post rushes onto the field and t one good seems certain | eens roe re is appointed to Mt hand ul of Cayenne pepper out of the late lamented! | z certain tit or respon= es of the fielder. That] s very one is agreed that! Has Sid Terris ever been knocked | ‘ oe player cat But it gular season should end sooner out?—S. A. BEupOlwotk or hinder him in the .jto pave the way for an earlier series — O1 - Kid Wagner turning up during the last Summer sud wh aves. (Bhectict tart, the t Wix iccusdbcin seer ct Superin- W parated | The terrible weather encountered What was the score of the final] lan school from Ts neee 3 at Pittsburgh got a strong rise out game in_the 1909 world series | tate board this 1 grounder 1s lof all the scribes’ as well as the tween Pittsburg and Detroit? “off cked down the third ba i ‘powers-that-be” in baseball. . E, | the oth-| It is probabiy just as well that oot of them go down in althe game was staged, for every day f blood and broken bones; it} since has been about as bad in the « for the captain, and| Pittsburg section of the U. S$. A. The teams might have been ical | yet. A world series to start not Aes than October 1 is the battle cry of fandom. The s should be ended before the feature football games start. This year it overlapped | the goal li any time during t ure widely ther over In foot + erouped Two or three of the yers have ‘survived the car-/ , and these rush for the brave! tain. The poor fellow tries to es-| but it is no use. The blood- | hard after him! As the| vin tries to dodge on of his tor-| many of them. ntovs, another sa sidelong; Another change should be a 1 in ubout the| start instest of 2 mm. lacked | olently to the|as if a couple of the 1925 games ;might end in a tie. Had such been H ¢ it would have been difficult | innings. certainly not | op- cap hounds are lever tac ich Olson kick dof the he other Tie games are to be frowned upon tin the s. Every effort should be made to determine a winner. An extra 30 minutes means about two more innings can be played in case! ;| of a tie. after a point In the fourth quarter Olson score ‘a fake pass play, but missed the for the e ion closed wit placed at 33. Next Saturday th ©) Red Sox is sponsor for the above and “| just the fellow to put over a mighty ' good thought. team ‘will play, Mino DISPUTED DECISIONS nee sae This is sche ft Sport decisions will always be dis- he most valuable ane of the season although efforts | up the 1925 ¢ puted. There never will be a base- player sana handicap to Peckin- are belng a je poses ge an On ben: }> [ball umpire, fight referee or foot-! paugh in the series, the experts say. ent for another tussle on either Ar- |s redio heacon tower is to he! ball official so capable that his every To Peekinpaugh? What was it mistice Day or November 14. °° | [brush Monmouth, Ill, a Je ruling will mect. with approval. |¢o'Johnaoat The lineup and summary of Satar- "in ‘ of the United Tum inelined to think that” the tees y's game follow cle n ce q = i day's game jeteh vies. perfect referee or umpire would tend|~ Because the Prince of Wales posed H. Brown Bender (C) Coleman Folsom Jones ‘Anderson Lofthouse Olson MeGett Watkins Goebel Substitution gan, Danrot for Goebel, Slatte: Anderson, Nichola for Lofthouse, Mc Carty for H. Brown, Vonhagen for | Jones, Bender: for Folxum, Gorman | for Coleman. Light for Rowe, Morri for Brand, Light for Schmidt. | Touchdowns: Olson 2, Anderson 1, Watkins 1, Goebel 1. Points after touchdow SOME OF BIGGEST GAMES OF SEASON SET FOR NOV. 21 1 New, York, Nov..3.—Many important MINNESOTA’S BACK FIELD “Heidt (C) Dann for Me! Olson 3. A Left to right: Poplaw, halfback; Joesting, football games are scheduled for| Here wre three of the men on whom Unive: Dee obs ibe ae Sauraay. erage eelors hich in the season's big games, now at nksgiving. 5 00) rt abo biggest tilts of the gnire campaign which’ kept um hie playing for the rest of the season. are booked for te terme an-| Five yards McCarthy” and other famous conference tuilbaeks mueenie ‘StatecMiinois fracas. This from Owatonna and 1s the idol of southern Minnesota fans. Bill be staged at Columbus, the ten seconds, equaling Poplaw’s speed. ye atronghold. It will’ also unwillingness of opponents to try forward passes against the Gophers this year. po nll > appestance of the} i@s on this full ; Murrell, haifback, and. All are new to Minnesota football, like Britton and-Fry. Dr. Spears 1s: depend- trio to show Minnesota’g caliber in the ck Tad battles with, ‘Western Conference elevens. a oa amen or al a hig ig a mBOSSIEl bs The final game was played under had d. | or ii ial young and in-/ conditions that would have been demd \ third b it iS passed back-| garded as poor for even football and fails, the re is quite as dive vaddled legs of; that game can be played in most any I as if th steam hud collapsed al the| kind of weather. President Beb Quinn of the Bostoa! sity of Minnesota students are depending to carry their although Poplaw iree plays against Michigan last year before he was laid out with a knee injury Joestring bids fair to be Minnesota’s rival to; This big boy is Murrell weighs 190 but can run 100 yards in His presence in secondary deignse has had much to do with the Pittsburg 8, | When did ¢ y captain the | Ohio State football eleven?—W. D. In 1919. Did Keene Fitzpatrick, trainer, ever hold a similar at_ Michigan ?. Ww Yes, severi | JeNUT | Someone stole Goose Goslin \in Washington the other night. . . . |Since it didn't occur during the ser- ies the ‘Goose couldn't very well blame the theft on Oil Smith. It may be true that silence is gold- jen, but the mouthy Mr. Smith, you'll jobserve, collected one of the fat checks in the series. | Princeton position car You can no longer question the courage of Jack Dempsey... . . He is going to tour Mexico, where the business of tossing the bull still inks with the finished arts of the as a fed-headed vampire in an ama- teur theatrical, Buckingham palace is shocked. . But it needn’t be ‘really alarmed until he starts to lisp. A Cleveland player held a perfect mah jengg hand recently and Mr. O'Goofy wants. to know what she held it In. a basket of a barrel. They're calling Andy Mellon the watch dog of the treasury. Thi we suppose. makes him the man on Cal Coolidge’s varsity War has broken out in the Balka~s again. . . What mystifies is how anyone is ever able to tell when war stops and begins over there. There is nothing in this country | thet ‘eorressonds to the continuons Bajkans disturbance unless it is the annual’ wage debate between coal op- erators and miners. Or..on second thought, the annual September ploy-off in the tennis fin- als between B:g Bill Tilden and Litti Bill Johnson. Soi Or, on third thought. the mehine- like regularity with which Rogers Hornsby leads the National League batters each ‘eason. | NOTE: Will the uncouth rowdy lin the fifth row. end seat left, who made hat crack about our not pos- sessing sufficient mental capacity to exude three thoughts. hands, run- ning, please leave the place imme- diately. 4 So many of us do. And then comes indigestion, that nuisance of a trouble that can easily make you miserable all afternoon. Hurrying through the noon-day meal is a habit hard to break. But there is a way, easy. to learn that! has helped many to dodge indigestion— simply eating a few Peo mint Life Savers after meals, ~ Try; . They often work wonders this way. ¥ 7 eee Indigestion is a miserable thing. So many people suffer this way. If they only knew that simple old method our-grandfathers used—peppermint. And-now it is available in a new and really conve- nient form—Pep-o-mint Life Savers; the little candy mints with the hole. —“sandwich, coffee, apple pie—an’ please hurry it up!” ™-.'Do you gulp lunch? @ It sounds very simple and old-fashioned. But'Pep- o-mint Life Savers really do the trick. Try them after meals when that heavy, logy feeling comes over you—or to relieve that irritating distress of indi- gestion. Pep-o-mint is displayed at all good stores so you, may help yourself; also Wint-o-green, Cinn-o- mon, Lic-o-rice, Cl-o-ve and Vi-o-let. Five cents a packsaycc bite Savers, Inc., Port Chester, N. Y.

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