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PAGE SIX Many Rock coaches have resorted “Ss tacties, but it rem Tech to pull a new a © owith Notre Dan funny part ef Dan asn't ed with 1 tanding quarterback roducet er ni cute lent way th y the quarterbac Bunnell of Yale is not only a good ficld general but also a bit of the Grange in running back the ball, How old is Luis Angel Firpo?—W. Ey Minnesota gridiron nv? At Kalamazoo (Mich.) Normal. | How long has e Godfrey | been in the ring? Hi. 1 Since 19: HELPFUL HINTS | # HUNTERS BY MORIMS ACKERMAN h mountain trip. this Felt hat (stock- ing cap to sleep in if nights are very cold), two woolen shirts (one in a pinch), mackinaw breeches or trousers, four pair white cotton sox, four pair heavy woolen sox, two suits medium weight underwear (wool if you can wear it), one | of perfectly fitting, roomy - packs, moccasins or shoes of (waterproof if possible), pair camp slippers or “comfys,” buck- sin em Woht Inather iacket, to break the wind, mackinaw coat or a good quality coat sweater, poncho or rain cape and gloves that are soft and roomy. Add to this a pair of| suspenders and a half-dozen ban- dana handkerchicfs—and there you are, McGrew Takes Care {f of Veteran Players No manager in baseball takes bet- ter care of his veteran players than ‘John McGraw. Anv-athlete who has served McGraw well need not worry acannon Bn he THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE" FOOTBALL PICTORIAL YY’ --- yy x West Point the inte while — Charle Berry, Lafayette, All-America — end, d emonstrates ING HANDS ON INTERFERENCE REE WINS JOLT “AIR HARVARD After thre ‘ ay hinted that Ha GRID QUIZ ‘i y Billy Evans ‘ ** the Cr QUESTIONS vard 4) Lo What i thrown Jed that the proba fora spponent on} ANSWE 1 Pl Ay Joe Williams drawing the | | { PRAISE WAITE HOYT’S SPEED} | 11.-No one on the! A two-l s p ring as he do ata In one respect at least a football jscout and a baseball scout are much Their information is usu- close to being |ally bad. he oot anno ‘ soon as he learned Nie Altrock except the Walter| wouldn't be ther are no f w ng un singing. He the elder to the fast f 2 pinch, and, |. It isn't likely the idea of restrict- suffer jing football ods to 40 plays will . knowing Hoyt's fond-| ever be generally adopted Few) curve in the ér ul-| quarterbacks can remember that old | many. Rhea nother way to st ba chate Many Safeties Made with in Big Grid Games) ‘when Apparently they don’t worry about it comes to spiking, Stanley ‘ootbalt isn’t going: to let base non it as f: ned. | STUMBL] H4 safe-| An officer was rt in the r the battle: eames. inseribed plate, he nt she | it beaten | A FAMILY TRAIT |The Jones Brethers, Howard and Tad, Hang Up Reputations as Gridiron Tutors HOWARD JONES, LEFT, AND BROTHER TAD in the world of sports. Both being at the University of Southern California and Tad at Yale. A few vears ago while Howard was in charge of griuiron uestini brotn@r Tad’s Yale warriors, too. : jt minor Jeague berth when pla y| for the var: ..We figured he wouldn't | spiking drinks in Washington, but | 11; Harris’ finger, well, that’s something | The Jones boys, Howard and Tad, form a rather unique conb‘nation at Iowa, he took his Hawkeyes east and handed 2 6-9 trimmin~ ‘o| Way will be graveled during 1926. And right in the’ Bulldog stronghold, F This season each hopes to turn out a winning eleven, though it'll lays are over. Hank Gow- eee be am easy task by any means, , | News From the ‘ State University | —_—_+ author of “Ban- an inter-frater- is spending a few days with the chapter of Phi Delta Theta at State University. orge Banta, provineiai pre- ident of Kappa Alpha Theta soror is a guest of the local chapter of t sorority at the present time and will remain here over the week end, Grand Forks, for the deb $ University and the selection of the va : debate question were. decided Jat a meeting of all University stu- dents interested in debate. “Resolved t the constitution of the United tates should be amended to permit | Congress to regulate child labor,” was \ adopted as the varsity question for the coming year. Work on the question will begin at once and tryouts will be held in time y team to begin united ight dat yh work by the first of next month ten pins. ¢ thinks platinum to Clarence Decker, unive r are ever so much mere interest-| ty fe coach, The men’s va y z H be composed of twelve | oa according to the present Supreme Court i| Decisions { Saar ah From Cass Count Nick S. Breyer and Louis F. Gra- tias, respondents, vs. J. H. Gale, et al, ppellants. | SYLLABUS: ; 1, A. judgment docketed against A. N. Pearson, does not afford con- structive notice that it constitutes a lien upon the real property of Nels Pearson or Nels Pehrson, or Andrew Pehrson. Appeal from the district court of cass County, Hon. A. T. Cole, Judge. Opinion of the court by Johnson, J. | Affirmed. | Lovell & Horner, Fargo, N. D., at- | torneys for respondent. i Spalding & Shure, and Francis J. | Murphy, Fargo, N. D., attorneys for | appellants. | From Eddy County i The National Cash Register Com- pany, a corporatio®, Plaintiff and Ap- | pellant, vq. Midway City Creamery Company, a corporation, Defendant and Respondent. SYLLABUS: Where a verdict is returned by less than twelve jurors pursuant to | chapter 333, S. L. 1923, and error is | specified on that ground, there must | be a new trial, following Power vs. | Williams, holding said chapter un- constitutional and void. Judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered. Appeal from the district court of Eddy County, Hon. J. A. Coffey, Judge. . Opinion of the court Per Curiam. | Manly & Manly, New Rockford, N. Dak., attorneys for appellant. | Bothne, New Rockford, N. respondent. | i i Ly Security National BaW® of Fargo, a corporation, plaintiff and respondent, John Andrews, et al, J. 0. Lium, . G. Hagen, and Andrew Skarvold, ppellants, LLABUS: | 1. A written guaranty is not ef- e unless and until it is deliver- Where guarantors who have | signed a writen guaranty deliver the | writing to the principal conditionally nd he, though the condition is not complied with, delivers the same to | the obligee who has no knowledge or notice of the condition and who acts | on the security of the guaranty, the | guarantors are bound thereby not- | withstanding the noncompliance witk the condition. | 3. Where an applicant applies to a nk for a loan and the bank advises , him, that it will make the loan only | Upon his securing a guaranty of pay- ‘ment satisfactory to it, und the ap- _ pliéant thereafter induces guarantors to sign a guaranty satisfactory to |the bank und on the security of | which the loan is made, he is not the agent-of the bank in the transaction, | Appeal from the Di: t Court of | Gass County, Hon. A. T. Cole, Judge. | Action on a written guaranty. From ja judgment in favor of the plaintiff, | defendants Lium, Skarvold and Hagen appeal. | Affirmed. Opinion of the Court by Nuessle, J. | Lemke & Weaver, of Fargo, attor- neys for appellants. | J. J. Mulready, of Fargo, attorney | for’ responde | i | o MORE ROAD WORK Minot.—The ‘Wad county comimi re famous as foothail tytors. Howard] sioners have awarded contracts. f 34 miles of addi ‘highways. ional state-tedera’ Forty-five miles of high cting provincial | | company and will become actively en- portions of the re: ed his position and has accepted af position with the Rose Hardware and | Implement company. Walter Kramer of Mott has taken the bank position. NEW OFFICERS Fessenden.—H. C. Whitcomb elected mayor at a special election to take the piave The vot- r to on, who also has resigned. rles Buerge and Fred ; Bonuet eacn received 34 votes and ‘the election will be decided later in ‘the presence of the council members in a manner to be prescribed by them, | WINS DREAM HOME ' Minot. Clarence H. Peterson, son arl Peterson, a former Minot r ent, wus recently awarded a $6,- 0 “dream home” at Bellingham, Wash., in a contest conduc Belungham, real estate board. home is a model nine-room r coniplete with all the clectri pliances, imaginable. | EPIDEMIC AT HAZELTON Hazelton. A scarlet fever epidemic ind new cases ty i | ‘a ported almo: ly. The school {building has been thoroughly fumi- ated. | MANNING GIRLS DROWNED |. Manning. —Jessie, 18, and Sarah, 12, daughters of Mr. ‘and = Mrs. Ho N. | Person, were drowned : | Pasadena, Calif. The [of Mrs. Person's — sis jdrowned at the same time. son is depyty county auditor SIX WOMEN ON JURY Dickinson. Six women, — all of whom live in Dickinson, are included in the panel of 40 jurors service at the fall term of di court Which will convene here vember 1 SCHAFF WILL CARRY MAIL ew England? John J. Schatl has awarded the contract to il between this village and Amidon | » this year, to June ccording to Postmaster J. He will receive $1,400 per 1 department and sengers on the mail! ear-old son was also Mr. Pe: here. | 30, A. Elliott. ar from the posi will also carry pa route. BUYS GARAGE INTEREST Washburn.~ -RK, R. Scholl, who until this fall lived on a farm near here, has purchased the interest of Wiiliam Robinson in the Washburn Motor gaged in the business about Febru- ary 1. DICKINSON TO P Dickinson.—E, R. Griff ing engineer, ha the city commi and draft plans based accurate estimates of the cost of paving the down town district and / idential 8.4 { i t ion to make survey upon which may be hoped to be struction early ne > ’ MANDAN NEws |! —— Attorney General George Shafer, addressing the Mandan Kiwanis club! yesterday noon, took for his subject the lessons the United States citi- zenship has learned as the result of the great war. Mrs, Bernard S. Nickerson, past state president and past North Da- kota member of*the national tive committeé of the American Li gion Auxiliary, has been honored by re-appointment as national ch: of the Auxiliary memorial committee. | Delegates from all units of the Women’s Benefit Association of Maccabees from the southwestern quarter of the state will gather in Mandan tomorrow for a district con- vention. A banquet will be given at the Lewis and Clark hotel at 6:3 followed by a business session at the K. A. Hall. a | John Kopa of Morton county, con- fined a short while ago to the North Dakota hospital at Jamestown, died Monday at the institution, according fo a message received yesterday. The deceased, aged 43, is survived by his wife and six children. A religious census of Mandan will be undertaken next week, it was de- cided at a meeting of the Mandan Ministerial conference. The census is for the purpose of deterniining the number of Mandan people affiliated with churches. i | Mrs, Bernard §, Nickerson, past state president of the National execu- tive committee of the American Le- gion Auxiliary, was reappointed as national chairman of the Auxiliary morial ¢ommittee, according to a letter received here yesterday from Mrs. Eliza Shepard of California, na- tional president of the organization. i was, 1 DAY—2 ACES |Lewis Scott Turns Unusual Golf Feat Out on Coast | i | | \ i | | | i i i | : igi LEWIS Scot He leaped into golfdom’s hall of fame by making two holes-in-one the me day. It’s considered quite a feat to shoot an ace once in a life- time, But to turh the trick twice the same time out is indeed out of the ordinary. Scott is a member of | the Hillcrest Country Club, Los An-| geles. Doings at the State Teachers’ College at Minot Elsie J, Cook, critic teacher of the eighth grade in the training school, ! now On leave of absence for special | study at the State Universi«, was | elected president of the. State Con- gress of Parents and Teachers at the annual convention at Jamestown the past week. Consequently she has re- jened =the secretaryahip of the Northwestern Teachers Association, a position she has held for some! years past, Miss Cook has been al member of the faculty of this insti- tution since it was founded. The enrollment at the college has pased 530. In view of the fact that! the first year of high school work | has been ‘dropped, this is a good showing, representing a gain over last | fall term’ of 54. If the first year, high school had been continued, the! gain would have been 25 per.cent. Prof. L. O. Lantis, of the depart- ment of social sciences, has been ab- sent from his classes the past week,! lecturing in teachers’ institutes at, McClusky, Napoleon, Carson, and oth- | er points in the southwestérn part of ‘the state. The State Educational Association met at Minot last week and many of the educators Visited Teachers Col- lege. The students enjoyed the two- day vacation. Many of them showed their professional interest by attend- ing the meetings of the conyention, | but some took the time to go home| for the week-end. A small but very important pamph. let is just-off the press by Miss Olga Lakel, the new teacher of Biology It is entitled “Hydrolytic Enzymes 1 Phormedium Laminosum.” This sub- ject may not mean much to the com-! mon mind. But it repress vast amount of study and investigation on the blue green algae mostly from Yellowstone Park Springs. The music faculty of the College gave a splendid recital at the city| auditorium Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. It was the first of a series | . Capt. Weir, Featured Players of team are Capt. Bd Weir, All-Ameri: Rhodes, well as ever, while Rhodes has doi Nebraska to the ‘front. Nebraska got away to a fine start this fall by stopping Grange and Doteat by the strong Msagot Tel 7 a a dj Beutel OE ero NS nag. thereby trimming THinols, heen employed in the German State @¥eT, bank the past five years, bas resign: ZUppke’s Itini, TWO NEBRASKA STARS All-American Tackle, and Halfback Rhodes CAPTAIN ED WEIR, INSET RHODES Two of the featured players of University of Nebraska's forniidable Seatrnsed some of the early prestige gained by a win over Coach Bearg’s Team | North Dakota than is the case j ball as the favorite winter sport of | daily and numerous others who have WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1925 of Sunday music hours to be given. The department of music is made’ up of five persons, three full-time and two part-time instructors. A reunion of graduates, former students and graduates of State College was held at the Con- gtegational church Thursday evening during the convention. More than one hundred twenty-five sat down to dinner. The student body of the College represents 29 counties of the state 80 high schools, 42 nationalities, their parents 69 different occupations, 17/ church denominations. Miss Delia Goetz, of Banes, Oriente, Cuba, been employed as primary | critic teacher, a position left vacant} by the death’ Sept.43 of Miss Mary | G. Rud. | STATE U RANKS ABOVE NORMAL IN ATHLETICS More Students Take Part in REVELATIONS IN TAJLORING Quality AND Price Investi- gate Various Contests Than | SEE at Average College Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 11.-#) More students’ take part inter- mural athletics at the University of t th age American college or univ ity, Paul J. Davis, director of athle. ties at the local institution, said here today. Statistics compiled by the athletic department show that more than 54 per cent of the male students attend- ing the university take part in some form of organized sport while others play as the spirit moves them, Figures compiled at the University of Min- nesota, he said, show that about 33 per cent the students there part in anized athletic activiti and that institution ranks high as exponent of inter-mural athlet: Davis had planned to introduce soc- cer to students at North Dakota uni- versity this year but the bad weather experienced this fall prevented him from carrying out the experiment. To Play Hockey Preparations now are under way for the organization of from 10 to 15 hockey leagues to add zest to the sport. Plans for the hockey contests are dependent upon an open winter so that snow will not seriously inter- fere with proper conditioning of the hockey rinks which it is proposed to established on the campus, Plans for the rinks include an ar- rangement whereby the gity of Grand forks will furnish’ the water fon flooding them and the university ath- letic department will take over the job of keeping them in condition for use. Schedules will be arranged by the athletic department as soon as the various teams ure organized and a trophy cup will be awarded to the winning team. Basket Ball Favorite Pastime In addition to the winter sports program, which will occupy the lime- light as soon as the football season is over, Davis is laying plans to in- duce every student to take part in some form of sport at all times throughout the year. More intermur- al baseball and tennis teams as well as more men interested in track and field sports will help to increase the present high average, Davis asid, Despite the interest which the pro- posed hockey league has stirred up it is not expected to supplant basket- 26 an most students. Candidates for tite varsity basketball team are practicing no hope of making the team are get- ting themselves ready for the series of intermural basketball games sched- udied for later in the winter. N.D. HIGHWAYS ARE RICHER AT MONTANA'S COST The State Highway Department was recently advised by the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D. C., that it would received $10,584 as addition- al federal aid for the construction of highways because of the failure of the state of Montana to use its al- Iet~ont. On July 5. 1922. the state ‘of Montana was allotted the sum, of mit tzorzi us federal aid for the building of highways in that state. Under the provisions of the fe-leral law, this allotment must be used ur within two years after it is made, and any unencumbered portion there- after reverts to the Federal govern- ment, which within 60 days thereafter must redistribute such unused por- tion to the various states. On June 30, 1925, Montana ‘had failed to use up $655,546.34 of its allotment given it on July 5, 1923. On August 29, 1925, the Department of Agriculture redistributed this sum to the various states on the same basis as that on which each state was awarded its or- igina] allotment. The last legislature of Kansas prac- | tically abolished its state highway de- partmen: by its failure to make an appropriation for its support. The federal government promptly with drew its feteral aid allotment for Kansas. Thereupon, Gov. B. S. Paul- en secured pledges from the member can tackle last year, and Halfhack Weir, one of the best forwards in the game, is. playing as ne more than hig share in keeping {| exceptional YO-NIGHT - & V. Breameyee OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE OPEN EVENIN tate legislature that they support such an appropriation ssion, and upon th pledges, the bankers and businessm of the state advanced sufficient fun to maintain the Highway body. Wh funds were supplied, the federal « was restored. Had not this volun support been forthcoming, N kota might have benefited at Kan expense. “COLD WINTER” BATTLE RAGES Farmers Are Warned Not to Place Much Stock in Fore- casts for Next Year North Dakota farmers warned by a well known Aj Foundation against placin forecasts of an extremely cold wint ahead to be followed by an un able summer in 1926. The winter n be extremely cold and the summer unseasonable, but scientists have no means of telling it at this éarly d A week is the longest dip possible in- to the weather future. « Neither is there reason for belie ing that the winters in this section are no longer so cold nor the sum- mers so hot as formerly, according to the Foundation, which quotes weatner bureau figures on the point, running The mean Dé cember-January-and-February — t the decede 1895.1 For the decade 1905- 5 degrees; and for 1915- es, a difference in the total range of .5 of a degree. The mean temperature for the same three winter months last year was 9.1 grees. Exceptional Occurrences “Snows that lay on the ground fc> months on end, skating that began in November and lasted until March, snow drifts that reached almost any height one might mention, were the occurrences in grand- father’s day as they are today,” the Foundation declares. “One mild win- ter starts the rumor that overcoat manufacturers had better go into the Palm Beach suit business, while an extremely cold winter is dubbed as a good old-fashioned winter. One planation for this is that memory and recalls the exception: rather than the average. Another is that modern living has taken the edge off the extreme weather. A snowfall that our forefathers would have trodden under foot for days now is shoveled awayebefore we get up in the morning. Better. héating,. too, makes us feel the low temperature less, and ice refrigerating plants and electric fans make extremes of heat more endurable.” , Changes Very Gradual While the weather is tonstantly changing from one year to another, big climatic changes are too gradual to be observed in the lifetime of one or even a hundred generations, the Foundation states. Scientists figure that the climate of this continent has not changed in some ten million years, not since the passing >f the glacial period, and probably will not for another ten million. PROOF DORIS: “So Arthur proposed last night?” “Yes.” A DORIS: “Did you accept?” MA’ don’t know, I was so aw. fully excited. If he comes tonight, I did. If he doesn’t, I didn’t.”—Sydf- ney Bulletin. are being xe BOWMAN i oe weS sacl rr Charge. Day Phone 100 Night Phones 100 or 484! aD + a 8 ‘