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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE’ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1925 | _ 3 KINGS OF FISTIC GAME FILLING STADIUM ort a vino, a and Rosenberg Snapped During Work: IS EVERY COACH'S AT DOOR OF RED GRANGE Games Must Be Won Various Offers Are Made Him ds Vision Him as CRAZY QUILT TRICK GRID FORMATION fei * Gripping Stories of Life! The stories that-stir your soul, that give you the greatest thrill, that linger longest in yout mem- ory, are not thd creations of the fiction writer, but stories of events that really happened, and in which the characters are true. This great fact is hammered home in a most erful manner in every issue of True Story Mag- azine. In this great publication are true stories of love, sacrifice |, and struggle—written by men and women who havelived them. Fiction is interesting; a good drama will hold your attention for an hour or two—but the true- life narratives that appear in True Story Magazine will grip our imagination and tug at your Feare strings as no other kind of story can do, The December BY BILLY EVANS Football coaching has a multitude of worries and the greatest of all is the modern stadium for athletics, That may sound like a rather far- | fetched argument but you need talk to only a few of the leading directors of football to be convinced. The worry of the coach in respect | joc to the stadium i | fi ling of it. T now must be Here is something new’ in trick foothall formations as originated by Coach W. L. Laval of Furman ted at Greenville, $. C; He calls it the “crazy quilt’ and it looks even worse than that: It has been te pees worked with great success by Furman in a number Of the most important games on the schedule. ess financially as a = mia a ing? | Russie Leroy of Fargo here Nov. —Fr Future Congressman suc Ch N (P) The well as artistically for the coach 10 ie . P " | feel ce re i 7|] issue is literally packed with ae certain, ofretention: RIP: Starch high-balls. if Leroy’s manager agrees that Bull thrilling featlites Wee town “fhese big stadiums have just ees Buy.it today. dealer has it. rue Stor At all newsstands 25¢ foot- ath- sponsibility of ch,” remarked etic director to me reeently. | “Other college s) ts depend upon | football for their life. Football fans $ other specie; ride only with © winner, | sWhen a couch fails to put over a winner there is no sell-out at the big MIKE BALLERING, JACK DEM! AND PHIL. | Trek Like any eons or & aeunny ROSPN YEG built to house three times that many. “When your college b enter the ring at 140 pounss. Another reason why the Scotch re- saat fuse to take up football in a se St. Paul, Minn.—The North Dakot ous way is that halfhacks object to| Aggies defeated St. Thomas Colleg being thrown for lonuen. football team, 14 to 7. We see by the pi nplaining of weak legs... they've been pulled often enou ers Babe Ruth| Parshall, N. D.—Gunner Smith, Well,| Moorhead, knocked out Johnny | h. | Compton, Minot junior welter, in the | fourth of a scheduled ten round bout PITCHING ACES here last evening. fangthing MAY FIGURE IN = We dont ince shatter yout ct| SEVERAL DEALS| PEANUTS TOBIN : | and al Kings, As you daubt'ess kaos, TaHering 8 [jy that eosts hal | church. ¢ eu junior champion JEMpse niles the } clor und) siderably more, there is a tremendous! toastmaster, i cuted | Hovenbers : at Jacita| 1 rnd upkeco on the invest| De Wolf Hopper a good fielder or KNOCKS OUT i - alone is 1 with the money | ‘¢Pts a lot of chane fabu-| net, but the old boy certainly ac- Despite the Jeorge Jerzenka 1 r ng talent, it JOE WICKS | ois ca or vith ainsi Cascabagagi a ac ae tl Ha e et f : ‘OAC IS FE | a big field that took care of 10,000. Ernie Jarvis, British flyweight, is H y at TOUGH OPENER jf eis, hone at d has yet to| The failure of a ks of Montana in | county d t court which to deliver. If he fails in his| three fights so ar pitcher to de-| (noched out Joe Wi d staged by | more serious charge. TS ANXIOUS TO SEieA| ear ceeies: he welaca colieh WPeRie | lon liver is not always due to fading abil- q ard b ined Of eteHintlneeeo useewh co : ; IS BAD BUSINESS! Soe tntecece wales tor thee 4 th ee very often it can be traced to con. | local legion men. The kayo blow was | accu dof empting tou ah ‘old it the amou Dn een ener * puitial pCO IN ey ae dangerous weapon with intent to do ted a plese fe Ming to) Parshall, N. D4 Noy. 12—Peanut t harm” s convieted of ordin- r exist nes, usually less, in| to expectagions has had |able to get a worth while return. Tobin, 133 pounds, of Minot last night | ault by the jury of the. Morton dof the knocked out Joe tail-end I rea PD. : : dan Pe chies ition’ raced to con- | v vight to the stomach wich rollow- |army saber on Attorney P. J. Jungers ge retaae _Perhaps the chief reason Mr. Jar. | ditions other thin those that arise on| 2 FBHU A? the stomach watch Follow: | eee ong “with throwing aham- ; j 4 you get a break on the| vis ning in this country is|the ball field. The environment is ! RR sis monih 2 ago, Nov. 12 pened atin f'vour big games that the| that he was not in) England ‘long | not always right. A new asture of- aa aes bi ee i the ly the two enough to watch Joe Beckett per- | ten brings about a remarkable change a ; ir Wheatw t York, Nov ‘ « section ia hud busine happen ‘to. he undefeated, or form. inva piteher believed to be siipring| LAMPE RATED AS |, Attorney Junsers was the chief wit in Wheaton t ° d Nebragka are convince rte tie ane the ‘ aoe te fast. ess fo je prose: » appearing: less. than t me is the one that will de . be i See " | SiO Gvapig IR GIES Abbooney o ightw a , certain championship, interest in ® t was Willie Hoppe and|_ It is said that such pitchers as vith his arm in a sling. Attorney €. ft Pein s irene 1g6 (howe two: collenes agama Talwave’ insures a packed | now s Bob Cannefax who lost |Ehmke of Boston, Hoyt of New York, CHICAGO’S BEST | Kelsch conducted the prosecution his own admission, b RES a EWwG:y hous ° his wife in the div courts Uhle of Cleveland, Collins of Detroit — jand oe A, ‘ampbell was 2 ons of his mother have ery college has its natwral| The kiss shot in billiards doesn’t|and Zachary of Washington are on| Eastern football experts fuera | pointed by the court us counsel for vereoiie: and | | sometimes two. In the old days] seem to be so effective in the home. | the market. greatly impressed by the play of End | Jerzenka. Ilinois won, this go in the game against | The next case on trial is that of ou polished off those ancient en- Leonard told of his « , N e tables, 1 a Z ei a e ‘They rate his work te vs. Fred Wenger, ; white” going th el dish a anauk ess BOB ZUPP One First Down in . as the best of any of the highly tout- d peeeny in the aileR t be within af H ata yeynn! id his re yg the onching est! BALL ‘TEAM R ‘e ei ‘Chicago stars. ‘Lampe ‘is sixfeet, ain from a granary on the farm sue : el almost a. probally as of the college. You were! with A WEAK LIN Yost-Purple Tilt) orc ei and nes @ displace: y Veeder. ee ee ee atee 9 eee The| SAME, GOES FOR AN I ment of 195 pounds. p 8, were take 1 cf tt mission Tex Rick i, promotor, only safe system for coach to fol- AC T OR A SOAP PEDDL One of the most unusual feat paniehtieiehih | of the surpris iT of Mich scheduled for to by Northwester turday was the i MANDAN NEWS | = making of but a single first down in the entire game. ‘The Wolverines got] @——~— ||_ NEWS BRIEFS Peipabeerdtih that in the second period when Half- is to win all the games and n't _he done in football over} young Stribling will fi ns gS will fight length of times | Tunney as soon as he is of ag © stadiums are wonderful, | we doesnt inéan’the | particularly if you fill them. How- Which Dempsey plansto, j low run-. admitted that he was considering, 4 prineipal in Walker » prospect wit ian age The Armistice day celebration in ved.” Bie ;anost of my gray ‘haies have(Aen back Herrnstein went around the Pur- sl e da} 9 ivent of th wile, sone ple end for 13 yards. It was the/ Mandan opened af 1 aah Grand Forks, N. DE. R. Mont- . leneeat’ gain ot-the¢ concert by the Elks band. Attorne 8, N. RM You never can tell what a sport ae ie C.F. Kelsch presided during the pro- | 8omery, fair secretary he al th [pionship nest summer, You nov lng -edltors wilde... Ber inetance; gram Which ineluded "aloe by Misa,| cele ere autborized to attend aS? the ¢ heard) rumors—just rumors, = | Fiorence Connolly and Mrs. H. W.|the international Ifvestock show in i | mind you-—that Red Grange is to be); SPORT BRIEFS = {| sicdaugh, an address by Attorney | Chicago. a aaa Leonard will have to re-enter — th 1 welter as I don't think hel z ; topped 135. pounds.” from the coach's point of view, but rt oA ca this year. 4 a pireadi - - ‘ stopped get Inca panchsoriéwotnoxt! » sandlots to je hus so many goed things to recom. | Pores om she! alt Americathis “fear. | g —__—__— Ceara Shafer, and ‘the reeding of) Grand Forks, N. D—The « him because he Benny said. “Sure 1 want}? I AAO oy -]| mend it that this one must be over- FAMOUS FROSTS Battling Flynn, Grand_ Forks,| Quigg’s offi statement on Armis-|one half cent storage and t runt ht again. I have been fee 1 experience enio by Fre#co | jooked. Jack. knocked ou K. 0. Brown of Minot. | tice day by Post Commander Herbert | rate on grain will be one of the im- at field a looked | like returning to the ring for ompson of the Pittsburgh Pirates.|/ The stadium has made possible ‘on the ‘pumpkin. ans | Hoeft.” Rev. C. W. Stewart gave the | portant subj d by the je from the, vut the foot- Perhaps if 1 can] onsen nade his professional de-| group athleties on a large seale. It| Firpo. Devils Lake.—Abe Wallace, Fargo,| invocation and the benediction was | North Dakot change at as sure. I'd was almost other, who doesn't at with the Island club of | js doing a great good for the general] Lefty Groves. was given a technical kn ut in! pronounced by Rev. $ » Nebraska Halfyard, | its meeting here on . Twill be joined ¢ rong tho "And you saw what Grange did ue in 1923.| welfare of the student body at every| Lightweight elimination tourney : , the main bout here with Jimmie Por-|Two civil war veterans were given ————— 1 of the Western | college having one. ter, University of North Dakota! places of honor on the platform. John The number of passengers carried a ee ague in the fall of the year and football coach is one of th RAW-RAW HUMOR champion. Leach of Solem and J. C. Creighton of |in 1924 by French airplanes was more aera Sekteese os on with the figures in the life of ev RIPP: I got awfully stiff las’ Mandan. than 16,000, and the quant f me; 7 his sale t ig i Football Games Lone He has a big job and is | night. Fargo, N. D—Frank C. Bull, Cana-| "Veterans of all wars were honor |chandise carnied in the yeu $ (deserving of being well paid. SNORTER: What were you drink-| dian lightweight champion, may meet] guests at the banquet given by the aabout 2,500,000 pounds. . FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13 Ozark Wesleyan vs. Miami Schoo of Mines at ( Phillips v at Durant. Missouri WesTeyan Osteopaths at Cameron, Kan Westmin Fulton 1 Men cms Wet | Wren the second act has come to an end—and ee the curtain is rung down amidst whirling applause—when abt? tei | OOM A ated scm you mingle outside with. the excited throngs in the lobby pstern Teachers 4 Kirksy Valley at MEMORY OF CAMP copied Select none that w When W ter while attending a me alter € Sas -% void in football circles, He will be/the line at the ki ‘ would become of the All- the goal, 3 1! 4 1 team, tion of h ) 2 Would) the annual the ball : — have a amel.: hing & mythical eleven | crosses the hicker’s geal line and . pore es j . ‘ould some method be! #0es into the stands just back /of . ran Gt : 2 devised for continuing it jthe end of playing territory. How 4 oa \is it scored? ‘WHEN the thrilling second act of the best show of the year has just come to an end. And the stars have. taken their curtain calls in answer to Any number of suggestions have! On the kickoff the ball crosses heen made as to how the All-America the goal line and 3 into the stands custom should be continued. at the end < have been logical, others not. \ ALI MERICA soe ee aes mbidawi send alter sonnick-apeimne: ‘When reg join 2 Collier. "ie" nae’ boom Joooked for | ess counting 80 the crowds outside just as pleased and thrilled 4 and fans. To ved ont ' t would be ridiculous as yourself—have a Camel! 4 np’s team was the ambition of | ke a ball that bounded ‘ " 1, [stands a loose For no other friend is so cheerful, so resting a pert tb ree ere oxen | unger between acts as Camel. Camel adds its own es fg ° . . Pi = sonal ee Bean It cue nscessary: for — —and kept—so many friends. Camels never & noenore a een tire your taste no matter how liberally or zest- Fer Camp under the jurisdiction of cigaretty after-taste. All the desire to please, afl ae ett renee of continuin Cummings win th zation in the world, goes into this one cigarette. th the Walter Camp. All-America. golf title twice in i. So when: you leave the theatre pleased and inspired for' greater things, when you see life’s problems and their solutions clearer—lift the came from a cigarette. Have a Camel! Grantland Rice is a great writer i} and a noted football expert. Hel How old ’ tt played the game at college, has lived Giants ?—5 it ever since. He is eminently fitted ne for the task, Snyder of the 32, is Willie Ha boxer?—H. T. R. ti SAME CUSTOM Harmon is 36, Here is the announcement as made ie by Collier's relative to its policy on re Sai th the naming of an All-America eleven. HELPF L HINTS “For 26 years the football! season | the Into the makin; the world’ fe Re atlas shelter too H UN TE 2 A} fhe id of this one cigarette goes all of the ability of Aleigen ny ball team, chosen by Walter Camp. Sar organization of expert tobacco men. Nothing is too for Camels. The pe eps eat iad oe nto] BY MORRIS ACKERMAN choicest Turkish and domestic tobaccos. The most sidlfud lenders. The most - such wide popularity that it im-| ee scientific package. No other cigarette made is like Camels. No finer cigerette can , ™ * ] sible for his eyes alone to see and i h f i y Reigh the merits 62 all. the great| I suppose ten thousand deer and | be made, Camels are the overwhelming choice of experienced smokers. Our hij est ish, if you do not yet know Comal quality, is that pad (es them. We invite you to compare Camels with wny. cigarette made at any prices . R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Players. And so he drafted a corps|moosé, pfferinz perfect target : Tf famous coaches and expert ob-|been missed on account of servers who informed him of the| being’ “knocked over.” (1 know I } promise and achievements of the| missed one of those ten thousand on A best players in each section. that score.) Knocking the sight a “The same experts will perform| against a rock or a tree will do it. 4 the service during the season for|A leaf sight may look 0. K. on top { tre ntland Rice, outstanding among|and ‘be all wrong underneath. Bi sports writers.” Look your sights over before leay- ' a we ae thin team | ngccame, and on the way home at re is no reason wi is team | night. rf ae micked by Grantland Rice should) A few looks in the meantime won't 17 ee'be as anxiously awaited as were/hurt. One thing is sure with out-of- ir, Camps selections. In memory /line sights, and that is, no matter ‘ ow F k tHe name of |how well you aim or how perfect ( pe ihe ergintar of ‘he Iden should (ti target, you are in for & miss every crack of the weapon. © 1923 : " M0 ms poe cage Poy enaanwmmnantices