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ilure to Score Extra Point Plays Berlenbach Adds New Qne to Lis of Fight Alibis, Will Smile Stay? ore point n evidence thi have been Lost hk. pass or run intended. . for instance, dropped yoint, Ogletirr ton Un mney wd have 1 Was Badly Howey or right asus ohins Viste + bout reund f ef ession MeMillin, to " proce te ¢ hoon him pasting for th ve ! rAMes, round to run up m on it On en able » one touchdown Uni- pom yet to win a r hand, Boston d just nine md’ hu Tough ( ‘ampaign For Golden Bears audioner Min nesota May Reverse Score Minn on Wolverines \)))...: vig: game is with Stan- A victory over sould help AS! | Hiram Is Scoreless oleges in First Six Games Hiram, O.. No olleyre footbal Vy. + Kit h keyes six. he most hotly niested tilts In it n the two fe iled t te ack Demp r 30) minut: to et $150,000 Honor orm With | ' Moro Prisoners in | Philippines Fails (P)-—A policy worst Moro criminals hears Sulu in B instead of at the olony at Zambora- jigutate A dozen of rate convicts have been to the umber of Player: nents five wen quot number of su GOING STRONG been co VANDY alien jbrought her At the San Ramon colony the pris- ¢ placed on their honor to a xtent, with the result that hom have neraned and Pawns. nds which have terrorized other org nderbil Than s with Sewanee Mor ro) HAVE iking about the! it had in the game), le was lucky to win by a It looked like a certain 1 lish, bell- is now so ; rders for bells dt from Dutch though the low « the home of the caril- eipe rimson ‘T ) verdict. | countries a whi Hon. aT ‘nat ball — Por Saturday All-American Caliber—Southern California Coach Kaer Kast Georgeto Middle West Michigan vs. Minnesuta i orthwestern due vs. 1 igsouri v ngax Age hattan. Hotre Dame South | Nebraska } vs. Michigan State a€Bast Lansing. i puth Dakota State vs. Detroit at Oklahoma at Norman Wesleyan, ! Xavier v st s, Okinhoma Ag: Es kansas, Univ. Fat Stillwater. ke vs. Wottord at_Durham, N, ory & Henry vs. Elon at Emroy, | i rida vs. Hampden-Sidney at} itadel ys. Furman at Charleston, | ys. Kentucky at Lexington. New Gilente? vs. Loyola vs. Virginia at] “Southern College ati Bei grett vs. Guilford at Wake! ford io seater fia at Berkley. n. ¥8, 0} ies at Cor- fornia, v. fo ke Calif, at| is [ith gh he, i Bratch) a. Cali fe ere vs, Puget Sound ‘vs. Brigham Young Durin, Pa 5 eae y by yon of ecaching at Yale, Iowa end Southern Cali- wags Futon” ed 14 stars, bp All-America. He! o No. 1 orton Kaer, nicknamed “Devil-May” ee manner in which he handles tiie'o; wiser oem ee te, es en § for Coach Jones says Kaer is pec among the ‘backs tht have played under btm during his long enpeer. Jsual Havoc, 1 tha THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Minnesota Is Gunning For Yost Pack of Wolverines | | it prove successful, Mlnek reer hiogses| cles,” | may command good prices forshuntets, | work of ! saddle horses and polo ponies, in. the! ' future while Uncle Sams Ge og ors wet | ; some of their remounts, animals resulting from the | okperim nt. FREDERICK EN “MADAME a + the, luge of the. English, wil arrive ta cape casi tm ” gt Me fs ane fas played that tole on stage ai | © BUY ENGLISH DRAMA motion ' ! ‘sport of ‘English drama in ex-; tres 3 change for American musical comedy | nd jazz, will be greater than ever during the current theatrical scason. American managers—Al Woods, Ar- chie Selwyn, Lee Shubert, Morris Gest, and Several others—left Lon- don with pockets bulging with man-* uscripts. Twtnty-five per cent of the plays on Broadway this season will be from Furopean pens. The proportion of American plays in Lon- don will be even greater. a in ndoners eatre in 1908 is believed to: be Saas by English audience: _— ee London:strect names committee whrt to strects of the sate nate. stance there are dozens streats, which confus No STEN STRUCTION, Not one English musical et re bought by. Ani athe cl mérican musical an jancing shows ft! ‘continue to fill English theaters. | sseibed property English plays to be seen in New} York and their authors, includes “The Ghost Trai by Arnold Ridle “Wet Paint,” by. Lord Latham; vet Our Yesterdays, ” by C.K. Munroe; | “What Fun Frenchmen Have,” by Mi. chael Arlen; “The Constant Nymph,” | Lo by Basil Dean; “Scotch Mist,” by of Bierharen, Dakota, i front of or adjoini | Sir Patrick Hustings; “The Letter,” {orginal by Somerset Maugham. There will be| Lot Nimber 1. J ja dozen others. xu tt i ig" eran “ REFORM BERLIN REVUES Bet ‘Number. 2 | The Germun cxpitul, which next. to | Paris und Vienna has reputation for) Lot Number 6... during revues, hus decided to reform.| 5 OrMginal, Pia The reform was started by producers/ [ot Sumy Z themselves. herm Pacific A Erik Charell, whose new folls is} G0 fe. of N. 100 ie it “From Mouth to Mouth,” suid that | Northern’ Pacific: Adéition. | Eriko Glaessner, famous for posing in the nude, talked him into the id ot PS plugin clothes on all the girls “just or once.” But Charelt thinks the fad) % is not going to lust out the scason. Two Americans, Alina Barnes and Louis, Doyglas, ure among the head: liners. P Pacitic Adéittun, BI we Number 8...... jorel Pacific a | Michigan and Northwestern now hold the ins Ten feotball chi The Purple, with only Tow yoed chance of sticking to the top, but the Wolv a tartar in the husky Minnesota eleven when they ¢ ¢ stronghold Saturday. Above are four stars of the Spears aggregation—Joesting, Nydahl, Alinquist and Peplaw. They make one of the strongest backfields in the middle west. In case.cne of them gets injured the Gophers have still another flashy fellow to shove in the lineup—Barnhart Joesting ix one of the best fullbacks in the game, while his mates are all fast and clever ball-toters. They're certain to cause Michigan plen- ty of trouble, He track -in the Bix: # ‘0 face, stands : apt to meet ar MAN | ah at the Gopher HAUPTMAN LEADS = \ Gerhart Hauptmann ‘holds the lime- ‘Vight among modern German play- wrights on t! this season with three plays, one ‘of which “The Rats” has started a run in Berlin. “Dorothea Angermann,” a tragedy which aroused interest several months ago because five producers woul the rights with. out having read the manuscript, will Ii have simultaneous premiers in 10 cit- “60 ft. of 1... w. bo ft, of and 8: Northern Pacifie, Lot Number 10.. . ARMY REMOUNT CENTER STARTS NEW ADVENTURE IN RAISING OF HORSES, of Oklahoma and Texas that riding! te the minimum required of a German horses arc a natural part of the life theatrical producer for engaging an|Iot Number of the community. There the need for; Envlish dancing girl for hts revue, | Lot Number sturdy saddle stock has persisted he British government insists that | Let while elsewhere the coming of the a British girl may have a passport to|L? ies of steam and gasoline meant the Germany only if she can show a con-| foe Number 6. ¢ shipped out fe teady dwingling of the art, and it) tract for five pounds or more weekly, ‘Lot Number te to the | is an art, of producing good h s|and if the equivalent of a returnjLet Number ion in the}and, polo ponies and other | ticket has been deposited with a Lon- Lot Number 9... northwestern corner of don bank. Hot: 5 Jn and about the Bie vi herds of wild hor: $ estimated that there are $0,000 alt told wande: ing in the or in the horse corral of the Infians. They are the rem-| nants of herds that once r ned the slopes of the Rookies and from whieh came the mustang eow pony of front ier times, Among them there lingers, — » traces of the ood v4 ui first Arab»stock brought o the World by Cortez and h dors more than four hun years| the. ago, descendants of the fleet steeds, the Moors brought i when th Bat ¢ steady dilutio ot riding horse es the end of October. The music for ‘And Pippa Dances,” n fairy tale, was written by Bruno Hartl, musical di-; rector of the Frankfort Municipal | Opera. PROTECT DANCING GIRLS Five pounds sterling por week and Lot Number Lot Number Let Number 3. Mensie & C q tae Number 16. MeKenste + Cottinns ‘Additton, in horse raising got under from tite R Riding Horses In Demand ‘We have now entered a of national life. Whereever \Trish or carly American strong among our popula love of horses has remained day ri mand, th HIT HUNGARIAN COMEDIES pene ace Musical comedies from Austria and [Ot Number 12. Hungary are “spoiling the taste of the Lot N Jugoslavian public” in the opinion of Lot } the Art section of theMinistry of Pub-| MeMenste & lic Instruction. It has circularized all 0 theatres in the Triune Kingdom de- | [et manding that such comedies be re-| red moved. i Number 1. | bridte path everywhere and even with Tot 500 head of remount stal-| Inasmuch as ninety-five per cent of Lot I take us years to fill all| all operettas staged - in Jugoslavin Let applications -for riding animal} originate in Budupest, the managers oe breeding that We are go-| protested immediate withdrawal Lot ing to put that in back on its| would force them to close their [2! > fect and thi tending the | houses. Kot ing hand in Le just a part of PLAYWRIGHTS AS ACTORS iLot Since Shakespeare's day many of the Lot successful English playwrights have lot had experience as. actors. Sir Arthur, Pinero was a player before he became: a dramatist. Clemence Dane had years Lot Number of experience as an actress before she Lot Number 2: wrote “Bill 6f Divorcement.” ier Number Noel Coward is so busy with orders! Lo! ; getting started in it ni | the program nd) The three stallions shipped from | Front Royal are elmo a 15% hand Drait| brown, foaled in 1921, and whose rac- known min-| ing blood runs back’to RenBrush of the Whitney stables and Helmet of ‘the Bradley strain; Guilsborough, a 16 hand bay with the blood of ‘Or- Sane aes a mon sible ele for Sew plays 4) re a“ little time | oe Ht lerchant arine, a 16 hand grandson to act ut wi appear for a mon s iat game Weck feed aun at a ina play Basil Dean will produce Be kot Saar af daughter of Hamburg. They be London. In return for this courtesy, | sent from the quartermaster remount Dean will appear for a month in New| Lot Number ¢ center at Fort Robinson, Neb., to the! York in one of Noel Coward's plays Lot : ee + : Blackfeet reservation where the at-'Cicely Hamilton, Whose “The Old oy poses to find in the tempt to build up « new line of riding Adam” had a good run Iast winter in| bo cavalry remount. h wi i in fm e - mn, was an actress for man: umber 14 indian wards that would ake them biiebiond coh tuoromgubred sires wi | ¥Sutteon Vane of “Outward Bound” | Tet Number i “supporting. supervised by the Indian agent. If, fame also is un actor and “Ask Bec- | Lot FB Ts 1 Not Discouraged a But Comm joner Frank Knox iat These Gopher Stars May Upset Yost’s Title Hopes fertilizer plants to which thoushnds of head have been sent. T wretched, spiritless lot, army inepe tors found some months ago after careful appraisal of the herds request of the In By hoped | source be the Board of Indian Comm who hi not to be discourage, au reserve officer of the amiliar with the » adequat Lot, Number MeKensic & army roblem of supply of ri und suring ing. hors Lot_ Number MeKensice Number Number for the army in the event of a war! emergency that would call the troops} to protect the southern frontier. Thay; xpused flank is a horse ‘country Great as has been the development. of motor transportation by land and} jair, mounted troops are the main: reliance of the nation in the desert land waste ama that'would be the} {scene of conflict. | Colonel Knox also found that the remount experts from Salt Lake had j noted only one favorable factor in the | linspection of the Blackfeet rese tion wild herds. ‘They eztimated thai! there were 300 mares possibly from which a new generation of riding horses might be bred if the work was done under scientific superv: thoroughbred stallions were available, That led the commission to talk the) matter over with Major General jfrouc Cheatham, quartermaster: gen- eral of the army. ‘It developed’ that ‘the remount service, had some 460 mighty stallions at its command, 200 of which have heen donated to the | government by enthusiastic horsemen ‘in their eagerness to see thé revival he American riding stock breeding. General Cheatham was éager 19, ‘help in the double. barreled effort to! | supplement the national defense and lat the same time aid the Indian wards of the government in gstablishing themselves in a new industry, Con't Brood Un Natural Processes “It is, after all, a simple inatter to Ut cue suustrial power of Americ: into the speedy production for war! of guns, ammunition, clothing and! j other equipuftnt for troops,” he seid.: “You can speed te all those mechani-! es processes; speed ‘up naturgl proc tes like hares breed:t jing. We must make our riding horse | | : ! | i | output bufficient. in peace time to meet our war time speeds and we are doing it. The success of the re- jmount efforts thus far has. been) here is no shortage of draft stock in ae Uni States. We ean get all the gun and son teams we need because our farms have kept alive the gfoat strains of draft horses | ritish horse buyers revorted ‘when | they made their last peeetaes inthis country toward the close of the World War they were getting as good ir better’ work teams then as they. aia in their pik ad upon the Amer- “But it’s a different stor ine rn inc stock. The farms rare oote pega ae Farmers one: “to ve om it a only ro the roaaen oul a ie eastern fhe Roetios nnd down theengh parts. ee Prulitie Frederick his sucemmberto ful. With the peak of stare, A reaver the old fut Wi passed ‘und 8,000° more cars Tena ‘Ashwell starred at the old Globe ‘licensed than Jast yenr, the expense The most puszling problem of the | lo with the great eg ei of core in| Gonstabu lury, ,. Victoria streets and Church | title the postmen. other NOTICE. 18. HEREBY GIVEN to | because 0 following de- | fo propert; situated jm the City | from a poorhous sidewalks: have - Scent coemiracigd ts in} the said pro- rty, 3 and that to amount ‘due and t den ecitic “Natition lock 12 Hp a Northern Pee! > an Aadition, i0.80 i 46.34 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1926 of Evan Dlaea, 2 pay i ee Prisotiers i Operate Avitomébile License Bureau in Montana 0.) —Mon- Helena, Mont, Nov. prison it tena’s experiment in usii et labor to operute its automobile license bureau apparently lias proven success- the year’s has been cut alniost 60 per cent. | The bureau formerly.was a part of the department of state. TITLED, AND POOR London — Sir John Echlin, a ser- jeant in the Royal Ulster has _ inherited a without « fortune. Three impoverished haronets have red =recentuy in the news -'—one earning a ing by taking care of horses, another Sying shortly batter bein, tHireatened with ejection inability to pay the rent his tiny room, and a third rescued HAIL THE HERO: Mexico, Mo., Nov. 19.—The hero has been found, right hercvin Missouri. Alvin Breamer is the man who show- ed them, Alvin came from his home at Molino to take in a carnival, and while enjoying the sights closed up 26, the doll rack booth, his accuracy at | knocking down the dolls claiining the : last quarter in the place. At a convention of scientists in Washington recently ao plant wus pelt growing within « hermetically sealed bulb, proving, that plants do not need fresh ir. It uses the sai water and wir over and over agui andirequires no attention. Northern Pacific, = ‘Nealtion, | Miners of this lignite have recently changed their cquipment to meet the demand for a size ‘that is suitable for stoves and furnaces. Furnace Size Is a clean, small-lump lignite, free from slack, and sized right for this sete use. It need not be broken to go in the door, A boon to the housewife. Sold Exclusively By ST. HILAIRE LUMBER COMPANY Phone: 17 Bismarck, N._D. Phone 577 ‘No. 10 “THERE is a best way to : hovel dirt, drive a car or write an insurance pol- ‘fey. This is an agency of } the Hartford Fire Insur- : ance Company.’ We write ‘policies “right”. Buy your insurance like