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COACH WARNER | OF STANFORD HAS 45 PLAYS Hopes to Bewilder Alabama's! se in New Year’s Day Gridiron Classic University, )—One of stitions about Warner al hed by the scheduled New Year’ Day game between Stanford and Ala The other may superstition when the Crimson Tide meets th Big R Horde in the Rose Bowl, New Y Day Tt has been said loses to a team he ut myth was watehed — the ‘alifornia pli then Calif, two Glenn Dec ay licked companion p tory is that makes ¢ a neithe s notes on} It is record. ks with him to he watched the! ly this season. for Atlanta sport pages | anford coach filled two composition books with is scouti ed he took no notebe Los Angeles when Trojans Reporte claim the or three ame with Georgia in Bormingham so, and, if it is true, is that a forerunner to another Alabania vi tory in the Rose Bowl? Back on the Joh Warner returned to Stanford Dec. | ; having visited Birmingh : Army-Na the Notre He immed of | flict with Alab as nearly as it can be h football! championship of the United State: “venerable on defens mentor” went 3 te from Tuscaloosa. week was devoted to defensive work. Of. | fensive plays were polished up but! no new ones added. It is known | Stanford had 45 plays for use against | U.S.C. The board of strategy that | gave the plays in the huddle in’ the | Trojan contest forgot about half of | the plays they had been armed with | but Stanford won by the margin of a placement kick in the try-at-point | after touchdown, | iS those 45 plays still are were ed against nor t ity fornia in the closing game season. They may be tried : the Crimson Tide. Deceptive Attack pr is apparently satisfied with equipment. Deception is the ¢ of the Stanford attack this . It is derived from plays 1 with the simple reverse as a! Passes, line bucks, off-tackle | plays and end runs all evolve from. the mystifiecation yenerated | when “Bit? Hoffman, fullb: eives the ball from center and either hands it to one of the backs nig past him, dives through the line himself, or retreats to hurl a long pass. But, Warner does not fear the | power of the Crimson Tide. He has| xeon with his own eyes the powerful Alahan arge Georgi: He t ed the not too powe ful backs e yardage on a fake end run that 8 le and on an end tun formation that is bul warked by a a pass. He knows what will need to offset the power o am tht he | has said “Hi a single weakness.” | m basis. Coleharbor, Mercer - Independent Quints , Will Play Tonight’ Coleharbor, N. D., Dee. cinl)-—Undefeated thus son, the fast Colehar! Ants will play the Mercer Independ- ents here tonight. The Coleharbor guint has won de- cisively, oyety phe; Turtle Lake sharp- shoot Oren NE: Wilton Independ ents, Last year this ag, made a wonderful record whe: feated all the teams in McLean ty and the Drake independ: 1: tean after Drake had copped the —inde- pendent title. The team composed of the fol- lowing players: Arthur Nelson, for- mer Coleharbor high school star; L. H. Kanooth, a-player of much exper. lence in independent circles; Joe Hailey, all-county high school guard of last yeat; J. Koeppen, star guard of seasons past on the Oconte, Wis., high school teams; F. A. Vogel and| J. W. Vogel of St. Cloud (Minn.) Teachers’ college fame, | Any teams seeking games are urg-| ed to write F. A. Vogel, the manager, | ‘at Coleharbor. | FIGHT RESULTS : —_— 18.—-tSpe- | r th | | » :(By Associated Press) | New York—Tony Canzoneri, York, beat Bushy Graham, Utic Y.;": (10.) Pete Sarmiento, Philip- | », fought a draw with Dominick | PD od York,” (10). Carl weland, drew with Andy Béston (10). Johnny Green, at Vic Burrone, wt | | New insas City—Glenn e, Mar- | m, lowa, fought a draw with , Sioux City (10). Rarris, Des Moines, beat | , Kansas City. : Stein, New York, Dem dog, Bock Island, il. : jalian Moran, Havana, beat “ yan, St. Paul. (10). ‘Worth, Fla.—dJimmy. Cahill, Ee , St. , Fin, “technical kneekout | Nene to! meet used |he ready for | mauler’ Dartmouth Seeks Revenge in Major Winter Sports a a SIKES HARDY i of a championship fcotball team fcr 1926 shattered, as Yale, Harvard, Brown and Cornell, Dartmouth y 1 hockey with a spit ams. ec is basketball capta y leader, The material is excellent both sport Delaney Would Be Easy For Dempsey, Gene Tunney Says (P)—All to hit former mpion and the present heavyweight titleholder in the ring, and Del Idition t6 the N out list, Gene With vision. the result of de s the hoc in * Basketball Scores Bsa ing Junior Junior coll college 26, two overtime iods necessary break deadloc! Minot High 32; Stanley High 11. Devils Lake High 14; Rolla High Ely pe Kk. 18 dois ihe Rochester Junior heavyweight ch J. ¢ college 28; Ma- son City, Lowa, a. ae. ; "NEWS BRIEFS’ | knoe belie a “ agent nockouts ¢ fellow Dempsey,” 1 and ev pil ney Dempsey can hit. Tunney told the Newark E News that he would d they eve City Minot Coroner’s inquest inio death of Mrs. Mildred Watson, 24, of Minot, who killed when struc r, was adjourned until Satu.- Negro prize fighte police to be the w killed three women a yi is charged in Philadelphia with murder if he gets to you. Tomm Gibbons not to me. But a punch who gets to Jack knock him down, If Lever get in the with him in 1 he- lieve I'll prove that theory.” get mum capital of staté banks and more in es for all new banks s recommended by A. J. V ate commissione| Duggan Beats Fettig¢ in Grand Forks Bout Grand Fork strict then a nation: termine the countr: Taw, KE. J. Crocker, Te sioner, and James E. Ferguson, hus- band governor, ec a fist fight. is fired and fined; Ferguson y Same fine rand to des attitude on the ig in the fe boxing card here last was complete! classed Minot Johnson aded Johnnie Grif O'Day shaded Tommy Murphy, Lew Griffin and Walter Boese fought to Chet Boese Young ined Rud ht jabor commi: chnieal knockout over Bal pssst Sumner H. Britton, aujgeor And re- tired publisher of New York, mis | since Monday, found an inesia patient in IS | hospital. Wills-Lenglen Game Forbidden By Rules Chicago, Dee. 18. ()-Miss Helen Wills, enroute east today for some! Christmas shopping in he other, repeated h that a tennis match Lenglen seemed. impossible “the rules of the tennis association will not permit it.” Announcement was York Ja night that \ would join the staff of the Ne World, Governor of Colorado plans state penitentiary with pl to examine thr to ns. BY THE BEARD: sed trate (to ace If your bla Well, if we going y beards you Rave no conscience at i all.—Der Brummer, Berlin. RIVAL COACHES MASTER MINDS Stanford, brought Glenm Warner to the Pacific y | coast, to put Stanford, dn the football map. He has more than exceeded oxpectations. In three years, he has two victories and a tie game over California, Stanford's greatest. rival... This. year his team.won and South St. Paul. ‘Livestock of All: , Kinds Is Marketed in Larg¢_,Amoun Ti eee ova dtatrice” the marketing of all: cla |-tock in very legge amounts) adcomd ing to a preliminar; mar: axricuittra: and finanetw ‘conditions rprepared by the Federal. Reserve bank of Minneapolis; ° 3 The total ga@mber of’ hedd of Hy 4 og Tre. etfes at South St. Paul was y cent over whyear ago. | H vipts reached ‘gecord-break: \tals for November-and pe cent larger than:in pesiber ja fum- jben of head. However, owilsg to the average weights ‘were than a year ago. Phewe extha- y receipts of li ved, ivestock terminals, the gains’ in 41 ivid debits over November ing 23 per cent for South id 10 per cent for Sioux . In the face of stich heavy | ings some price declines were | Median hog prices drop-| tabl {ped $1.50 per hundredweight,: and rieties of livestock declined as compared with October Pp it is noteworthy that s compared with a: year age, price chan, of livestock ¢xhibited+ Thing ains as losses, so that estock price situation in general ‘was fully as favorable as in’ Novem- |ber of last year. Shipments of stock: lers feeders during November j were nearly double the total for:the [sume month s year ago, hog ship: nts alone being more than three large as last year. Grain Receipts Smaller In this district grain receiptyy: at terminals continued to exhibit to- 's below a year ago, the volume in: | November being one-third below last ‘year, This has been reflected in curloadings for grain ‘and grain products, which. were 27 per. cent ‘be- jtow last year whén comparing the \first three weeks of November in each year. The median prites of, the rains during November as compared with a year ago declined. 15, eents ‘for wheat, 18 cents for corn and 34 jeonts for flax, and increased 23 ents for durum, 14 cents" for rye, m t +6 cents for oats and 1 cent for ‘bar. ley. As compared with October medians, small declines where shown | for all the grains, except durum and flax. Grain stocks in terminal ete- | val ors at end of November equaled j those at the end of Qctober and were 10 per cent greater than last year, |The physical volume of business, as measured by carloadings for the average working day during the first three weeks of November, was slight- ly larger than a year aga. Gains in carloadings were shown for livestock, coal and coke and merchandise in less than carload lots. Reported shipments of linseed products and of flour were respectively, 35 and 17 per jecent lower in November than a year ago, The money value of busihess trans- acted in this district, as measu ayments through banks teen gities, was velow u lin November “a year ago, decline: \heing shown in all reporting cities except Billings,- Fargo, Helens, Mi- not, Superior, LaCrosse, Sioux Falls Of these the first four named are in the wheat belt, and the last two named. have livestock receiving terminals. Sales {at retail, according to preliminary reports made to us by department ores located in twelve cities ‘with- in th rict were 6 per cent small- er than a year ago. Orine Tyberg and G. G. Klipfel of [eran were callers in Wing Satur- jay. Lenora Johns and Iola Dutojt. at- tended the dance in Regan Friday | night. Josephine Olson arrived here Satur- |day morning after haying spent a \few days in Regan with her aunt. The Farmers’ institute which was to be held in Wing Saturday didn’t Prove very successful. The speakers started out in a car and got as far ‘as Baldwin when the task of fight- {ing snow got to be too tiresome |a job, ‘so they turned back. “But as |long as the lunch was all ordered, it ididn’t stop the business men from serving free lunch to all the farmers und all thos who were there. Viola Hagen, Seno “Torgerson and Mrs. Edgerton served lunch. & Lenora Johns has been going out to’ her school on horseback in spite of the cold weather. i Two big sleigh loads wete out sleigh-riding Saturday evening, tak- ing advantage of the beautiful night. —+ < | event of Ni i Re rere (night after short stay in Minne: |of the pianos, "@f| Reverend Bachman of Valley City fe proportion of atgck “pikes Fé. | ‘Mich | of} red | fire extinguisher under the engine | “Qilte & SWS wr Pesple were in | Christmas shopping hes jaturday. F| Mr. Chester Larson of St. Paul, | auditor for the Farmers Co-operative: | store, ‘teft for Bismarck Monday after | two. weeks business during the time the store as béen’ changing hands. Ed. Larson returned Suturday iting with relatives and] arrived Saturday, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. ae of W He was a guest} ‘eber. were | shopping y evening. Lucile Millman was a caller i Wing on Saturday. ‘ongregational church services were held both morning and evéning on Sunday. Quite a number were out in spit of the cold weather. | The Herb Holmes family have | ed the Albert Little house. | ck Dickey has been staying at the John Mueller home the pust week. Mr. Emil Mauch of Goodrich, N. » was-an overnight guest at the ueller’s on Tuesday. Doctor Thelan called on Catherine Lee and Mabel Lytleon jast Wed- nesday and reported Catherine with a case of genuine schrlet fever. They were to be quarantined at once. Planes Aré Curious Mixture of Aerial and Nautica] Ideas San-; Antontd,., Dec, -18—4—The amphibian planes, which the army is sending on a good will tour around South America, are a curious mi: ture of ‘the aerial and the nautic: The machines are equipped with wheels, yet they water pumps e any marine craft. The order, “Man the pumps,” however; does not entail much labor on .the part of the passengers. Should thé planes be forced down in water and spring a leak, or ship a,wave or two, the pumps would be hooked directly to || the motor and the water thrown out by the ship's own power. The chief dangers, in such an event, would be that the waves would damp- en the ignition system and stop the motor, or that the fliers would ‘use up their supply of gasoline in pump- ing water from the hull. The hull, made of thin plates“of an aluminum alloy, which is very light and strong, contains five bulkheads and will stay afloat for a long time. It runs al the entire length of the ship ‘and is broad enough to ridé comfortable in ordinary weather. At the front it is turned up like the toe of an old shoe, so that when the it looks as if it on its stomach, rather than upon its. wing: Nearly All Aluminum Almost all of te fuselage is con- structed of aluminum. The wings are made of tWo wooden spats, between which are aluminum ribs. Two small pontoons on the wing tips are de- signed- to keep the wings out of water as much as’ possible in rough weather. One of the most unique safety fentures in the plane is an automat hood. The extinguisher consists of a small tank from which pipe: te 1 portions of thé motor or hood where fire is apt to break out. In case of fire the tank is turned on and automatically throws a chemical mixture. which smothers the flames. —___.___4 FLASHES OF LIFE | en. —— Johapnesburg—How far can a motorcyle jump? Pict. Lievaurt, a Boer, claims the record with 49 feet. New York—Mayor Walker dislikes being a “spoil sport” so far as New Year’s eve is concerned. And #0 he favors lifting a new curfew so that cabarets and night clubs can open after 3 a. m. January 2. Los Angeles—Whether the desire of some competitors for costumes of grease has anything to do with it or not, the hour of that Catalina Island swim has been changed so that it will be broad daylight when the com- petitors finish. reERrapeek Leander 0. Gentle of Atlanta, 75, weight 250, has had 28 children. Representative Upshaw presented him to Mr. Coolidge and then ‘to the house, where there wa: great applause. Gentle has been ma twice. Eighteen children dre-living. = Kittyhawk, N. 0.—Flowers dropped from -an airplane on aviation’s 23d birth are on Kill Devil Hill, where the invention of Orville and Wilbur Wright- stayed in the air 12 seconds on bey 17, 1903. They were drop; yy Miss Herta Junke: daughter‘of the designer of nil-metal planes’and a pilot herself. ~ Médesto, Calif—From 1 remote mountain camp comés, an account of a bee on a big wolf, irs. e | rade foug i the animal at the door of the cab sa herself ard two wolf eluded her after bal abit er ‘coltlies and scratching jen ran from the attack of ‘a New York—Al Smith beat Cool: idges, well, 2 poste: SATURDAY, next year now that John McGraw Kas introduced a new innovation. McGraw, disappointed at the show- itig of his men, decided something fas wrong and sought to remedy, \the matter during the winter by. cut- ting off all the shirt tails of their | Uniforms. The new uniforms “will see th shirts securely fastened to the trou- sers by a series of loops through whigh ‘the belt will run. itt ‘tails are of no benefit,” says McGra ‘They get in the way, clog motion. I hope the team plays better baséball now.’ If this plan has the desired effect one can expect to see a wholesale shedding of shirt-tails in both the National and American’ League. dia- ;monds next spring, CURSES, OUTDONE! —--. Two motorists detested each other met in a narrow alley ju ernor'’s ‘likeness Nee in. six -houts. les: by we en} jlent’s portrait. The Sm . erty thé airmail trip ‘to ‘San-Francisco; the other went. via’ ste i to London. And so Hugh Clark, Philatelist, is pa: ing a $500 bet to Theodore Steinway ‘Went around the than one Newark, N. J.—Joe and Tom Ro#zo ed headed und freckle faced-—are twins and scruppers. But their joint réxing championship has been tuken Bite from them. While Joe was: quatifying for the final bout at the Newark A. €.,'Tom hid. Fresh and heavier, Tam appeared ug Joe in the final and won it. But the twins with oné trophy aroused, suspicion at' the exhibit. May See Epidemic of _Shir€-tail. Shedding New York, Dec. 18.—(NEA)—Wiat effect will tailess shirts have on the near tailenders? Baseball fans are wondering what the ints will do ‘First Class Shoe Repairing Bismarek Shoe Hospital es piamaree, De cars. We cltan' the car down to fturen, O DECEMBER 18, 1994 large ‘enough ‘fer.ene car to pai ne said, in a bullying voice: never give way for a fool.” Whereupon the ether reversed his car and replied gently: > Go past me, inj flea sie Mele Paris. AN. ACCIDENT “My wife had a motor accident yesterday.” “I'm sorry. Was there much dam- age done?” ‘ “A fair amount. A smashed-up back, and several screws loose.” “Your poor wife!” “Oh, you were referring to She only fet a broken Ieg.”. jo. + When the tax collector appears at Melanesia, off the east coast of Aus- tralia, a tom-tom is beaten to warn the ia who run to the woods ide. car with the’ same’shade of DUCO that is‘ being shown on the latest model the bare. metal, remove all dents and scratches from the metal, and then build ‘tip the DUCO finish, cont by coat. Let us figite on your job now. Fair: prices, quick de- livery, and satisfaction guaranteed, + ~ LAHR MOTOR SALES CO. A ; 5 eee We just received for our stock two differ- ent styles of Tuxedo Suits, also complete “trimmings,” such as Shirts, Collars, Ties, Studs, Silk Gloves. . Holiday’ parties ‘and state parties demand proygr dress. Come early. — " o Klein’s Toggery (STYLE HEADQUARTERS) * GIRL Christmas Presen For You «