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EMER AS RRA EM AME NS ARENT \ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1927’ Bismarck Boy Elected Gri -Wrss cHRpA pn) TUNNEY IS ‘MIGHTILY PEEVED’ ~ Ween te "AT TEX RICKARD, SAYS GIBSON - fee eek on cee Ses, steel ‘@ fast express i 4998 FLICKERS It was a terrible accident. The 22 royal ‘sons of Baylor were thrown . : high into the air by the im the gsr bus was entirely demolished. Ten of P a THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE d Captain at North Dakota Universi Reports That Fight Impresario Is ‘Undercover’ Manager of Jack Dempsey Arouses the BUY FALL AND WINTER Earl Benser, Another Former a Frou, prare, Milled: Among t World Champion—Gene Will ‘ rf lives were lost was A Demon Star, Also Awarded | Clyde “Abe” Kelly, captain-clect of| Fight Twice in 1928 all ‘His Letter Macally wes Pease the eisatéat ii eo anaienin 08 letes in the southwest. He was very, New York, Nov. 10.—(?)—Gene ne bi Tunney is “mightily peeved” at fast; a wander in.a broken field, one A a SLOPE BOYS SUCCESSFUL in Tex Rickard and is certain to cause F passe: ‘quite a rumpus,” when he gets back to town. That and’ ho more would Billy Gibson, manager of the heavy- weight champion of th» world, say Eighteen Members of State Championship Team Win Monograms NOW. New patterns and styles in our new section $99.50 OTHERS AT $30.00 TO $50.00 - Alex Rosen & Bro. tern Conf only did he atar on the gridiron, but he was the clever catcher of the ee bes et ce” today in the absence of his warrior, Of an ing personality, he |20W spending a few days roughing Willis Shepard, grad ¢ Bis was one of the most popular athletes et ¢ Racquette lake, Old Forge, i ard, graduate = Y¥. \ hee as Frith the cl in the history of Baylor. The aroused mental state of the Team fe age - Kelly Was Self-Made champion has, been caused, Gibson explained, by tales reaching. Tun- P-| Kelly was self: . For seven tanany: Nome cepa’ Oe tas boo Mo hed worked hi way sani ney’s cars that Rickard is the “un- J. Davis, director of athletics at | fig yremmeT ce the Waco (Texas) trite at Philacdiphia last year and| | the university. : : ‘After the 12 players wha were for- trounced again in defending the ser, 500 Fifteenth atrest, wes alsa tunate enough to escape death recov-|""Tuck ‘Kearney in his suit for $333, 333. eect the former champion, ered sufficiently to onec again think warded his letter fe pbb od OH Car Bex | Of athletics, it was deciede not to! \i1 e that the promoter of the last two title battles has handled + the 1927 varsity football team. Ben- elect another captain to take the 1924 of Be ote hi 4 ie Ren Si one of Kelly. The thought was that | Dempsey's affairs for almost. two he. 4 d all-state ho seb he.c ter is spirit would-hover over Baylor ear, he has announced. Other on the great Capital city teams of |'@i2, Zee and spur the eleven on tol Sources maintain that Leo P. Flynn 593 er 1924, Sear hae layed greater in his memory. ‘who managed Dempsey aipeinie the enter and guard on the varsity prid | obefore each Sennvr this yearljatter’s comeback attempt, did so crews for the pax rs ‘and | Coaches Morely Jennings and Jim|under the direction of Rickard. “Gene will fight at least twice in A third Missouri Slope boy to win part of the captai 1928,” Gibson said, “but not neces- ‘ ; ptaincy but, to- the ei A * ae eee Vernon Smithy Dickinson | Haver a vision of Kelly, “Fighting | has teen: no bresk, between Tunney Behemoth tackle ‘of the Nodake ‘who| Abe,” will constantly be before the| and the promoter but I do know that d rt Tar ae if of tatlesking eleven men wearing the Baylor | the chituipton is mightily peeved at when he reperted vor the fresh eolore bere Bed vi Melba captain in the stories going around concerning team of 1926 that has ever been is- “Win for ‘Abe Kell Rickard’s connection with Dempsey. sued by the varsity athletic depart- et Jack’s order for stock in Madison crews for the past three years and/ Crow are naming some player to will. graduate in June. look after the usual duties that are a ment. Smith is only a sophomore Square Garden hasn't helped mat- and has two more years at the uni- ters any, either. versity. “ffunney is bound by contract to fight once for Rickard in 1928. He Plays Every Game Shepard, former Demon star of feels, however, that one battle a the Bismarck eleven of 1924, played ICHIG AN year is not enough to ward away ——=———— = = a in every game on the Flickertail ring rust, and is certain thdt the] was arrested at his home here last Evening Post story of the same ELTINGE THEATRE mance and life behind the 1 ‘ ‘knockdown Dempsey scored in the seventh. round at Chicago never would have hapsened if he had been fighting dftener.” Beef Cattle Grading Demonstration to Be Given by Farm Expert schedule this fall. He started in every game except the Homecoming battle with Creighton on Oct. 8 and in every contest. critics and fans were unanimous in their praise of the calibre: of play that the Bis- marck boy offered. SHlepard matriculated at fue Nodak vatsity in the falt of 1925 enrolling in the College of Liberal Arts. He immediately reported for ‘The intoxication and color of Pa- risian life during the World War provides thrills, romance and spice to Milton Sills’ latest picture, “Hard-Boiled Haggerty,” which is to be shown at the Eltinge theatre Friday and_ Saturday. While a few thrilling episodes in the battle experiences of the hero, such as#shooting down German planes and being shot down in his Ly and was released on $2,500 ond, “The indictment charges seduction and was based on the telephone op- erator’s story that Cissell had* not kept a promise to marry her. Cis- sell is expected. to be returned to Des Moines to face the c filed by Bernice Ryner, who gave birth to ‘@ boy several weeks ago. name by Earl Deer Biggers and fea- {At the Movies | ° At the Movies J tures Hobart Bosworth, Marian Nixon, Edmund Burns and nearly a CAPITOL THEATRE ‘ore of other noted screen lumin- n elaborate and dramatic photo- s. It was directed by Paul Leni, dramatization of one of the most|ace of foreign directors who was thrilling ie deed novels ever Pub: | bro) ight to the country a year ago lished will be presented at the Cap-!by Universal. His first American ital Theatre tomorrow Armistice| effort, “The Cat and the Canary,” Day. | 2 created a sensation and his present The picture is “The Chinese Par-|opus is considered by many to be ture the plot of “Hard-boiled Hage gerty.” Street brawls, intrigue, « feminine m; stery, cafe life and the “celebrati ns” of fighters on leave from the lines fill the with stirring and picturesque Molly O’Day as leading womert and Arthur Store, eee ste ete Bp @’Avril ucien Prival o supporting cast provide some splendid charac- Last Game For Two Yeafs With the Wolverines Is 19th Enceunter Minneapolis, Nov. 10.—A_ week from Saturday “Minnesota will close its 1927 season at Ann Arbor, where football and was awarded his nu-|Dr. Spear’s team will play Michigan WIni ry ‘ rot,” adapted from the Saturday ‘equally as great. Ameri ircraft, ente | izati merals at the end of the season de-|in Minnesota’s 19th game with the ines pronciieinin on ee inies Verdicts in Favor. of BES ath band deni own American aircraft, enter, ro-! terizations. spite the fact that he was one of} Wolverines. It will be the last) ‘will hold the first beef cattle grad-| Plaintiffs Directed Siete ree ee cha Mie act ee eepmecnes heer by Judge And. Miller varsit fumDo. ir sc] ule » cleat ent et a y wh ace leet. fall elidalnaies the North Dakota at the Enoch Ander- y is ' son farmy Nov, 14, at 2 p. m., one miles west and two miles north of Baldwin, according to an announce- ment today by A. R. Miesen, Bur- leigh cougty agricultural agent. Cutting the cattle into different grade lots as they are sold on the market and short talks on the mar- keting of beef cattle and-future cattle prospects will constitute the bulk of the program that Mr, Wal- lace will give. Mr. Wallace, who is a practical cattle feeder and ranchman, is giving a series of these demonstra- tions throughout Notrh Dakota, the Burleigh county demonstration be- ‘gl ing the second staged in the state. Mr. Wallace will answer any ques- tions that his listeners may ask. Other demonstrations will be 5 held at 10 a. m., Nov. 15, at the Alex 6 Ashbridge farm, eight miles south of Bismarck, and at the L. E. Hea- annual Minnesota-Mi an game in 1928, Chicago having placed on the Gopher schedule instead. Minnesota beat Michigan in the The last Bigmarck boy to captain an athletic team at North Dakota was Edgar T. “Dutch” Houser, rec- ognized as one of the greatest bas- ketball players in Flicker tory. | first two games played between the Houser scintillated on the undcfea‘- | rival universities, those of 1892 and ed North Dakota Aggie ketball | 1893, and won again in-1919. The team. of 1926 that claimed col-| famous game of 1903 was a tie at lege 4 : ip of North and|6 to 6, as ev in Minnesota South who is 30. years remembers, Montana. nrolling Despite th. preponderance of Forks institution he played on foot-| Michigan vigtories, few of the games ball and basketball teams that|have gone into large scores, as the copped the football and basketball | following table of results-will show: championships of the state for three | 1892 Minn. 14, Mich. 6 consecutive years. Minn. 34 Like his brilliant predecessor Shepard has played on Nodak foot- ball teams that have won the state championship the last two years. He succeeds Mike Geston, well known to~sports fans of the Mis- souri slope. Shepard and Geston Verdicts in favor of the plaintiffs were directed by Judge Andrew ee : . Miller in the federal district court Wednesday in the case of the North- ern Pacific railway vs. Barth and Hummell and R. E. Schumacker, re- ceiver of the First National Bank of Delano, Minn., vs. C. N. Lee. - j Suing for $61,000, J. W. Breanard, Fa Mandan, is the plaintiff in a dam- i Sey 5 age suit brought against the North- ern Pacific railway as the result of an accident in a gravel car in.the Mandan railway yards in May, 1924, in which the plaintiff claims that he suffered permanent disability. Hearing of the case which began at 10 a. m. today is expected to oc- cupy the attention of the court for eu two days, according to court offic _ William Wolfe, Kulm, N, D., fined $250 by Ju Miller today were the stellar flar.kmen of this} year’s varsity aggregation. - Eighteen Win Letters Eighteen players were awarded their letters by the athletic board of control at the universit; are: Willis Shepard and Earl Ben- ser, Bismarck; Alex Solow and Stuart McMillan, Grand Forks; Rodger Thomas, argo; Knauf, Moorhead; Paul he Boulder, Colo.; Lewy Lee, V: City; Ernest Kotchian, Lidge: Edward Showers, Kenmare; Mike Geston, Grafton; Vernon Smith, Dickinson; Joseph Keuber, Grand Forks; Atnold Kirkness, Lake Park, Minn.; Irwin Dunnell, Minot; Car- men House, East Forks, Minn.; Harold Westerdahl, Slayton, Minn., and Delbert Bjorklund, Hope. SLOGAN RALLIES ‘Win For Abe Kelly,” Com- memorates. Dead Captain _ of 1927 Team ‘ BY BILLY EVANS Mike | 1: BAYLOR ELEVEN 22: MPSOSO PISSCHOAMACHS 1926 (2) Minn. 927 Michi Minne never! Michigan is pi any “natural rivalry” two. teams than to the fact that the Michigan series is the only one be- tween Minnesota a, 5 ese Conference team, or for mat ter, an: ‘Seam, in which Minneso! is on the short end, over the long’ linnesota ii with Purdue. . So it is it there should be a gen- x the anemic * “Win for Abe Kelly.”* This is the | ne! logan the ball warriors of Bay- Yor University in°Texas are before’ them this fall. For Baylor, with no captain in ) has a 8 itual leader in Abe Kelly. An ‘extremely’ unusual situation exists at Baylor. -At. the .close of the 1926 season, Abe Kelly, outstand- ine. star of the eleven, was elected ptain. ylor had finishéd' second in the Southwestern Conference championship and, with most of the regulars returning, 1927 held prom- ise of brie § big year. Hardly ever, when stage. A almost wiped’ pet team, befell. ing. ‘was one of the Let us go back to last winter tor} the details. ‘Twenty-two’ Baylor’ athletes sicceae eee tee ae oat ee ‘where , on. Saturday, Jan. Texas U % L s a seating capacity igan Si in excess of Gia ‘persons, probably present ting spac seat cal tained only this year. y. i th erec! cet aes iby writing or calling Mr. 8. | Al ton, af Nov. 15. ‘urther information Bismarck. Ball Player Faces Jr., farm, at.2 p. m. Wednes- be had ‘iesen of Felony , Indictment St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 10.—(AP). Chalmer Cissell, baseball player gold by’ Portland last week to the Chi \i- cago White Sox for $123,000, faced a felony indictment today, based on the story-of a 20-year-old telephone operator in Des Moines, Iowa, Rise Together espa y men, elec’ : G. Pipkin state president, ie He when he pleaded guilty to engagii in the liquor traffle, viens Federal .court -will not be in ses- sion during the forenoon on Armis- tice day but will convene at 2 o’clock in the afternoo Officials Thwart Plot.of Prisoners to Escape Prison New York, Nov. 10.—(AP)—The plot of a group of long term prisoi ers, members of the Richard Reese Whittemore gang of jewel thieves, to shoot their way to freedom has been thwarted by efficials of the Clinton! state prison at Dannemora, officials sald here today. : Authorities asserted the scheme was halted through a tip from a prisoner, later reported stabbed by eon Kraemer, supposed head of the group planning the prison break and who is serving a 40-year sen- tence. Kraemer was a pal.of Whit. temore, wi wi executed: Febru- are. 2, 1926, in Baltimore for mur- jer. dack region in which-the prison is situated, have been .discovered in the recelving room.of the prison, The stabbing of the man men. tioned as the “squealer,” took place in the exercise yard, where, it is rs. John} Amana RA AE