The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 20, 1930, Page 4

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BISMARCK TRIBUNE an e Newspapes ‘ heart-breaking effort to stave off defeat, or that last heroic charge to victory. They see the sun slowly setting behind the stands on the western side of the field. They BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 16 Under Difficulties! | feel again the surge of excitement, the tug at their] | ” bat heartstrings which they knew on those days long ago. MH Bis- | And they wonder if it ever will be the same again. AWE For most of them the answer is “No.” It cannot be Ay the same again because time changes men as well as conditions and they will never again be the youths they Sage, once were. The struggle which life has imposed on them P bend precludes that. wo Never again will they have the same enthusiasm as THE MENTAL HAZARDS OF they once knew. The cares and duties of the business SICKNESS world heve seen to that and they have come to realize! In the game of golf certain hand!- w that, after all, a football game is only a sporting con- pene aBihrroranfictlt arent tet : . test, not the matter of life and death which it once tt Orly SO Peay ak GEE A Th seemed to be. fewest. number of strokes. The memories remain, of course, and some of those who match memory with present experience will blame the floodlights for their failure to feel the same senti- ments which they once knew. But it probably will be the man who has changed, not the game. For played under floodlights or in the crisp sunshine of a bright October day, football still ts football; one of one i the grandest games devised to test the physical strength pity, i and courage, the moral stamina and the will to win of better those who play it. baa — 4 It is this attribute which thrills the crowds at foot- fer ap? ball games, whether that same crowd takes the pelt trouble to analyze it or not. It is this fct which holds pty the interest of men who have played the game long habits of after their playing days are gone. Yes, football is a great Ma ie eg j game and Bismarck is to be congratulated that more of cite This cae ee nae es toss of | its citizens will have an opportunity,to see the games to aie ©. W. Lundquist, who for several years had served this] be Played here. ita, eee a community most efficiently as postmaster. He entered] As many of those citizens as find it possible to do so bad for - the civic life ‘of Bismarck energetically and strove to/ should show their appreciation of the new development should give the best possible public service. by buying the athletic tickets which have been placed as these best Mr. Lundquist occupied an important place in the ad-| on fond by the school authorities to help finance. the am { es , . betas: Form ministral postal affairs in North Dakota. He was/ project - : : \ ks 7 contact with civic bodies he showed a willingness to co- * cover th operate. His geniality in office won for him a host of ini anes reer Seog or joree i 18 Italians to annex the Papal states|were soon to take advantage. ‘The| [ait pot CESS fll sving. Hunters wil lne the duck pases and rorn|| ,TOday Is the | |jehich they wanted inorder to /King of tay at tla juntare, ted words ot iuiegd . * The appointment oe nk cad few men|DAk0t's wild fowl will be made to realize that the im-|| ‘Anniversary of — ||sernal’ city. a° group vot Italian | tore et he ae tate a i | tures are Iam service in office. Politics had no place munity from harm which they have enjoyed since last patriots under Garibaldi made a bid {dignified and independent position in| think of any } in public life eliminated politics so completely as did year was, after all, only temporary. UNIFICATION OF ITALY to capture the sought-after territory |the Italian government. selves to ‘80 that | Mr. Lundquist. In selecting a successor it is to be hoped if - On September 20, 1870, the unifica-|but were defeated’by the French at) ‘This he refused to do. Although| plague or to the | that merit and experience in postal affairs again will) Reports as to the number of ducks in the country vary; |tion of Ttaly was effected when the|Mentana. ‘This event destroyed the|he felnted a resistance, the royal bring govern. Mr. Lundquist was fair at all times to all| estimates depending upon the nature and location of the | forces of the king entered and cap-{800d feeling which had prevailed be-| troops entered Rome and soon hoist- | political factions and there was never a complaint of| persons who make them. It.seems logical, however, to|tured Rome, last of the Papal terri-|tween France and Italy since 1859. [ed the Tricolor on the palace of the discrimination. ; assume that the number of- ducks reared this year is | tories. At last, in 1870, due to the outbreak |capitol. It was not until the 2d of ANSWERS That territory had been protected|of the Franco-Prussian War, Napol-|June, 1871, however, that the Agar Agar 4 .. | smaller than the number produced in the past. The dry- asks: “1 ,He came to Bismarck originally as postoffice inspec by France. Napoleon III, from mo-|eon was forced to withdraw his|made his triumphal entry into the agar " . tor and it was not long before he was named assistant |ing-up of many sloughs and small lakes is responsible tives of policy, refused to allow the|forces. a move of which the Italians|oapital of Italy. how to the Bismarck postmaster. He virtually directed the|for that. - ——- - affairs of the local office long before he was named chief./ There is no question but that conditions for propaga- His untimely end came as a shock to a community| tion have not been ideal and now the wild denizens of : £ in which he was respected and beloved. A community’s|the lakes and sloughs face the added menace of shot- ae ¢ 3 set A sympathy goes out to the bereaved family; the city/ guns in the hands of crafty nimrods. . t y € s s Be j f mourns the passing of a friend and an efficient public! 1 is to be hoped that those who go hunting will have eC yf servant. ‘ @ good time and that they will get some game. . There 'is ‘ i nothing quite so disconsolate as a hunter who comes N . f, ‘~ A etter Ways home “skunked.” To return empty-handed \is, to some ae by y EPA a : . ils ciueek BP ty rman authorities that the| mien, almost a. peragtal insult heaped upon thea by t= |, COPYRIGHT ]1950.. py NEA SERVICE:/nc; wy, OY ERN EST LY chiet duty of a police force is the prevention of crime| ‘ind nature. And so, in order that all may be satisfied, i | and protection of the public, rather than the apprehen: | it is to be hoped that everyone will get something at least, BEGIN HERE TODAY racket, he sald. “Everywhere he ‘ = : sion of criminals, Of course, after a crime has been} But in doing so, the true sportsman will be careful to Question: C. : observe the “rules of the game.” In other words, he. will obey the law, strictly and to the letter. What the law is may be found on the back of every hunting license. No ‘one will have any honest excuse, on most matters per- taining to the gun and field, that he had no opportunity to learn the law. pee Every real sportsman will be careful of his own life and of the lives and limbs of his companions. Firearms are @angerous and should be treated with respect. A mo- ment of carelessness may mean a life-time of regret. It would be a fine thing if we could go through the forth- coming season without any of the accidents which have marred some previous years. : Tt is to be hoped, too, that after the season is over and the shooting has all been done, there will be enough ducks left to propagate a larger crop in some future year. As to prairie chickens, the situation is much more HLtYwoop is full of rumors. acute than with regaml to waterfowl. Farmers in this ila egy! the gg = and other areas say this fine game bird rapidly is pass- they hover over lunch- would help ellminate much of the ill-feeling. that exists | ing from thé picture and soon will be extinct if not pro- | J fon ‘ables and fit through hotel} ig the boulevards, | between the public and traffic police. tected. It was recognition of that fact which prompted Suchend-such a star is getting a | Alfred Reeves, general manager of the National Auto- | the state game and fish department to curtail the shoot-| 9 divorde; ‘so-and-so {s leaving this mobile Chamber of Commerce, suggests that every traf- | iné season on prairie chicken and grouse. rhigenel for that one; Amalgamated fie officer should be in full uniform while on duty, that| This restriction also should be respected. After all, it is going to do nothing but super reductions; his motorcycle be of # distinctive color, and that he pa- | is more important that enough of these birds be left. for pla ia ie eee featured trol the highway instead of hiding up side streets. Propagating purposes than that any hunter get a full Rare ts the official sniali “Other highway users are better protected: when the | bag this year. tt - ment that fs not preceded by a host Police stop violations promptly instead of permitting the committed, the latter objective becomes the policeman’s primary aim. But the principal goal today is that of seeing to the obedjence of our laws and regulations in ad ‘Yet this is hardly what is being done on our high- ways, in the effort to enforce speed and other motoring rules. ‘Traffic officers today lie in wait bebind a bush or other covering and wait for prospective speed victims ~ to pass. Once they sight a prospect, they follow him for another half mile or so, “clocking” his speed, before stopping him. By doing 80, the traffic officer permits the offending motorist just so much longer to endanger the lives of other drivers on the road. The proper act for the offi- cer, according to latest principles, would be to show him- self at all times on the highway. é ‘This would make the officer’s job preventive rather | than apprehensive, would avoid much congestion in our | courts, would increase the safety of the highways and scceverte stone mi eune- warming at Coltine’ Rome. * Now GO ON WITH THE STORY ‘ER XX of rumors, It was a rumor that Pan ae : Louise Watkii motorist to speed for half a mile to make an arrest,” he Just as Well. pec hss sd lr ge eays. Aviator Brownley has decided not to risk another at- was surprised at its nature, he did . Mr. Reeves lives in New York and his knowledge chief- ly covers the situation in the eastern states, but there are many North Dakotans who will agree with the principles which he entinciates. : i : Pigskins Thump Again } Pigskins are thumping again throughout the length | and breadth of these United States. Beginning today colleges, universities and high schools im many states meet their first gridiron opponents of the tempt to cross the Pacific ocean by air this year. not think it. at. Bil strange that Tt is just as well. Mr. Brownley douttiess is a tine, | it ahead of bim te cere ry ears clean-living young man. He has a wife and child. Prob ‘wood travelel in roundabout fash- ably he envisions for them a snug fortune which would fon. And, besides, Louise wrote accrue were he to be successful in his attempt to span for ® group of gossipy movie tan the 4,500 mailes of water between Japan and the North-|§ jyfeg"e® and she-knew her Hol- Pacific cogst. This, coupled with confidence in his own ability and in his plane, probably accounts for his Wont Balen Pep willingness. to try. Lawson Brothers were going to But Mr. Brownley will have another year to think it buy Continental and merge it, or alone. One admires intrepid spirit but he also dislikes to |(™ afternoon, had run into Johany| means something.” see @ young man go to a watery grave—and in-any tyssle |(M Riddle and informed him that Paul ea ec enpecsalls At tt of man and airplane against the Pacific ocean the odds| ff 24 Dan were having “open house,” |S" neck. ae are very much in favor of the water taking its toll. = Nel glanl ig Aled = “and how about you?" Paul de ‘Out here in the west, many of the games this year will by Parks gt Dan seit, “My ie rrag Played under floodlights, a change made possible anyway. Only a couple of te rapid development of electric illumination. * . Vige S- ag ote A ge gph tier In line with other progressive centers, Bismarck’s high it would never renew.it. In tact, I'm school footbell team will play some of its major contests An Added Thought expecting the air any day—in large For many teams, to be sure, they will be only warm, ‘up games, preliminary tests to show coaches and follow- ers: how well the various teams have developed since achool opened and practice started a few weeks ago. fter darkness falls. ¢ ty Herald and copious quantities.” " (Hettinger Count He smiled. “Paul,” he explained ‘The innovation should do much to popularize football | | J8 oe goer, to Louise and Johnny, “worries “ about me. I'll give him gray hair yet.” : Sround tore nd pimselt scouting) Cotter growled. He sald that tt Paul Collier observed dryly: “You're lucky you haven't had to do ep gp before this,” and at Louise’ inquiring look Dan ex- plained. 1 Saf gs kitchen, ery age tiring to the others, “Independent, that’s him all over.” “Quit picking on him,” Johnny Riddle advised. “I like to cee a man who can tell some of these high-powered executives where to Fpl a capt 4 like it... . "e irl friend getting along?” “Coming right along, Johnny. keep tT 28 {f for no others, the new flopdlights nd Bismarck should be proud that 8 other places where night football Gsture tus that the game gripe the interest with did when played in the daytime. Ei ot eet nay nes oe But there ‘ rasstppone,they'l continue to op- Mill Goubtiess be many old-timers of the gridiron who e name of Conti. | find t8 @ tte difficult to applaud the innovation. eT eee Jock back over the games of the past in which “There's room for plenty of| Collier said have participated, or at which they were spectators, : that.” Dan observed. “I beg your | Louise knew her. i things will ever be the same again pardon.” is her, name. You met a friend of n Nant to Abin . a Y “—or maybe they'll merge it|hers ome day; over at Continental. it “ad Aduminat scene. completely.’ But that’s not very:|Eva Harley, That:blond girl, re- ‘thelr ‘mind's ‘eye they see their own team making Ukely; thé name Continental still |member?” -' eat desperate stand under its own goal posts in a 5 . a 1 ee 4 ally it, with their other studios, season and the glamour of football begins to be felt |Ver. Perhaps, by that time, he will have thought so She had dropped in ea: dt was a noisy crowd, talkative and gay and light-heartedly cynical. throughout the land. much and so well, that he will leave the Pacific ocean Rorimer and eae that pide ea bd 0 id Johnny Riddle, Collier observed In an envious tone, undoubtedly | fF had the greatest racket in Holly- wood. “It's all very well to hai legitimate publicity business and to make money at it—" “Lots of it, too,” observed Louise Watkins, “although he does noth- ing but complain about She laughed and called to Dan, who had appeared in the doorway with aking Johnny Riddle feel “It can’t be done,” Dan said. “Where n there's no conscience there's no feeling. goes the big stiff is as welcome as Santa Claus, Why? Because he list of papers longer than Holly- wood Boulevard. Do the studios figure horizon? Don’t be silly. want to know how good Her is? I'll tell you how is, He can call up the first m star that comes to his invite himself to lunch and pagne if she doesn’t mind. And get it! And even if the ster doesn’t feel like doing it, her press agent—if he's as good your turn now,” Watkins. “How's the fan magazine Tagket?” Louise made an ‘indignant reply and they sat and talked of incon- sequential. things, and presently people began to drop in and make themselves at home. It‘was mostly a newspaper crowd, young men and ° young women from the Los geles papers and ex-reporters now attached to the publicity staffs of the motion picture studios. It was a noisy crowd, talkative ages ay ul af E Te fl: i fe if tf hi A 3 2 ai i k HG E Fs rf dial teige z

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