Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 7, 1923, Page 7

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SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1923, Casper Sunvap Morning Cribune PAGE SEVEN KNOCKOUT BROWN "BURNT QUT’ IN. Moviests Women Beauiying ~ Her Face ‘ ry APPLIES A CLAYISH : SUGSTANCE To THe FACE.-> SAME To REMAIN on FACE FOR HALF HOUR EARLY CAREER, NEVER WON TITLE outhpaw Fighter, Who Boxed With Right Hand ended, Fought on Even Terms With the Best; Battle With Harlem Tommy Murphy a Classic. Thie is the third article of @ series on great boxers who failed to become champions, and the reasons why, “Say, th chev ds ae “Say, there’s a guy boxing up at Brown’s tonight you ought to see. He's a darb—good boxer, fast, and he’s got a punch, But the reason you ought to go is that he's a freak—stands with his right hand stuck out in front instead of his left.” “Right hand out-in front Never heard of a bird like that. he tangling with tonight? What's his name.” “He's boxing ‘Harlem Tommy’ in end other honors more desirable than the main bout.” were to be found in the comparative “Must be good to mix with Murphy.| safety of the east’s short, no decision But what's this guy's name?” contests. So he took him to Call- “fis's called ‘Knockout | Brown.’| fornia. ‘Come on, let’s watch him, going But they both knew {t when Brown to be the lightweight champion be-| met that terror of the Pacific coast fore he's through.’ arenas, Joe Rivers, The bout took Pose Amazed place at Vernon, near Los Angeles, on he two men participating in this|February 22, 1913, and in the tenth trom fanciful dialogue—there were| round the tow headed little easterner meny similar ‘conversations along|collapsed under the T. N. T. Rivers Broadway in 1911—were seated pres-|carried in his right glove. A photo- ently at the 28d street ringside. While|graph of that knockout is a pitiful they waited for the feature event, the| thing. leas informed spectator was intro-|Stopped Again; In Fifteenth Round, duced by his friend to the exploits} A few weeks later Valentine was that had made the new fighter with|knocked out in the same ring in the the unheard of style a headliner in| fifteenth round by Bud Anderson; and the ten round no decision bouts of/ astute Morgan realized that the scores that perlod, of battles in New York had taken “Knockout name was—and is—|their toll of the strength a champion Valentine Braun. Born in the lower|must have. east side of Manhattan of Germa: A few more mediocre performances American parents, young Valentine|and “Knockout Brown,” at the age trod eagerly in the footprints of many | of 25—an age when men in other lines another boxer who has risen to con-|are just beginning to roll up their spicuousness. Odd neighborhood jobs| sleeves in the start of life's battles—| hig intermittent and usually poorly | passed out of the sport page spotlight rewarded livelihood, he chose for aj forever. hobby the punching of other boys'| Under Dan's sagacious tutelage, noses. however, Valentine saved ly Of courses, he could punch harder] portion of his ring earnings, and to- and do it more quickly than his com:|day he has a comfortable income from Panions could, and, of course, he be-| his investments, contented family, sen to dog the footsteps of the cele-/a fine home in New Jersey, and a fu- brity who had won deathless honors|ture free from worry or regret. in. the vicinity by appearing in $5] (The next article will tell the story preliminaries at some of the numer-|of Johnnie O'Leary.) ous clubs that dotted any diagram of yo IRs Levey G@otham's sport history at the time. Berine to Lara Pisnting. (LEIGH SCHOOL ‘Valentine gained precious access to] gSymnasium by volunteering to run errands for the neighborhood pug BASKETBALL while he trained. Other idolators Igering lovingly. to thelr Idole. tn SEASON ON| trunks and boxing shoes, Before long young Braun was permitted to remov hia shirt, don the shapeless old gloves the boxers used for training, and try hie luck with votaries of his age andjhigh school gymnasium when heft. local quintet will meet the fast five He won the approving consensus of|from Riverton. The Fremont county those tolerant toughs..who watched| aggregation dias played two games the kids awkwardly battering each|this season and won both, showing other about. As the months_ passed, they will be in condition to give Braun was given his tryout. That he] Casper’ a hard-fought contest. made good without delay is shown by| Coach’ Neff has had his men out for his record, obtainable in any book Of] practice five times a week for. the last his time. _ z two weeks and the squad is in good A glance at that record for 1908 to! physical condition and fast develop- 1811, inclusive, finds it generously! ing team work: The men who will studded with knockouts. He won 49! pronanly sfart the game for Casper of his 100 contests in those four years|are Davis and Lester, forwards; Over: by. stopping his opponents. baugh at center and McGrath and No Insignificant Feat, Groves, guards. All of the men who ‘True, their names are musty tn ob-| have been on the first string will be lion's calendar ,their caliber was civen @ chance unless the game Pali and their prominence nil, but] \ ives unusually close. likewise, was a beginner; and It is " no meritless feat definitely to knock danreitene. San . unconscious any typro of your size| ” and weight and age and general ability. Braun was fortunate from the start Wahoo Sam Is Now wise “and. becptantee ipesererctes| TOS. S. Crawford, Morgan—by fronfe’ sporting editors . aubbed ‘Dumb Dan” because few Of B. B. College there are who can talk as rapidly, , yoluminously and tirelessly as he in — extolling the virtues of the chs It is now Professor Sam Crawford, He soon moved “Knockout” from ‘ie {ft you please, no longer Wahoo Sam, opening bouts to the sem{-windups | of the big league days. The former and then to the principal matches of| star of Detroit has been selected to the evening. head the National College of Baseball, Under Morgan's guidance th¢)tho purpose of which is to develop money poured in, and the blond,| ambitious youngsters who have de sturdy, croas-eyed little southpay bat-| signs on the big leagues. The College ted his way to newspsner decisions! of Baseball was first suggested by in _acores of battles. There were many| Frank Chance, The hoard of direct- crack Ughtwoights in the east in! ors and the instructors in the various those day: “Knockout” whip; features of play are all men who have ped them all, or got as good as a hairline ts th draw. “His. fight with “Harlem, “°? ‘Heir spurs in the big leagues, ‘Tomm; Murphy, pretext for the oping paracrant nore acess] Rartgers Gained One sonicated ee Mile on Gridiron How they boxed with extraordinary gverness, how they drove home stun- ning straights and crippling upper-} mutgers advanced the tall by cuts, how their footwork and ducking | scrimmages almost a milo this fall on and jabbing and hooking and ®lU8-| the gridiron, according to the minute sing brought the packed house to !t8| statistica compiled by Fred A. (Pop) feet and kept it there, and how the| tart. peerless rooter for all Rutgers reporters crouched at ithe ringwide! reams, especially football. Hart, were unable to pick the winner—alll yposs charts and statiaticsl data have this will be told and reiterated for your amusement and onlightenment been an immense help to Head Coach by any New Yorker so fortunate as to} G°0Ts® Foster Sanford, finds that have witnessed the bout. And you| Rtsers advanced the ball 1,696 yards will hear. other frenaiod stories con-| in {he 402 serimmage plays of hoy cerning his clashes with Leach Croas,| son for an average of 4.21 yards Ad Wolgast, Matt Wells, Bert Keyes, | * Play: Abe Attel, Matty Baldwin, Johnny ween rs Lere, Willie Beecher, and Jimmy|MeGILL RUGBY TEAM IS Duffy. BOOKED TO TACKLE YALE Yet “Knockout Brown,” with the| The Rugby team of McGill \univer- faith of a betting boxing fraternity| sity will play the Yale eleven\in the pinned to his queer right fist, never|bow! at New Haven on October 20, reached tho heights defended in his|1923, it was announced by athlettc di- era by Battling Nelson and Ad Wol.|Tectors at McGill. gast. And this te the reason why: In accepting the date, which was of- You read tn a preceding peragraph| fered by Yale, MoGill made the re- the words ‘scores of battles. quest that the game be played half phrase is justified. Where other boys,| Under Canad'an and half under Amer- later to win the title, were fighting} ‘can’ football rules. team six to a dosen times each year,| Besides Yale, the MoGilI team prob- un was fighting twenty and more|ably will meet two other American rugged opponents each twelfth month.|teama next season. The team will In 1908, he boxed thirty-five time: play Syracuse on a date to be sot 1909; fifteen; in 1910, twenty-eigh: later, and tentative arrangements in 1911 and 1913, twenty-two times,|have been made to play the Army. each—or a fight nearly every two ser eeevesreelininie—tongea? weeks for five years. The United States Tennis asnocia- ‘He simply burned out his fuse. Stilljt‘on, as part of educational work, growing—he was only 17 years old in|plans to take a series of slow moving 1908—he could not train as faithfully| pictures of various leading experts tn as he did and fight every other weok|action on the court and send them without paying the price throughout the country, in order to quently, though neither he nor allow a broadcasting of the methods Promptly at THING LUKE THIS Family. a simple Mttle identification key | fishes that deserve the name of pick: length. {s not found east of the Al shanies. And the two eastern pick. piekerel) are not found in the west. He's .a Great Pike. Bolling {t down even further, tf you| our well known great Iaken pike, er-] {0 .Deliet of officials of the Pacific AFTER TEN MINUTES FACE FEELS SOmE= FACE COVERED WITH The GREENISH CLAY... OBSERVES SELE IN GLASS _DUBIOUSLY. In TWENTY MINUTES WW 26 MINUTES Face IT DosSN'T Fel Uke FCELs Ling A DRIED oR LOOK LIKE A FACE CURRANT --* WOULDN'T -7> 1S MIGHTY GLAD WANT CHILDREN OR exists, although there is Although there are seven members| fusion there, as over the: in the pike family it is not dificult] byt one species to tell them apart if you Just keep} jucius, [leagues and develop them for them: selves, or to accent them temporarily | from the bigger fellows under an op-! mature fish a pickerel, an older one ~ © back of your mind. First, let's|@ jack and the mature fish a pike, look over the whole bunch once more|and, miad you, all three are the same and then we'll get hold of the key and| species. is BY JOHN O'BRIEN first craft at all the budding talent be ready for any member of the pike} In our own country you find the (Onttea Pyweas Staff {Zorrestondent)|!n the little clroults, and have more family, small, pickerel cajled baby pike or You remember the three pickerels—| grass pike, the big or Great +) pike incorrectly called a pickerel and erel and which you and I should call/ sometimes the mighty muskie is even so abs By this name to avold confusion. If|{nsulted by being called an “over-|Announced Determination of you do not want to remember much| grown pickerel." Majors to Abrogate Agree- about these fellows, just keep this one fact in mind: The Mississippi valley pickerel (Hsox vermiculatus) which is known as the “little pickerel" and THR FIRE: FAMILY. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 6.—A neyer grows much over a foot in| North America is pretty lucky ‘ ? a aN when {t comes to possessing members | S!gantic baseball war growing out of “lof the pike family. This group of| the recently announced determination hi 7 i ,] of the major leagues to abrogate the erels (banded and common eastern iy aos ie uate A pos bis peruaeacs iuadormntnce lanbte: Gaekanert locate GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH ment Brings Blast, OF PRIVACY HUSGAND To Ses_NER, ‘This in the first of se’ articles on the pike family. The next, which will appear at an early date, will take up the identification of the various Identifying the Members of the Pike) In England much the same members of the pike group. = FANS FACE IN ORDER To DRY CLAY.... FACE BEGINS , te PUCKER BUT- WHEN The HALF HOUR 1S VP AND IT 1S ALL WASHED OFF --= OHH: Brey tt w minor leaguers can obtain good re-| 1 N crults under the new arrangements !s| A elther to take them from the littler| |identifed as HB. J, Cattell, president TOWAR MUDDLE Players’ Organization May Up- set Majors’ Ideas of Corner- ing Market. BY I. E. SANBORN thing after anothtr, from the view. minor leagues thought that, taking ad- vantage of the inexperience of Judge Landis, they had put over a national agreement giving them the power to collect $75,000 or $100,000 per each for monopoly with a clever form of boy. cott. And just as the majors thought they have developed a plan to corner the player market along comes the new players’ union with the poss(bil. ity of upsetting the whole works !f £ glue which will stick long enough, | Warned by the use made by some of the minors of their exemption from| the draft to extort blue sky prices for | thelr promising players, the majors negotiated a oint treaty by which they pledged themselves not to release a player to a minor club unless that} player could be drafted back into the} big show in case he proved worthy of of a second chance in fast company. Asthe Pacif'c Coast league, the| which claim exemption from the draft the biggest three subs: ry circu'ts ean not obtain young players from the higher-ups unless they sign an agree-) ment to take that player subject to possible draft in the fall, whieh would The only way the independent} tion contract making the player sub- Ject to recall, or by submitting to the draft. As the major leagues have PARIS, (By mail to United Press)—|than doubled the number of players America ip drifting toward shipwreck |Which may be farmed out under op: on the rock of gold, said Louis Louch-|tion contracts, {t will be only a few! eur, formerly minister of the devast-|Years beforet he big clubs wil! con- ated regions, Im a speech before the|trol practically all the good payers National Association for the Organiz-|!n the country except those whom age ation of the Democracy. Tho former minister, who fore the war. garded as one of the financial experts in France and who may be called to the premiership, was explaining how| Waste no sympathy on the minor France ean get back to the position she occupied in the world market be- world has only one pike, Esox lucious, |!" sporting circles today, according} yf, Lousheur emphasized the eatch a member of the pike family in| roneously cafléd plckerel, this contin: | Costa! league here, great pike, as the only true pickere’ length and a paund or two in weight. balled up on hat is what off the color game in this pike bu do. Here Is the Key. your tackle box and use it on the first member of the pike family you catch, ‘are completely scaled. cover scaled. chun and gil cover scaled; lower haives are naked or, you might say, “smooth shaven,” ‘There is the key th a nutshell, ne ber and absolutely fool proof. Color differences are sometimes difficult to remember, but this scaling business on cheeks and gill cover is not so difficult and can always be relied upon. Less Confusion in England. Very likely the Great Lakes pike will be called pickers! for many moons, as that name is associnted manager realized it, “Knockout” hadjand styles of the Jeading players in a played out his string, when Morgan|manner that will reach all those inter. Geolded there wero felds more golden|ested in studying the game, you will be able to “nafl"’ the old boy at once and tell whether he is or he/a foot. n't. Pickerel—Tho choek and gill cover it were, It is simple, easy to remem:| 1) group that is very much confused ar ‘7 great lakes pike or a muskie you power. fome localities and the samo fish is} ” “Anyo) sections. So as a starter towards Here is a little vest pocket bird’s-| the consent of both parties,’ Raseco't [Rag i Tepe rater eye view of the pike gang—sort of | McCarthy today. Colors come and colors may go| ily sroup, ag it were, giving com-| “Judge Landis at the minor league SnelaeaRia’ soaks! firth eke, the mares apecied jentific name, and where | meeting in Louisville and at the joint | "eer Czec! varying so much that you would hard: ly think they were even related. Lay 'eome Wisconsin luke and he runs|ent can claim seven different species. Nine ee Nonuamt Cerne pot seven or eight pounds and he's not] Common as tse members of the Q & muskie, then you have caught al pike family are, they constitute » league, declared today that if the big leagues violate the letter of the pact in Wisconsin (vermiculatus) doesn't| regards correct names, and today|%* ‘hey have announced, he will ‘com t Cctrects ft 1 attain a size more than a foot in| when a fellow talks about a pickerel| commend to the Ctrectors of his league when they meet in Portland January 15 drastic action aiming to The whole point is that most of the! nardiy know which fish he is refer- so-called pickerel caught in the mld-| ring to, as pikes are called plokeral in| Catt, ‘Ms asserted assumption of! tne iatter will never pay. It is also dle west are really Great ra eg see| or, to cut it short, great pike. Ani ‘th fin tiiele id tothe the common error everywhere is to| Sven the name o - | With the Bnglish language must know give tho name of pickerel to the great! straightening out the jumble of|ment, which wes signed “two. a pike, and as a result we are always Y Jook at the pike} ago and atlll! has five years to run, Fortunately, there is one infallible family and see what's what, cannot be changed or revised without ie who is at all conversant that the major-minor league agree- stored to the norma’ said | Continue their fore'gn trade. major league session in New York, “ but she has 600,000 persons .| Valley, as well as in streams that flow | McCarthy. ‘Evidently the major th Ra Ee mane Br eneecael Tait into Lakes Erie and Michigan. It {s| league club owners are acting without} Werk, Poland tried to do the same cover. You will always win if you| Not known east of the Alleghani This little pike rarely exceeds a foot ve been informed, and have ' in length. wired to Secretary Farrell of the Here is the key: If you stick it in] 2% Banded pickerel (Esox Ameri-} National Association and Mike Sexton, by an exaggerated development of | == her exporta, She failed and her eco- BUILD WITH BRICK nomic position is just as bed as that of her neighbor. The Polish finance/z ‘It 1s a tremendous m'stake. wald, “to devote themselves, as tain countries, especially France, di before the war to the ercumulation of, credits in foreign countries which a mistake to attempt to increase ex- ports constantly and diminish {m- ports, as the United States is doing. ited States will die on ite gold. Her producers will be forced to lend money to Eurepe, if they want to What iq needed Is the reestablish ment of the trade balance. We have unprece: dented efforts to develop her sepory Little pickerel (Bsox vermicul-| said that the agreement would be| trade. She was seeking to stabilize atus)}—Found in upper Mississippi | lived up to to the letter,” continued| her Rational money. She rises has slowed up enough to make {t {m- {a re-|possible for them to ma‘ntain the big time speed, No Sympathy for Owners. club owners, however, for they were not satisfied with the old arrangement by which they could keep their teams fact | Practically intact for years, The eld that, no matter how the country’s in-|national agreement made it tmpossl- terior problems are settled, real prop- erty can only return when interna- tional commercial relations are re-|draft, Thera was no necessity for the ble for the majora to take more than one player a year from any club by clubs to sell any of their players if he) they did not want to, But there was cer .,out of the limelight for life. Peer morte Mire Lite; te. Just’ one dame To atiy facilitate the edvancament ist pelnt of the club owners. Just as the|YOUns recruits who can make the somebody has discovered a brand of| With & liveried chauffeur for The Economy of. Brick Basements no way for the minors to keep @ * great player out of the limelight for ~ life unless one of the Chicago or New, York clubs offered a fortune for them; : aq the situation now is. They’ overt reached themselves tn their avarice for dollars of diminishing value and now find themselves in the sorry plight of having lost what advantage they used to have. : ; Moreover, the major leagues have * the public with them. because the! fans always have sided with the plays = ers against the club owners and this last move by the big circults makes {t practically imposalble for a small town magnate to keep. a good player It will grade, For Greater 5 Now comes the new organization of players with no apparent purpose _ other than to increase the circula- ” tion of ‘ts members by winning for their ball players, along comes Ban! Johnson with a scheme to break that| tM greater freedom of action. There seems to be nothing else within rea- son that the new union can call a strike for. About the only additional comfort or luxury that could be handed the major league player today. would be an overstuffed limousine clustve use during the season. i And some o the players draw sal- aries which enable them to provida + such accommodations for themselves, ? without going tnto involuntary bank; ruptey. Since the new union can not * demand higher salaries or greater comforts, {t must be forming to ob- tain greater freedom, scacame mem come|W Y ATHLETIC. CLUB actinatatewe'ntgane deat.) 1 AMAZED AT CATTELL, fe teres saan: 70 YEAR YOUNG ATHLETE Before a sesston of the National aay | | | Collegiate Athletic association got un« be a yilolation of their own hard and SHIPWREGK FOR AMERICA it. Seevenenit. | Ne "york, the delogatse were tobing New York, the delogates were asking the identity of a white haired old gentleman seated near the spectators’ reatrum, A short time later he was. of the Philadelphia Chamber of Com Merce. Moving with the agility of a Killinger, emphasizing his points with the dynamic force of a sophomore de« bater, and putting the punch of an enthusiastic young sales wizard, Mr, | Cattell had the delegates spellbound with a talk on the benefits of ath letics. ‘m only 70 -years old," he said, ‘and I hope to live to be a hundred, Three score and ten, and yet Inst year I hit out @ two bagger on a baseball field and made second standing up: I'm barefoot at top and bottom, but alive in the middie. And it's all due to my having taken care of myself. ~ “I came here just to show you men \a living example of what can be done |in the work you are doing. I believ | that the sporting spirit is the only o1 |that can save the world, and that’ why I hope to have international ath- letics the main feature of the cen- tennial. I didn’t get to bed until 12 last night, I was up at 6, traveled sixty miles to mest you, and must now get back in order to make two mere speeches tonight.” canus)—Distinctly an eastern fish, as] President, for definite information that minister studied the problem and dis: Arkansas, and Tennessee; 2 common | Payers subject to draft. Occurs in four continents. Also found | ‘Mem. as far north as Alas! This is the common pike of the middle west, usu- ally called pickerel, ¥: Muskallunge (Esox Masquin. visions. it 1s found only east of the Alle} the Lamied er iad pe veihie oe ghanies. It reaches a length of about aereery nt on January y putting luv dose watloneliwadey: They Tabitha Ontitnel player tice trons cai |the finanota return for thelr exnorte tn fore'gn countries and the result, as far as the exchange was concern: from eight 8. Eastern pickerel or green pike| ‘7S the optional player list , (Beox reticulatus)—Thiy fish is found] ‘© fifteen and eee. ee ee from Maine to Florida, Louisiana, | /¢nsues to necer: all major league Great Lakes pike, common pike, " usually catled “pickerel"—AMl of the] tish in Ozark waters; also common in odie by pa pone Slee eas a a SE ical | hy ede bogsrdegnie PahAr IE sill weap weet Ger 4, Great lakes pike, common pike, | etd i toned tateat: hutable pte Muskellunge—Upper halves of both} or ‘plekere!” (Baox teh Widely rales a Hala dene erie thay is and the Ohio river country " a ing on our rights. We will fight for “The Pacific Coast league does not want the draft, It haa fought against it and will not be forced to its pre- Outside of a few small leagues all valley. This ts the common muskie} action is taken. known to the many anglers who have ———— crapped with these big fellows. Ohio, 6. Ohio Muskallunge or Chautau- i th ohn lon every si] at on mamenes oe Seca | VAMA AND) SMITH TIE Ohiensia)—Chautaubue lake, uary 8. Oklahoma Is To Organize State Police Forces} OKLAHOMA CITY, Jan. 6.—(Unitest| fish is native to all the | of the outfita in organized baseball are| Pross.)—Okiahoma will be the next upper St. Lawrence river, | opposed to the draft, followers of the and its streams, as well as certain| game here declare, It 1s anticipated Small lakes of the upper Mississippi | they will join the coast league if any administration taking offic covered that the reason of the failure was that the Poles had no confidence state to organize a state police force according to plans of the new state left certain strength and foundation wall, afte bins sult of vigorou: Jack Walton, governor-elect, favors | ganda and vast sums 1 and the Ohio river basin. H Senator Carlock will 7. Great Northern Pike or Plain Muskallunge Esox Mgsquinongy, Im- maculatus}—Found only in Eagle Iaken in the northern part uf that state and Minnesota. There they are, the whole bunch of pikes that are found in North America. This is the group that scientists have declared are pikes, pickerel, and if all of us called each fish by {ts correct name everything would be lovely, but name is not the case. Tho first three In the Ust, the little Pickerel, the banded pickerel, and the eastern pickerel, should be called pick: | Martin all having 301. today's play. pikes. For instance, that little pick- erel which you find right here in the SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 6.—James Kirkwood and MacDonald Smith of San Francisco are tied for the Calt- fornia open golf championship with A medal score ‘of 299 as a result of ‘There is a triple tie for third placa, Walter Hagen, Eddie Loos and Huff erel, but we ought to lay off that It {ms expected that Kirkwood and; name when we talk about the big] Smith will play off their tle Monday Francisco golf and country club links, Carter county, it was indicated. Jury @ year ago. clo friends. The former s' of Walton. middle west {n ponds, sloughs, and Gene Baraven’s score was 304. Jank| ganization along the lines bayous and which never does “grow | Hutoh/son turned in a 73 in the morn: up” to be any longer than a foot ing and @ 76 in the afternoon for a) snte police. | he “Mounted” would replace, to extent, the national guard or- when caught by anglers, thought to| rand total of 303. be an {immature pike. Not so long 58h PAE RNS ago one fisherman wrote us asking U. 8. BOXERS TO JAPAN. why he never cowl@ catch any big Pike in a quarry which he had stock ed with these “picks Good reason— because they never do attain any size, being just plain Uttle pickerel. part of February, accompanied five pugilista of merit. Moore Tausig, San Francisco boz- ing promoter, has announced that ha will take a trip to Japan in the latter by ganization, ec SST SEY as saying he feels it Philadelphia North American. y denied ay URa nob Ag rd = brick substitutes. But the facts that really er—facts that touch the pocketbook and affect the pride and confidence felt in the finished structure—are not influenced [cording to the new administration duce a bill providing for establishment jot thia constabula: soon aftér the legislature meets, he announced. OPEN, GOLF TITLE, AT 299\"susst"occ, Sate ue iA sheriff of © known throughout the southwest as a tw ® picturesque son of the outhwest, more widely known In Ok-|& lahoma than any other officer. wag doposed as sheriff by a grand Garrett and "Governor Jack" are! rift was nm active campaigner toward election | of The senator from Georgia spent | ie nothing to gat his seat, He ts quoted was worth intro» by sales methods. Brick basements cost } expense is considered. Beauty, definitely tion, simplicity and consequent economy of erection, fitness proved by long experience, are some of the reasons why the brick still without a serious rival not only as the standard but also the cheapest of all worthy types of foundation construction. The advantages of brick foundation walls have been somewhat lost sight of by some during the past few years as a re- les methods, wide propa- your next building operation we suggest brick consideration be given due weight. it, if “overhead” integrity of construc- r centuries of use, is spent for advertising Before undertaking ¥ial in a round of 18 holes at the San} In event the “Oklahoma Mounte: bd ia formed, Garrett will effect an or: rr rl the Texas Rangers and Pennsylvania C. E, Starr, Pres. Extreme North E: Ell TAT BUILD WITH BRICK and Tile Co, Phors 1076 nd of Center St. AAA

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