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PAGE SIX — _ IS HE? Sports); ~ ‘DEMONS’ TAKE © TWOGAMESON LOCAL FLOOR Ha Clendive 1} to 12 in Hard- Fought Contest Reat ton S to 7 and Jing to dis) rich the Soviet | th 'antel | —-— overninent has wed to reach the | Party ‘to safety. it De Lee REN Mae Ness lesa Stefansson considered that Great! : Z | ouerricay ah vite Weare | Britain had a good claim on Wran-! ‘ The Heelers ; ded, was &ell Island, whieb he predicted would! : ble station for aer- in , ts 3 RRS | Captain t of the British shi 2 ‘ OO j Hes 1349, He aide land, He Hb BNE ie Ahh ; brane island, which is 7 miles, *Sociations of the island had led it i Vi sailess GEN AUR ERAT . be dubbed “the death trap of the f | north of Sil and 300 ee \ ihe TALIS. GE HERI OSTRATE, nother expedition, promoted bs he OL Z8 EN TATAE OS RE RENWAL nsson, was led to the island in| li LAC HBC EORBHOSRICERRE 1921 by Alan Crawford, young son of WiGan iikine: ted: inthe | Ii island is that vieinity was |% Toronto professor, He took three kel HENS NFCREONTA SCORER Herald { en, Lorne E. Knight, McMinnville, i the [Island the Stars and Stripes recently | OF€5 Frederick W. Maurer, New 4 H HacarecisGiseell ye ONAtRTHBUIDULE Philadelphia, O., und Milton Galle, i Vcuster of thomgasoline delioonen tien |New, Brauntels, Kntght and} LARK. ch Vain at. Maurer had been members of the 1G GY I aan eataoeeaten first Stefansson expedition, At Nome 0 4 Interest in W appar. | ne y a ene feu ! 20) ently dates back to when na-| 7 2CsI8C%, pean? f 0 0 6s Tabb Ftd RUCPAASIANE EO) Aus] Seumecronsestors fear ilove 1 ( 7 0 0 rdinand Petrovich von} A amid Hee beet use they only are Le Roy, G We nell, x Russian. governor of} 40le fo fasion from s skins the eloth- Anderson, C ij eae gell tried vainly | IN&_necess to life, and to do it to veach the swiftly. AG G FT Saw It In 1867 The next summer Captain Joe Ber- ' g. > pvomotcelldtte tiie ire islAWiIeG ‘d of Nome in the gasoline schoon- ! ee AN 5 vd probably hel eated Kellett until Captain Thom BGR ABA aell Go. out Cou} ‘ ay Be 20 Fane ie Ohilaley JORG LAM GNeERE » hark Nile, out of | Sel! Island with provisions for the ( (ue LU tH Herre eran erneniee treaty Rete cit ae happened around! Cony, Tee extended so far from the} Winer, G amend : Sea HOV SHIAN RATA ie island that he did not come within} Andruson, Pe UNG ainie son Columbia Country |ed té land, but. he sight of it, An Overtime Period CORN UL tu IMU Seer ele Thor: Another Explores wvertime period o most part are banked b; The following summer, 1923, Har-| the Bismarek between © five Re “In the it has to pl n | Winter. 1 ikept erea jthere is alway, te St at |tious injury back court game | off the Glendive | a new man played ast will prov nat that position wards have as yet aske! p and mi up. shots f baskets duri [ase ne inutes of play next with i! Hineup wa: love hape, danger i me in + po the hbsence rogeins “or Griffith me to play. Both of u the club up there next se cidentally it would make all that I championed ba I played. “Baseball le pad UPse doesn vugh to hol Lofthouse or Bismarck o doubt ady | The [ir not sed Bismare has basketha success rigger 1 have found the numerous Rismarel AGI IG Haas, | 2 0 Oison, 10 a Lobach, 00 fe Som showed me ot in the 9 ch better not ition contract for months of y them down like tha our me three to turn VT - conve about iP} Ngee eee the featherweight should start a reone tourney. received sucess oa been customary pall dur’ and it} although ing th ‘t want | searching hope to keep son. In- play kotball naturally No car figure intend $400 for Ay. t e The Nut Cracker | tourney we | Feath twice THE. BISMARCK. TRIBUNE ADVENTURERS DEFY DEATH, HARDSHIPS | AT WRANGELL ISLAND, SOVIET RULED . bi ceompanied only by an Eskimo, He First. White Man siehtedl iar landed, made his way to Nome, de- 5; i spite illness, and gave the word that Wrangell Island in) 1849.) cone several vessels on x relief race, |The race was | 1 | But Did Not Land, Think-| 3 won by the King & | | | | | Winge, a gasoline | ing It Was Part of Siberia} schooner. found i | the company of Stefansson Explorers} jefe aboard the Of those on : | the island one had committed suicide Over the) ina two had died of hardship. The! yescue was cifected September 7,/ She urvivors of Other aveled —Many Have T sland — ‘Traveled On Land | |, Seaeuts, Wrkehe, Dee Wrangell| Stefansson, bereft of his vessel, ; Jistand, rife in ctory of tragedy and] had turned his energies to providing | ee unfintened! Grose ce attained | that men eduld travel several hun-| {ie rehitie: 6 Russian possession, dred miles over the surface of the! to he explored reploited, accord. | Atctic, living on the ice and. killing seals for food and fuel, He led his} He the h ttered ice that come and go. Wrangell Island, after whose cognomen is s outheastern Alas tuck, The first island was by cd States revenue August 12, 1881, old Noice, a young Scotchman, led a ty to the island in the gasoline chooner Donaldson, He found that wford, Maurer and Galle had de- parted over the ice for Siberia in January and had gone the of the other parties appeared, Knight had died of ja, the sole survivor, w: vhat game she could und making clothing ready |, for a winter alone. e left on the island James Wells of Nome and 13 Eskimos, whom he had engaged for that purpose—the third Canadian colony on Wrange!l Island. st summer several efforts were American and Canadian ves- sels to reach Wrangell Island but the iee was the worst that old-time northerners had known, and all at- tempts failed. It was left for port, the Brasny "| ber) to make her coast of Siberia from Petropavlovsk thread Bering Strait, and pressing through the ice, to reach the island ugust 20, 1924. She hoisted the Rus- n flag. Wells and the 13 Eskimos were taken away by the Red October, to be} landed probably at Vladivostok, 1,000 miles to the south, according to lat-! ces. The Russians confi of furs which the \ ts had gathered, | i from Moscow and Len-| | ingrad h id that Day - jsian scientist, would head an exp dition to go to Wrangell Island and] y its geograph ron, around and the name} ¢ he recorded landing on the arty from the Unit- cutter ¢ Masta, Th party wi for the Jeannette, an American vessel in which Admiral Melville had tried to reach the North Pole and which was lost in the delta of the Lena river, Siberia, all of her complement but one officer perishing. The next year a party from the q.| Rodgers of the United States navy, an expedition fitted out in San Fran- isco to hunt the Jeannette, spent 19 on Wrangell Island, The Rodg- ck to the United , burned in St. Ls stern coast of ued to a Soviet army trans- Oktibr (Red Octo- y up the eas on the ¢ people wi Corwin by Stefansson, 1913 Vilhjalmar * an expedition for C explore lands and waters of America, went from Seattle vi Jinto the Aretie ocean in the K a 250-ton steamer. The master of the ain Robert A. Bart- lett, mer Roosevelt | jin wh ert A, Peary went north! oct ad to reaeh the pole in 1909, Karluk was caught in the ice Point Barrow, Alaska, and on September 20 Stefansson led a ‘hunt- party ashore over the He ne saw the n. She was carried wes oo ed a valuable store h coloni che: Th Briti Disp: correo ee eeneeeres esse DE DIDee Le Dee DDOOLOEDOLIILOCEODELEOIEDL EOD OLTETELEOPOESELEELELSEOLEEEELLELLILESESOOLOLCLE LOSE SESESELLELOLISESEESISOOCLEESS PLLELOTELSELOOLIOTLOLEESESOOLELESESILILOLESEOEELOLOLELESOLOLELELEEDDELELECLOOO DD ie | the ice, Johuetiatley ndded! that H Ik must be ihevontenpeeniiyiiie! pre once ree e the resou going to v » to an end in Fel | thoes aie have told her st | might be, to Amer ns, provided the | ruary. .. Com fe eamadde |/ien ices Leeann konanuaag j Americans would pay gyer a large | } Eddie C h ee a we cayeuin gave orders) enough share of the proceeds. It was| fite don he his was GO miles! stated that Russia regarded the is-| Connie Mack {north of Herald Island. The crew! jand “as an important wireless st: y {| made camp on the ice, The ni tion and supply base in event of | is ley described it, the wae? area jvsuddenly straightened out ona level! Russia had maintained a claim to| y peediie: voll : Kee! and slowly’ sunk with the Union| ws nell Island for a umber of Hee f ; It would | to believe Tom- | Jack tings anahteniiih » based on a landing asserted to; i o! real © oppor. | an ete Sends Men There » hee! e { tunity long before it was granted [™S ei] ie antl POHER Ha mae eae heen made in 1911, | ; him. ) > be if hi % allen mine am neer ent the first and second mates and ae | go ere ne. sou ae Re seamen to Wrangell Tstind 0) yrampune t TYPEWRITES | CN Paddock and Murchison @|cuche provisions t on Sholay eae pear me eres ‘ T have ever co: aun dioundathenwania wreek Camp, Th rty tamped on], is ri. tovba tis ceny } In treality ED MEG Nere SOUNR SG a picee of water to frecze over cof cine stenographer in the world. ence. . SEL OUI thaw could konaahater: (euler He has been taught to write the on his z 7 \ teh than intocatannite: é name Fritz on the keyboard’ of a much consider \), EMOTE AN Nationgt| Meanwhile in Shipwreck Camp|{¥PeWriter, and also the sentence, meee me that j 7 alte Wa there arose disagreements whieh! 4 ae dog.” His typing is said to! gept ots worties |iauch respect for our to get it found a leader in Alister Forbes|>° Perfect. | © eliminated ayer like , See ver BRE \very elo : National a ch surgeon, February U \ acting ; : Aes SE CAUTION i the b: Gf Als jo eeeete Loe) a panty led by D Mackay left the! Never dry graniteware over a hot! is Gleason’s glowing tribute | camp to make their own way to the) rise" because the expansion. may| hits? Ee K tribute | “Tommy O'Brien of Milwaukee will | island included an oceano-} vvuse the outside to scale. | sea cia Se {never be a serious rival of Le | graph anthropologist and a ee peers | Take it from me the Chieazo [aycuy acum UN RON ana te he heariof againy | | FOLRY PILLS REACHED White Sox will not finish in eet ‘On Mareh 12 Captain Bartlett: sues THE SORE SPOT 1 | Mr. Troteky seems to have lost | ceeded in landing the rest of his par- TE ee eee ger Bea jand is on his way to the bush league |ty on Wrangell Island, Six days , Manager Lee Fohl of the Boston | oe nolitics, er he left over the ice for nnd nerhing, seemed Red Sox has shifted his campaigr d to touch the aching spot until I pro- methods for the coming season. j cured FOLEY PILLS, with wonderful Instead of trying to build up club from bought veteran material, the thought is to try to develop a young one. “When I ‘| went to Boston, the de- | | By ip (umediatein aive the Billy Evans Any attempt to drop or place] today and you will be well: pleased club that could win a mar | rere ue yO ae auons sores foot- E ick that fails shall be penalized in} with the relief obtained. The use of hat meant the getting of fading \De | couches, spasinky forts oht chacan mila i Alb veterans rather than gamble with —Adt. unknown youngsters, At the start |. 1» Eliminate the rule which awards| the attempt is made from a point 0) lites Mee sels of the season things looked pretty |fi7st down to the team on offense | inside the 20-yard line, when if |@————__. Baa , |when the defending eleven is off-| should count as touchback. | LITTLE JOE: } POM ein he cxace .the>vetoran.| ie: 6.\The loss of a certain cc ect = players went well, we hoped they would, Then the bot- tom dropped out of the team, When hot weather hit us the old-timers | faded and did it quickly. “The team this year will be made up of youngsters with possibilities rather than yeterans with a glowing past.” came through 45 | widdle of the field line. of kicks that go over the sulting in the ball: b from the 2 to the ‘d line. 3. Changing the Iwould make a touchdown \ thr als from field. Fohl has been very successful de-|atrer tarchdown was veloping young players. At least a dozen present-day stars began their careers under his direction. that made |goal to be ve 4. Framing ten. the rules in ‘“Baseball takes on a different, meaning after you become a man-}{ ager,” remarked Stanley Harris to me at the recent major league meet- ing in New York. “The meaning becomes all shall that receive credit. if the some recovered by the kicker’s the nant and then a world series, as was! loss of the ball, TEN SUGGESTIONS FOR PROPOSED GRID. REFORM 2. Changing the kickoff from the!of ground every time a 40-y This will eut down the number | plete it. line, eing put in pla It will also| periods to say make for more runs from kickoff. scoring of three | of points for a goal field to two. T equal If the goal after touchdown was made, it would require four field goals for a team touchdown and kicked such way that ‘a player who blocks a kick One blocked kick does not, eross the line of serimmage and is side, shall count as the loss of a down.|ic is decidedly unpopular with. the more intensive after you win a pen-|If it happens on the fourth down, | football enthusiasts who like to hear results.” FOLEY PILLS, a diuretic stimulant for the kidneys, gently and thoroughly flush and cleanse the kidneys and help to eliminate poi- sonous waste matter, Try a bottle ja foreward and pa fails to com- \F-VA DONT MAKE” ANY”, RESOLUTIONS FOR NEW miting the number of passes can be used during the four 15 attempts. 8. Shifting back to the old ‘method the try-for-point after goal, That making the try from a_ point straight out where ‘the runner cross- ed the line or, if this angle is too jess at, permit the usual punt out: Making it illegal for a player |to return to the game after he has Tee 1. | that his | is, to jonce left it. Such a rule exists in ay eball; hp moment a player is |withdrawn from the game, he is is,/through for the day. 10. Making the huddle system of giving signals illegal.‘ While this it | method is favored by many coaches, ter pees of: the signals, The Coming Three Month Will be the Most Important in the History of North Dakota A New Executive will be installed to manage the destinies of our state with its complex problems. Many members of the house and senate will sit for the first time, re-elected members will resume their places. Committees will be formed. - All here to make good their pre - election pledges and enact laws in the interests of every citizen. 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