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a meee ct BISMARCK SET | THE BISMARCK TRIB FOR MIDGETS . CONTEST HERE Bismarck Uses Weight Great Advantage Generally But Shows Weaknesses | Creighton Bluejay in An- | other Feature This Week- | McLeod and McMahan Seem | Satisfied; Locals Expect i Expert Midget Team i | with the spotlight turned on the bat- tle ee k A fighting Mandan football eleven, sin at Madison, held y heavier Bismare. Demon} All of the big. ten | the western conference will burst i | to full volume next Saturday, engagements, but/ warm-up contests, the| tion will be the game at Mandan Saturday, the Beinons managed to cross goal twice and emerge a tired victorious team by s It was Bismarck’s first grid tory over Mandan in three years. Bismarck's giant cleven did not : come up to expectations in the game, 5 though Mandan would have given] any team in the state a terrific rub in Saturday’s game. oC Eddie Spriggs was responsible for| its tw ; a Bismarck’s first touchdown late in| University of South Carolina and the second quarter, The negro half-| Ripon College of Wisconsin will back returned one of Fleck’s punts|clash with another heavy, strong 25 yards and O'Hare tore off nine! eleven, the University of Wyoming, yards on the next play. Then the|on Stagg field. Coach Stagg’s line negro flanked Mandan’s left end for 28 yards to the three-yard line. . c O'Hare took it over in two tries. cocks ripped it almost to shreds in Bismarck scored again in the} winning, 6 to 0. Then Ripon. fol- fourth quarter when Ted Meinhover| lowed up the destruction by drub- reached up out of a mass in the end) bing the Maroon reserves, 12 to 0. zone and snared a pass from Jacob-| Coach Pat Page’s heavy Indian son, Jacobson missed two tries for| Squad, which opened its season points after touchdowns via the|auspiciously with a double victory dropkick route. Saturday, defeating Wabash College, landan’s line outcharged the| 14 to 0, and Terre Haute State Nor- Demons throughout the contest, par-| mal, 39 to 0, will stack up against tially making up for the weight| stiffer competition at Bloomington handicap. McDonald, Brave quarter, | this week-end in the University of made most of the yards for the; Oklahoma. ey 3 Mandan crew by sweeping the ends,| Bradley college will give Coach though he made no large gains.| Bob Zuppke and his Illini their ini- Helbling was worked hard through| tial test at campaign. the line and Dietrich and Arthur did| | Ohio Wesley: which | showed a fair job of blocking. great power in crushing Marietta Fleck, besides playing a nice de-| College, 33 to 0, Saturday, will in- fensive game at end, was called| vade Michigan, : hack to do the kicking for the Man-| Another interesting game will be dan outfit, and he did a good job of| between Minnesota and Creighton it, several times kicking out of| University of Omaha at Minneapolis, danger in pinches, Coach “Doc” Spears of the Gophers has met with several disappoint- Vosika Is Hurt 4 ments this year, but one bright spot Vosika, Mandan tackle, was hurt| has illuminated the Minnesota camp early in the first quarter, being re- —Bronko Nagurski, fullback, who is lieved by Mees. Mandan made only| being hailed as another Herb Joest- one other substitution, Edwards go-| i ing in for Dietrich at half. Potter replaced O’Hare in the Bismarck lineup shortly before the whistle aden the game. Except for periods when Bismarck made its touchdown drives, play centered in the middle of the field. Bismarck made good usc of its on practically sll occasions, the Demon linemen are notice- ably weak in handling themselves, blocking, and tackling cleanly. Hoff- man, revan:ped fullback who is play- ing center this year, played a nice game, making only one bad pass during the contest, intercepting a pass fora gain, and breaking up several Mandan passes. Ted Loses Touchdow Meinhover showed inability to hang on to perfect passes from Jacobson, losing a chance for an- other touchdown in the final period. ‘The rest of the linemen played hard and consistent football. Landers and Jacobson did nice jobs of block- ing for the Bismarck backs, but they carried the ball not more than half a dozen times. Jacobson did the sing in most cases for the team, ing aided in this department by O'Hare. O'Hare had the better of Fleck in the exchange of punts dur- i the game, though one of Johnny's in the first quarter was blocked and recovered by Mandan in deep Bismarck territory following a bad pass from Hoffman. lie Spriggs proved the class- jest performer of the day, showing some pretty exhibitions of field run- ning and end-skirting, although he ‘was weak on catching punts at safe- ty. Spriggs and O’Hare carried the ball most of the time for the De- mons, Spriggs making long gains in most cases and O’Hare plunging for short gains and first downs. O’Hare showed a great weakness in his inability to hang on to the ball x making several heavy -| caliber, of New Orleans Saturday. tle and the South Carolina game- 5 ra Other big ten teams, which start their season Saturday are not ex- cted to have much _ opposition. lonmouth College tackles Iowa at Towa City, Butler invades North- western, DePauw mixes with Purdue at Lafayette, and Ohio State clashes with Wittenbergh. BISON HARRIER SQUAD TRAINING Fargo, N. D., Oct. 1—(4)—Coach L. T. Saalwaechter is entertaining some high hopes for this year’s Uni- versity of North Dakota cross- country squad. With 11 men back from last year’s championship squad, he is putting the boys through their paces daily, and hopes to duplicate the stirring victory the squad achieved at Brook- ings, S. D., last year. Although the cross-country sched- ule for the season has not been formed, the team is promised a meet with the University of Minnesota harriers, but the date has not been definitely set. Indications are the event will come off in the first part of October. Both Russell Weiser and Russell Nelson, who were largely responsible for last year’s victory, have re- ported to Coach Saalwaechter for practice, and have been training diligently, Others on the squad last, wick; Wayne Clarke, Fargo; Jess Reynolds, Van Hook; Leonard Dob- bert, Robinson; Chester Rhimes, Regan; John Moilder, Brinsmaid; Kenyon Kilbcurne, Fargo; Virgil Weiser, Hazelton; and Robert Olson. GAME PROTEST DELAYS SERIES Oklahoma City, Oct. 1.—()—A dispute growing out of an umpire’s decision in the first game of a double-header in the Oklahoma City- Tulsa ard series for the Western league title has prolonged the series by one day, and elicited a strenuous protest from the Tulsa club, which may go to Judge K. M. Landis for a ruling. The protested decision was made in the eighth inning when Oklahoma City was at bat. Huffman was on third, Tubbs on second, and one was out. Saltzgaver sent a long fly to Munson in right field, and Huffman scored safely. After Tulsa scored in the ninth, Umpire Cot who was watching third base, said he had called Huffman out for leaving third before Munson had caught the ball. The umpires said they were unaware that Cot had called Huffman out, and the was finished under protest, ‘Teen winning, 7 to:6, klahoma City protested to Pres- Dale Gear, ins, Bismarck called signals from regu- Jar position. while Mandan used the huddle system. Roy McLeod, Demon mentor, though disappointed in some departments of Bismarck play, was satisfied that clearly out] the fighting es. Len McMal Brave coach, said after the ¢ he was proud his team held the heavy opponents to such a small score. . The two teams will meet in.a sec- ond fanises this year at Bismarck Mandan McDonald Arthur Dietrich Helbling Fleck (c) Valder Ellison Wagner Toman Vos: Stephens 4 Ihb thb fb le It Ig ce rt re Score by quarters: -0 60 6 12 -0000 0 es O'Hare, Meinhover. Sats ages Mees for Vosi- for Dietrich. ii year are Carroll Anderson, War-| end; Pat Page Seems to} SPRIGGS RUNS WELL’ Have a Strong Eleven at { Indiana U (P)—Football in| Goodreau, 19-year-old sophomore every eleven locked in combat and/life and death in a hospital where n Notre Dame and Wiscon-| with a broken neck. Physicians say | gUreneck for Hf with one exception, will be merely crhill, Mass, had been developed Bee TAC HG Giare Catarde boc| warmup contasta, “JUhe one: eXeep:|intai'a star quurterback: Under the the Wisconsin-Notre| tutelage but! Dame affair which probably will be!dreher, one of Notre Dame's famed a'12.to 0 score. | productive of -ootball of mid-season horsemen. It will be Wisconsin’s first game'der the crush of a driving play, and of the season and the second for{carried from the field unconscious. | Notre Dame, which barely took a 12|An examination by physicians re- to 6 victory over Loyola university | vealed that his neck was broken. ras f go dealt a double setback in! possibly a week,” attending physi- bill opener Saturday at the|cians said. i id; | while Gehrig was smashing only 46. |get well. He has not been told that his injury is such that He cannot re- was miserably weak in the first bat- |cover-and jnothing INJURED BEYOND RECOVERY, STAR Philadelphia, Oct. 1.— (4) — Leo uarterback of the Villanova foot- all eleven, today hovered between he has been confined since Friday that he cannot recover. Goodreau, whose home is in Hav- of Coach Harry Stuhl- Friday, during a prac- tice serimmage, he was buried un- “He may live an hour, a day or “But there is nothing we can do to save his life.” Propped up in bed, Goodreau shows a dogged determination to cover and believes that he received more than a_ dislocated shoulder and a broken collar bone. “T'll be out on the field again in a few days, coach,” he tells Stuhl- dreher, “It’s a bit tough to be laid up just now. Tell the doctor to hurry up and pull this bone back into place.” And Stuhldreher, knowing that his charge has played his last game, promises to do so. GOSLIN-MANUSH BATTLE IN AIR Fans Will Not Know Who Was the Best Hitter Until Offi- cials Decide New York, Oct. ()—Although Rogers Hornsby iched the Na- tional league batting title early last week, the American league battle between Goose Goslin of Washington and Heinie Manush of St. Louis re- mained unsettled until the iter. Goslni and Manush grappled down the’ stretch in the closest, batting duel in the younger major league since 1908, when Larry Lajoie thought he beat out Ty Cogb on the final day by making five singles. But the official averages showed Cobb with two or three more safe- ties than he popularly was supposed to have, and the Detroit star led, after all, with a mark of .324, The semi-official statistics of the official American league statistician show Goslin in the lead over Manush ATHLRTICS ARE | LICK for another world’s serie: With both terday’s clos: of the game’ doubt, restin; With a $2 Waite Hoyt, Miller Hugg Hoyt Pugilistic ci: games this but won his Babe Ruth’s Gehrig’s twe: The ished the si Mis the seventh home Reynol New York Gi home runs b; pions. today hv the thin margii point, .379 to .378. Unofficial fig- ures throughout the major league cities were at great variance on these two players, and the final truth will be known only when Ir- win M. Howe releases the official standing. Babe Ruth retained his mastery over both leagues in home runs and in runs scored, but again yielded to Lou Gehrig in runs batted in. The Babe tied his 1920 mark in home runs with 54, making this season rank in a tie the year of his Tankes debut, as his third best ma- jor league campaign. ' The Babe crossed the plate 162 times this year, against 158 runs last Season, and batted in 144 markers, only to see Gehrig shade him by one. The first baseman beat out the Babe last year in runs batted in by a margin of 175, the major league rec- ord, to 164, although Ruth was set- ting a new home run mark of 60 Lou again was second in homers this season, but with a mere 27. Paul Waner led the National league in runs scored this year with 141, Paul topped the National in 1927 with 131 runs batted in, but Jim Bottomley of St. Louis took the crown this year with 133. Bottomley also tied Hack Wilson of Chicago for National league home run honors, each getting 31. Larry Benton of New York re- tained pitching honors in the Na- tional, this time with 25vi ctories and only 9 defeats for .739. Waite Hoyt made it an all-New York proposition last year by taking the American league title with 22 and 7 for .719, but Alvin Crowder, the St. Louis star, gathered the honors for 1928 by winning 21 and losing only 5 for 808, Hoyt’s won and lost 'figures were identical with those he established last ‘year. fo ry | Major Leaders 1 o (By The Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Hornsby, Braves, .387. Runs red—P. Waner, Pirates, is Runs Batted In—Bottomley, Cardi- Doubles—P. Waner, Pirates, 51. ‘Bottomley, Cardinals, 20. Bottomley, Cardinals —Wilson, Ci 31. Stolen Bases-Cho ... AMERICAN LEAGUE lin, Senators, .379, Ruth, Yankees, 162. Batted In —Gehrig, Yankees, 145. : ’ Beg ——* |New York. Total ‘Hits — Lindstrom, Giants,| - ready decided, there’ to interest the baseball fans in yes- ED IN LAST | TILTOR SEASON |Hoyt Is Bounced Back and Forth on Diamond But Squeezes 7 to 6 Win CARDINALS BEATEN Goose Goslin Features Senator | Game by Clouting Home Run With Two on (By the Associated Press) The major league drama is done season, but the Yankees and the Cardinals still have an epi- logue to offer. They meet in the 8, starting at New York on Thursday and ending when one team has won four games. pennant campaigns al- not much jing engagements. Most ’s faithful stayed away in large numbers, some of them, no ig up for the excitement that is to come later this week. 000 bonus as incentive, » Yight-handed ace of ‘ins’ Yanks, pitched the American league champions to a 7 to 6 victory over the Detroit Tigers. had been promised grand,” as they say in the very best “two rcles, year. if he won 22 He was cuffed about rather freely by the Tigers, reward with the aid of fifty-fourth and Lou nty-seventh home runs. Philadelphia Athletics fin- ason two and a half games back of the Yanks, when they were thrown for a loss by the Chi- cago White Sox in general and Bob Weiland, a rookie pitcher from the sippi Valley league, in particu- Weiland held the A’s, to seven hits and fanned nine men. The Sox scored the only run in the game in when Kamm singled lds from second base. Goose Goslin’s homer with two on in the fifth was the high spot of Washington’s 9 to 1 victory over the St. Louis Browns. The Boston Red Sox romped to an easy 7 to 2 win over the Cleveland Indians, Phil- Todt getting a home run and three singles. The St. Louis Cardinals, their sec- ond National } tucked away, through the ‘motions at the Polo’ grounds, and lost to the runner-up ue championship did little but go fiants 4 to 2. Karl Hub- bell and Fred Frankhouse allowed only six hits apiece, but two of the blows off the Cardinals’ hurler were yy O'Farrell and O’Doul. The Giants thus finished the season two full games behind the cham- The Chicago Cubs, in third place, took the Cincinnati Red: 6 to 1 behind good pitching by Percy ls into camp ones, The Brooklyn Dodgers,’ although no higher tl the season than defeats han sixth place, ended with one more victory when the Phillies were met and conquered 5 to 1. It was the first time since 1924 that the Dodg- ers have fini of .500 or better The Pittsb of the league ished with a percentage rr, urgh Pirates, champions e last y ut no bet- ter than fourth place holders in 1928, and the Boston Braves completed their schedules on Saturday. Yesterday’s Games NATIONAL LEAGUE R H St. Louis... New York. Frankhouse and O’Farre! Philadelphia Brooklyn . Walker, Clark and Lopez. Chicago . Cincinnati Jones and and Hargrave, Sukeforth. E 4 Nl, R H E Tera 9 2 5 8 1 Milligan and Davis; R H E os 12 0! “3 teh} 7 zales; Rixey, Kolp No others scheduled. zh AMERICAN LEAGUE R H &§E Boston .. 7°16 1 Cleveland . 2° 1 Macfaydei Bayne and Myatt. Washington St. Lous Jones Wiltse and Danning. Detroit: . Hoyt Sorrell and mow Bool; Penn Threat eee Folks, Meet Paul Scull, Cap-. tain and Star Back for Pennsylvania You will be reading a lot this season about the young man who is charg- ing with the ball in the accompany- ing photograph. He is Paul Scull, captain and star back of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania eleven. He also has an educated toe that will account for a lot of points this fall. CARLS SET FOR NODAK CONTEST Northfield, Minn. Oct. 1.—With the opening game of the season with North Dakota university at Grand Forks’ only a week away, Coach C, J. Hunt is driving his men as much as possible in an .effort to get their plays to. functioning smoothly by next Saturday. The Carleton team expects a hard game with the Nodaks with Captain Simso, star triple threat man, out of the game with an injured right arm. A number of last year's men will be back in the Carleton lineup this fall, including Lester Cable, half- back; Setterquigt and Stuckslager, ends; Sartoris, tackle; Akesson, aie and MecNurlen, a guard who as been converted into a center. Some of last year’s reserve men who will see service are Moses and Sprague, halfbacks; Swanson, full; Carisch and Brown, quarterbacks; and Clauer and Jenson, linemen. The problem which Coach Hunt has been working on during the past two weeks in an effort to put out a strong Carleton team/on the field is NODAKS BEAT University of North Dakota Outfit Runs Wild Behind Grand_ Forks, Nz D., Oct. 1.— North Dakota's steamroller appli ning town Saturday, 80 to 0, in the university’s second appearance this year. An from North Dakota halfback, was the longest gain made by the Nodak legion. This came in the second pe- riod and followed an 80 yard dash for a touchdown off the kickoff shortly after the opening whistle by Glenn duplie: his 81 eleven, with tl North tively counte and ing in game, forth briefly this: develop a tackle to take the place of Ray Smith, develop a center to take the place of Jensch, develop a halfback to take the place of Addington, and a fullback whe can do the work of a Willegalle; of these men were lost by graduation last spring. In addition he must de- velop a guard to replace McNurlen and a tackle to, replace Hastings, who failed to return. The difficulty’ of the problem is lessened -considerably by the fact that Coach Hunt seems to have some excellent material, recruited largely from last year’s freshman team. For ends he has Perrin and Knowles; for tackles, Spurbeck, Freeberg and k; for guards, Grannis and Col- burn are layin the varsity on even terms. ield recruits are lim- ited to Broberg .and Salvi, who are potentially the most promising men in the Carleton backfield. Starting in his line against North Dakota next Saturday Coach Hunt will use Setterquist and Stuckslager at the ends, Sartoris and either Free- berg or Spurbeck at tackles, Akesson and either Gipuala or Jenson at guards, with McNurlen passing the ball. In the backfield Coach Hunt will probably start Brown at quar- ter, Cable and Mueller at halfs, with Broberg at full. Carisch, quarter- back, and Sprague, Swanson and Moses at half, will probably be used during the game. Wshek Beats Edgeley Eleven by 3 Counters '__ (Special to the Tribune) Wishek, -N. D., Sept. ~28. Wishek Pi: won their first home sap of the season by sinking Edge- ‘ley under a score of 18 to 0, ‘acker, Wishek, made a 70-yard dash:for a. touchddwn during the game. a eeeiion visits Wishek next Fri- Ye ste Siiersrar comune se Series, Statistics J (By..The Associated Press) «Contenders — New York Yankees of American Leagu: The | sensation. According to oldtime fans here, the feat of running two touchdowns back off the kickoff has never been Although Coach Jack West kept throughout, the Nodaks maintained an even: pace, counting 40 points each half, while Jamestown was be- ing held to 1 first down. Jamestown presented Cowles who w..s scouting the con- test for Carleton prior to that team’s appearance here Oct. 6, ex- pressed himself as impressed with| This is the way Norman Hall, ig his West's linemen were moving out football at Yale these days. Hall of their holes, mopping up the op-| had’ the misfortune to accidentally position and the task of the backs in| use an ax. across a advancing the ball was compara-| weeks ago and it is in such ae go o1 the crowd, which numbered 4,000,|for his regular berth of last ir officials estimated. scrapped courageously throughout its team play showed lack of prac- tice, but several individuals such as Gussner, Watson, played’ well. Jarrett flashed more brilliantly than Curtis Schave Saturday. He ran the team well at quarterback, however, and added some flashy bits of play. Allen, Kahl, Boyd, Ki Knauf’s tackling was the best see here this year. Vern Smith, tackles, were outstand- Between halves of the varsity freshman squad put on a 10 minute scrimmage. They battled Smith, halfback at South Dakota State last season, cut loose’ with enough ability to mark him as a fine all around performer. MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1928 Demon Football Outfit Wins Over Fighting Mandan Eleven 12 to 0 ' Waite Hoyt Wins $2,000 by Winning 22nd Game of Season Y esterday WISCONSIN-NOTRE DAME GAME LOOMS IN WESTERN CONFERENCE SPOTLIGHT to Minnesota Meets Strong] Norman. Hall, 200-Pound Guard, Watches Practice from Sidelines JIMS 80 TO 0 Good Blocking int a minute some fast run- tactics to overwhelm James- college at Memorial stadium 85 yard run for a touchdown the kickoff by Paul Boyd, Jarrett, sprinting sophomore ated before at North Dakota. Maintains Pace ubstitutes on a steady run a green which had something to do he score. Nevertheless, Coach Dakota’s showing. crack 200-pound guard, is takin, easy. Ideal weather helped tion that he won't be able to for some few weeks. And hi: Jamestown Scraps teams. half; Webber, end, and |A. Smith Schave Jarrett. Thoreson Kahl fb Scoring: North Hopehavet Gussnei d three touchdowns. Schave Dakota c= Tho:eson were imp jive. Kahl 2. Thoreson, Knauf, Schave. Substitutions: Ends—Berg, Bees tacles—Smart, Durnin, guards—Tvedten, Lindell, en, Hanson; center—Hill; center, and ‘Showers and North Dakota’s line. two teams selected from the back and | Jamestown — Salie, to a scoreless tie. Frank! Paintner, Sto HOW THEY GOT BEAT The summary: coaches after the Mountaineers lost North Dakota Jamestown | to Davis-Elkins in the opening game Terras le Webber | of the season. ‘ Showers It Lon; Kotchain Ig Knoll NICE UNIFORMS, ANYWAY Lee ¢ Pointen| The football team at South Caro- ‘Woods rg lina boasts of having the flashiest V. Smith rt foot _ several sence hurts young Mal Stevens, who Jamestown, although outclassed,|has the big job of ‘preparing Yale this year for some awfully tough Perdy Fergus Watson touch- downs—Boyd 4, Jarrett 3, Schave 1, Kahl 1, Lux 1, Ludwig 1, Allen 1. Points after touchdown—Lux 3, North Dakota— Thorliefson; “Lack of a sustained drive,” was the complaint of West Virginia on a strong: Valle: Saturday. new mentors, Case) Stanley Borleske, pro Shrum, ikings. May, Hanson, and field. The summary: N. D. A. GC. Ranes Sullivan oe Ordahl Barney Blair Hays Gergen Hermes Peschel Hanson, Peterson, Nogard, | Slater and Cassid: | son and Gergen, tin, placekick. nesota, referee; C. H. yd, Lux, Schmidt, Allan, Knauf. Conns, Joos, the Bison touchdowns, Guertin made a place kick fromthe lay full Subs for N. D. A. Tonn, McGrath, Williams, Skaret, Friberg, Hilts, Blakeslee, Guertin, Pariseau, Bassett, Babcock, Bollman, Smith, Christenson. Subs for Cook, ra Elias, Bergerson, Burchill, Bauman, pling City teacher Finne, ad a their hands in whipping the sod which also was a m wi Field goal Officials: F, K. S; BISON, VIKINGS IN HARD BATTLE North Dakota A. C. Outfit Comes Through Winning” With Three Touchdowns 3 A Bison football eleven, much im Proved over that of a year showed potential power in tram team by a score of 21 to 0 at Farge The 1928 Bison, coached by its in anc ight or iking Clark. , Sautel am uch im- team under the direction of its veteran coach, Jim Morrison. The Bison mentors sent 29 men in- to the game and uncovered several Heyl poi Het awa ‘was the shin- ing light of the day at quarterback. The Wop ran his team smartly and made several nice runs. Pete Gers gen didn’t show up as in former years, but the mentors expect him to come into his old form soon. Pete made an sens run for a counter, literman, Fiola, and played nice games for the Gergen scored mile Paul C.—Gorder, if Scoring: Touchdown—May, Hare Guer- ulding, Min- ‘imball, South Dakota, umpire; Earl Bute, Wahpe- ton Science, head linesman. INDIANS MAKE IT 2 VICTORIES Rochester, N. Y., Oct. 1.—()— Indianapolis was leading Rochestgr by one game in the little world series today as the two teams traveled to to the Red Games _will apolis Wednesday, necessary, to decide ipion- uniform of eny eleven in the country. ae of class AA in organized base- Indianapolis, where they will renew the contest on Wednesday. The Indians took yesterday’s gama here 5 to 1, which gave them two ings’ one. be played in Indian- Thursday and Saturday, with g game Sunday, if the cham MEN WHO GUARD oy, THEIR HEALTH SMOKE CIGARS - en + 85% of the Doctors on the Staffof . the University Hospital, Chicago are Cigar Smokers LaPalina és America’s Largest sili ‘High Grade ga A populasit is st pro root ras Tane in on the Le Palina Clab Smoker each Sunday night at In 19 different shapes and sizes, from 10c "Tra of th leadiny were interviewed —each A cigar Blase smoke ie cool. cine ALINA to 3 for $' Also in a vaciety of attractive pocket packages ( . MINNEAPOLIS DRUG Co., : is «@ ] i wn pers anos