The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 27, 1930, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1930 Rushes to Victory in Regatta for First Time in 15 Seasons LOUISVILLE AND KANSAS CITY MAY VOTE AGAINST SPLIT YEAR | Telephone Team COLUMBIA ENTRIES ornell Once More Rules Crews | i — pT ge | ' . gue Defeat Bismarck Dairy 17 to 7; | Power and Light Keeps Record Clean A. A. U. Water Tournament Attracts Many Champions LEAD ESTABLISHED . BARLY THIS. SEASON | Blues Apparently Have Just Hit Stride for Year After Shaky Start ;Cornell Also Is Jayvee Cham- ies ; pion, While Syracuse Won ASSOCIATION VOTES JULY 1 Freshman Contest : : cp : | ‘Syracuse Is Second, Two Lengths Behind, With Mas- sachusetts Tech Next | Northwestern Bell won its i ie — _— game of the season and the ‘North Dakota Power and Light entrant kept its record spotless in last night’s pro- gram of the Bismarck Diamordb1!) league. Northwestern Bell defeated the Bis- marck Dairy 17 to 7 and Power and Poughkeepsie, N. Y., June 27—)— Cornell once again rules the ifter- ‘vollegiate seas. Cornell has waited 15 years to pick up the thread of victory cut short by the end of Pop Courtney's regime, and has been buffeted about while a new generation of rowing greatness, featuring Washington, Columbia and lthe navy, came along to dominate the waters. a Associated Press Photo Louisville's March and Minne- apolis’ Eight-Game Win Streak Broken Chicago, June 27.—(AP)—Proba- bility of a split season, the second half to start July 7, has brought cheer to all American association clubs except the Louisville Colonels, who are unwilling to surrender their Light trimmed Montgomery Ward 11 to 9 in a nip and tuck contest, The Grand Pacific Eat Shop hum- bled the Capital Laundry 22 to 11 and Gamble beat Wills 15. to 11 in the pected two affairs. The standings to- jay: Won Lost Power and Light... 12 Lop Gamble .......... 9 3.150 | Montgomery Ward ‘Capital Laundry.. ‘Yesterday, through the rough water and the mist that partially shrouded the Hudson, Cornell came back with a startling rush to capture the four G. P. Eat Shop. |Bismarck Dairy. Will Company...... Northwestern Bell.. After a long wait of 15 years, Cornell yesterday pulled a great surprise to easily win the collegiate regatta at | first mortgage on a full seasons -pen- Poukeepsie, pacing Syracuse by two lengths at the finish. Back in the days when Pop. Courtney was coach, | nant. Cornell won as a matter of habit. Cornell this year had one of its heaviest and strongest eights in years. Left Indications today were club owners to right: J. L. Niles, stroke; H. O. Aigeltinger, 7; B. B. Clark, 6; N. E. Scott, 5; R. J. Heidelberger, 4; J. R. Shall- mile varsity race, defeating eight of ‘the finest crews the east, middle west cross, 3; A. B. Butler, 2; S. Y. Austin, bow; and J. B. Burke (in front) coxswain. -and far west could produce. would vote six and poet seven to one for the proposal when President Thomas J. Hickey presents it at the special meeting in Chicago, July 1. Tempel ewe reoy noe | EFiniay, Moller, Fuller and Dunlap Win)i.3:resc.°% }ses ‘the regatta. Syracuse turned up with almost equal unexpectedness as ithe only serious challenger while the | U7 * Intgnty favored crews of Columbia, the Wilcy Moore Wins 15th Game of Year ;1929 champions; Washington and the ‘navy, each three time winners, strug- ‘gled far behind. t Three Length Margin Cornell whipped Syracuse by a good Charles Eaton, Victor Over Paul Cook, Is Beaten by Cali- fornian Oakmont, Pa., June 27.—(AP)— three lengths as these two old rivals Miller Streak Broken at Eight | Four college golfers, two long and Straight; Blues Advance two short, two from the east and two} from the west, went out today to de- |termine who should go tomorrow to | Pittsburgh Wins easily. Thus the teams, which have been watching the Colonels make 8 one team race out of the pennant chase, will have a new chance not ‘ oq [only to win the second half title but P. ir F Phil to win the big flag in a post season a rom is series play-off. Louisville, seven games in front of {its nearest rival, St. Paul, intends to Dazzy Vance Tames Chicago/ fight the plan. Kansas City, coming Cubs, and Giants Wallop back after a bad start, also may cast a ballot against the plan. Sponsors of the split season plan National A. A. U. outdoor swimming meet at Los Angeles, July 3-6. DESPITE WINNIN G STREAK, Yesterday’s games: Northwestern Bell Bismarck Dairy .. Linnell and Shearn; Papacek and O. Hindemith. Power and Light.. Montgomery Ward E. ‘iggs and Lawyer, Cook; H. Buster Crabbe (left) and Josephine McKim (right), both students at the Uni- | Brown and Iverson. versity of Southern California, are two of the record holders entered in the RHE G. P. Eat Shop... 1022 9 3 Capital Laundry. cil 42 M. Hummel and McCrorie; Jacob- to Fourth Place the final of the intercollegiate cham-| pionshi St. Louis Cards son and Schlickenmayer. York Stands Third B EAT MUDHENS Milwaukee—The Mudhens defeated to 1. and Spring: Hill and Griffin. logan; . bowski, Lindsey, Haid, Bell and Wil- ns 1 | Club— NATIONAL LEAGUE Ww ot Former Major League Star Fails| runs. Athletics defeated St. | Burke, Houston, Texas, and Charley Detroit, 12 to 4. Louis, 8 to 3. Washington trounced e a day which produced 106 hits by the |" wir: on pening Speaker Resigns sekt #mocrecan i eeue einen cae) ‘Thursday, July 10, will be dack e 5 Hall, Birmingham, Ala. They start Even the humble Boston Red Sox| 2¢ 8:80 8. m. Bobby Jones and Jock fort-on-Main is full of - remarkable sights—Goethe” reads a cancellation stamp which local postal apthorities for five runs in th Hi “ith ionin a and eee He. ene Norwich, Conn.,| Writer's “Dichtung und Wahrheit. lefeating the Pale Hose 9 to 7, for a “head i KE “Nn, " i the sixth time in succession. ey ice ‘ae be Tere Sagas petites thier ounce nea Newark, N. J, June 27—()—Dis-| The New York Giants outdid any- | second [8 Role round on Pridey. The) an expedition exploring Severnaya couraged over his failure to develop |thing the American league could of-| Seid Wil Pe cut down for the final) 7Zemiva, an Arctic island near Franz ja contender, ‘Tris Speaker, one of ter, by piling ap 20 hits to bests SE| gepiypoue shi Joseph Land which has never been | baseball’s greatest figures, has resign- | Louis, 12 to 4. Pittsburgh won two! thoroughly examined. The explor- ‘ed as manager of th games from Philadelphia, 1 to 0, and; ,SETS RIVER SWIM RECORD ine le fy oot ioe club of it to 6. iphia, » | Taking nourishment every hour, tae ey spend next winter on the pane, Mehiy Bersbiod struggle epee pe ees Argentine “syimmcs, a COTTON LEAGUERS RISE e Titanse between Brooklyn and | Pa in the ver from me a ise sent Nine former Cotton States league | Chicago turned into a demonstra-|Goya to Sante Fe, a distance of 188 ene preticog Dat iy bas. players are in the majors this season | tion in honor of Dazzy Vance which | miles, in 67 hours and 10 minutes.|pian sea is now connected with and fans in this class D circuit follow | Put the Robins two full games in the |The feat beats all Argentine distance|Batum on the Black Sea by an oil their performances daily. The loop |lead with a7 to 1 triumph. Brqoklyn |and time records. pipe line which cost the government |Brooklyn Chicago . |New York Feats Yesterday ISt. Louis . to Make Contender of Newark Club eaeb co esestonaty, SSSRS8a8 ler (Cubs), 16. AMERICAN LEAGUE Ratting—Simmons (Athletics), .403. Runs—Ruth (Yankees), 81. Homd runs—Ruth (Yankees), 26, | Stolen bases—Rice (Senators), 12. | fought it out alone in the last mile. which set a sensational pace for near- believe it will create greater interest ly two miles, yielded doggedly to Cor- by starting the race all over again Y ANKS STILL ARE BEHIND ise & favorites, California, Columbia,| victory of the season as St. 1/rence Moller, Notre Dame; Winston | a slugfest 11 to 5 to take a double-|lis’ eight game winning streak were os oF = Washington, Pennsylvania and Wis-|¢vened the series at one all xesterday | Fuller, Southern - California; ‘and | header from the Philadelphia Nation- | halted in yesterday’s games. St, Paul i 150 0 Neibauer and Finlayson; Swenson oe rereeay Perens Dninrie ciedy apaeron | temncs re oer ee ee pen Entrants |and Storlie. Navy, as the climax to the worst | Louisville 030 008 000— 6 10 1 denced in what is usually their own| Polli, WW: and Autry; Moore | Perry, Alabama, the Southern Inter-| ,,Coljins and Davis; French and Saints and won his fifteenth victory fspecial element, was swamped when |9n¢ Grabowski. collegiate champion, 2 and 1, in their} x of the season, 10 to 6. 7 130 100 000— 5 14 2 \ . A 1 o .| Tokyo (AP)—The Dowager Em- ‘After a brief spurt at the outset the | the Brewers aeons g\vietory over Marshall, Forrest, Yale ARE funeral services” for Minneapolis'| ‘The New York Yankees have won Bobby Jones and Jock Hutchi-) 55 Pee iiiee tor ts win: ‘sailors never were contenders. ed oz 010 020— § 13 Ojcaptain. Dunlap beat Sam, Parks, ee roe winning streak. He allowed but|seven out of their last 10 games} son Will Get Away Togeth- - ‘three mile race in smashing style, |1ecki, Stark and Shea. ¢ \. ee was built on strictly Japanese lines ‘ od eit for Charlie Eaton, Harvard, and won| ers gained a 7 to 1 victory to increase| In another good pitchit it {beating the favored Washington crew BLUES ARE FOURTH 4 and 3. 4 their lead over the Cubs to two full| ance, George Beondlis, held Milwau- each won eight out of 10. The Ath- 1s the ‘epctuded widow of Emperor ‘oledo blast letics are a game and ihe ‘lengths in the two mile race that|feating Columbus 6 to 1. ceeaee ena as T H “ity | of the Seasters with the aa ae ‘opened the regatta. Columbus + 000100 000— 1 61 ‘ance ai ‘ry; Root, Teachout, |clinched fourth place by defeating eihie hal? patie hack open golf championship at the Inter-|dealers in foreign manufactured K Ci Columbus, 6 to 1. =~ sd lachen club, Minneapolis, July 10-11-| products using Chinese newspapers yder. St. Louis.—Scoring in every innin ° ° MILLER STREAK BROKEN but the ninth, the Giants easily took Disc dT; A i i hing! Minneapolis.—After winning elght 4 “e was 13 to 11. Philadelphia and Wash- ‘| ‘i ii ici- fleet of six entries with Washington, | .. "ight, Minneapolis lost to Indian- fhe Cerda into camp, 33 10,4, " ourage ris ington were victors by big scores in wil at Ae erie ol chi eee ee oe unit + The order of finish and times: Minneapolis 3 Varsity—Four miles—Cornell, 2: ners meineett 33 2-5; Washington, 22:41; Penn- lvania, 22:54; Wisconsin, 22:59 1-5; nell, 16:89; Washington, 17:01; Col-} (By The Associated Press) __ | Boston sumbia, 17:11; Syracuse, 17:25 4-5;| Hughey Critz and Fred Leach, Gi- | Philadelphia - genome ), 65. Y1:18 1-5; Cornell, 11:25 4-5; Colum- | two, | ciup— Home runs—Wilson (Cubs), Berger ‘bia, 11:29 2-5; Pennsylvania, 11:46! Larry French and Ervin Brame, | Philadelphi #11:52 1-5; California, 11:57 3-5; M. I./bill as Pirates won twice, 1-0 andj Cleveland : 1-5. 11-5. Detroit “Searcely less surprising was the per- .nell’s rush and still had the stuff to]. paut, june 27-—(#)—Wiley Moore tle decision narrowed today! pittsburgh, June 27.—(%)—The Pi-| 8nd result in higher gate receipts. Aas consin, finished in that order. by defeating the league-leading Lou-| George Dunlap, Princeton. advanced to} philadelphia ..... 000000 000— 0 7 0{games by defeating the Colonels, 10 Ahead of Senators; New eke Somme Sal nak Second game: h within 100 yards of the finish and ole quarter-finals match. BEET H Pati Mike Cvengros, the mournful In- Mil 100 100 000— 1 6 3 Hite? ty ing sovereign, has moved into a new Cornell captured the junior varsity |» conn: Pitt’s one man team, 3 and 2. Chicadc NDnasy Vance proved to be | three hits and the Indians won, 10 to | without improving their position, for or At! inberlabhen ‘by five and a half lengths. Syracuse} xansas City.—The Blues moved into games. 950 000 200-- 710 1| Kee to. six hits and New York, June 27.—(?)—Pairings Taisho. She is 46 years old. a Kansas City + Ope too oot 6 12 1 Nelson and Hartnett. Jayvee Champ Also The Yanks won yesterday after a] 12, have been announced by the Unit-|as advertising media, are taxed up- Columbia, Syracuse, Pennsylvania and} apolis 10 to 1 NE aargeaa ah Meee 323 111 316. Frankfort-on-Main (AP)—“Frank- “Syracuse, 21:54 1-5; M. I. T., @mavy, swamped. $Pennsylvania, 17:30; navy 17:30 1-5. |ants—collected eight hits between |Cincinnatt . Batting—Fisher (Cardinals), .431. (Braves), 22. 72-5; Washington, 11:47 3-5; arpstington Rae’ ‘ St. Louis Hee * Senators Make formance of Massachusetts Tech, The . rs 1 {finish a good third. The pre-race jor tho Saints chalked up his fitteenth to Phillips Finlay, Harvard; Law-! rates won a pitchers battle 1 to 0 and|_ Louisville’s march and Minnéapo- 1115 2 isville Colonels 10 to 6. the Harvard capta vanced to| ptigaif geo aon 4 pi Sato yvnrs this sailors ever have exper-|Si. Eaul » {10 000 50¢—10 15 1 [the semi-finals by turning back Sam | Pittsburgh | --. oor dag {te 6. Wiley Moore pitched for the Paired for Meet | -Newneefa ~~ News Briefs | Philadelphia — ‘went down. Moller putted his way to a 2 and 1 ¢, 331081 21411 17 8 lidanapolis southpaw, pitched the (By The Assoicated Press) “| ry lace in the Gondawara district. It Connally and Smith; Cobb, Stre-!" Fuller carried too many big guns Lima ‘uller ci 100 y big guns) the master of the Cubs, and the Dodg- | 2. perform-|Washington and Philadelphia’ have ’ y dee Brooklyn . — ‘Seat Cornell’s freshman boat by two|fourth place in the standings by de: rooklyn 059-000 300 > 7: 30:3 lent aiB’ to: Luvietory. for the 150 eligibles in the national! Shanghai (AP)—All Shanghai aa ixon; Warmouth and | GIANTS WALLOP CARDS k Cornell spread eagled the Jayvee struggle with Cleveland. The count| ed States Golf association. The pair-|on the space contracted for by a mavy finishing in that order. Indianapolis ete ae 4 1 ‘Mitchell iitainee. 319; ‘California 22:24 4-5; Columbia, ; Junior varsity—Three miles—Cor- ® Freshman—Two —miles—Syracuse,|them, drove in four runs and scored | Runs—Cuyler (Cubs), Stolen bases—Ci Navy, | Pirates—held Phils safe in double|New York . Tony Lazzeri, Yankees—hit homer | Chicago with bases filled to aid Yankees beat | Boston . Indians. Dazzy Vance, Robins—struck out| ciu (aaah a ss lound "i six, kept Cubs’ nine hits scattered | Louisville S@ OF DFEAKS |nd beat them, 7-1. St. Paul Al Simmons, Athletics— y double and triple as A’s won over | Indianapolis Detroit Is Thumped 12 to 4; Browns eaally: New York Gains by De- feating Cleveland Washington, June 27.—(#)—The Sen- \itors took advantage of e' © defeat Detroit 12 to 4 troit ... i 00 110 0: 4 ‘ashington 1.700, 12.171 Whitehill, Herring and Hayworth, fRensa; Marberry and Ruel. PENNOCK TAKES LEAD (New York.— The Yankees won a plugging match from the Cleveland ndians 18 to 11, and as a result Herb nnock won his seventh game of the leadership of the Dleveland ew York Tohnson and OS0X BEAT CHISOX Boston.—The Boston. Red Sox ran ir string of victories over the Chi- go White Sox for the season to six raight by winning 9 to 7. chicago . ++ 020 120 002— 7 11 8 Soston vfnd “Tate; Gaston \{ ATHLETES CONTINUE PACE ‘% Philadelphia.—Batting an old team- jam Gray, for 13 hits and 8 : the Athletics easily won from uis, 8 to 3. 001 001 100— 3 10 0 900 004 223— 8 13.1 rell; Rommel, and 3, Pennock, ickey. | Edgar Joe Ellis, hard hitting third Ay) 2aseman. and, pitcher who played his * ‘irst_year of varsity baseball on the | Dklahoma A. and M. nine this past yeason, has been selected to lead the \931 Aggies’ campaign. ; 20 Du RS OLDEST COACHING SCHOOL } More than 200 athletic students hing school, owas established in 1914. and his the oldest of its kind in the CAMDEN WAS BIRTHPLACE Horse races first. were held in the United States at the old Sprindale | course near Camden, 8. C., but not| veteran, has played Mark Twain, the until more than 30 years later was the | author, and Edwin Booth, the actor, | term, Eecumeised applied to the| among other famous persons during , |contestant TH’ MAJOR SAYS HIS hit single, | Kansas Cit Columbus .. | Minneapolis | Milwaukee HE PLAYED THEM ALL Maurice Daly, 81-year-old billiard his 61 years as owner of a recreation center. ‘Fights Last Night | (By The Associated Press) Mason City, Ia—Jimmy Gib- , bons, St. Paul, Minn., outpointed Art Maxwell, Omaha, (8). HE RETIRED AS CHAMPION No contender ever was able wrest from William Muldoon, present Oliver and Loepp of the Senators; Sigman and Davis of the Phillies; ‘Watwood of the White Sox; Dickey of the Yankees, and Durham of the Red to TARIS IS OLYMPIC BET Jean Tdris, 19 years old, who re- New York state boxing commisioner, | cently swam the 880 yards in 9 fifth his Greco-Roman heavyweight wres-| of a second under the world’s record, tling championship he won many) is considered in France as @ very TH" MADOR TELLS fo Visit HERE NEXT MONDAY ~~ AN" , CANS WERE “TOLD “16 PoLiSH uP AN? smaoTH OFF -TH? ROUGH EDGES us RUSTY Us HIS UNK IS A SILK GLOVE TVPE AN" HAS “TAGGED “TH” BASES FoR 72 YEARS !~|' WE WERE “TLD To MEET TH? oO -TIN-TWPE!) “TH” OL’ Bay IS So ~~ WHAT SORT OF A NUMBER IS HE, MRS. Hoople 2 ARISTOCRATIC » HAT HE GETS TH? GOUT we AN’ RIDES IN A WHEEL CHAIR DONE UP IN Louis XIN. STYLE! E's A HooPLe, IM LookiNne FoR A BIG /BOX WITH VeRY LITTLE IN (T, So.IT WILL RATTLE LOUDER ! serious threat in aquatic events for the 1932 Olympics at Los Angeles. FIGHTING GAME FASCINATES HIM ‘Tom O'Rourke, famous boxing pro- moter and manager, has been active- ly engaged in the ring game since he was 28 years old. He now has reached the ripe old age of 74. WALES TURNS DUNGEONS INTO STEAM HEAT PLANT Windsor, England —(#)—The dun- geons in the Prince of Wales’ new home, Fort Belvedere, have been con- verted into boiler rooms for a steam heating system. Fort Belvedere contains 90 rooms, including @ dozen bath rooms done in plain white marble. The Prince had some of the ceilings lowered to preserve the old world atmosphere of the place. CANNED CURFEW RINGS ‘IN GRAY’S CHURCHYARD Stoke! Poges, England.—(AP)—A gramophone record now broadcasts chimes over the churchyard where the poet. Gray heard the curfew toll “the knell of parting day.” Eaters the Syenine Bertie ait elec- tric operat gramophone is+ placed. in the belfry ahd natead of the bells of Stoke Poges church the countryside hears the chimes of York Minster a, Margaret's, Westmin- ster, ai le Later the loud speakers in the bel- fry are disconnected, and the gramo- lays within the church rec- organ music and excellent one the new sca gai the new idea gains support tiniest churches in the land will be able to hear world-famous choirs and organists at their services, ancient yew tree in the Stoke Poges churchyard under which Gtay is said to have sat when he com- posed the first draft of his immortal elegy, still stands opposite tl church door. The old tree has been patched in the middle with cement, Jand its branches are held up with splints and supports of wire. But it is alive, and, the foliage is now green, | claims McNair of the Athletics; West, |™ove Charley Root from the Mou with five runs in the second inning. BACK IN CLASS AA AGAIN AA baseball with Louisville after be- sociation. A SINGING, TROUBADOUR day’s training camp activities. a Wambsganss, of world series triple-play fame in 1920 with the |secutive intercollegiate matches and Cleveland Indians, is back in Class|was without defeat in his college ca- ing sold last winter by Kansas City to New Orleans in the Southern As- | honors. UNIQUE INTERCOLLEGIATE RECORD Julius Seligson, Lehigh university's great tennis player who won 55 con- - |reer, culminated his splendid achieve- ments by winning high scholastic MIDDIES HAVE BIG YEAR ‘The United States Naval academy Jack Sharkey does not come from | athletic te: @ family of musicians, and he's never | of their eet aaa won had a music lesson, but in the two| 125 events, ‘lost 26, and tied three. months prior to his bout with|The Tars won a majority of their Schmeling, the Boston fighter learned ! contests in every sport, and in boxing, to play the guitar and nightly| wrestling, cross country, water polo, strummed the instrument after his|gym, indoor and outdoor rifle were’ not defeated at all. My belief is that a good many golf- ers use clubs that are not properly weighted. More weight—and par- ticularly pith regard to iron clubs— should be in the clubheads. Three reactions are evident in the use of heavy clubheads, and all of them are favorable. In the first place, the player with a rather weighty clubhead starts his stroke with the idea that he must make his backswing slowly in order to retain control of the club. That’s fine. It eliminates much of the pressing that spoils the games of so many, In the second place,’ the extra weight enables one to have the feel- ing that the clubhead is doing the work, And that’s fine, too. The third point is that the weight at the end of the club will retard tie speed of the clubhead as it goes up- ward and will increase’the speed of the clubhead on the downward swing to meet the ball. inate common faults and have added something that cannot but help your game. (Copyright, “1930, NEA Service, Inc.) | TOMORROW: Feet and legs, When these three things come to-/ the |Sether. you have done much to elim- Rather Weighty Heads on Your Iron Clubs React Favorably in Three Different Ways | $25,000,000. It is operated by thir- teen pumping stations. Berlin (AP)—The German Frce- thinkers’ society on its 25th anni- versary claimed more than 52,000 persons joined last year, bringing the roster of the movement to 600,- 000. It was said that\in Berlin alonc 6,000 persons severed connections with the churches. DECRY AIR WARFARE Stuttgart—(#)—Perturbed at the increasing air armaments in Europe, the German Protective Association Against Aerial Warfare drew up @ resolution criticizing passive treat- ment of disarmament by the League of Nations and urging the government to convene an internationel confer- ence to prohibit use of aircraft in fu- ture wars. EXCESS WINE FLOODS ¥ PORTUGUESE INDUSTRY Lisbon (AP)—Portugal—one of the world’s “big three” among wine producing countries, is in danger of drowning in its own juice. ‘After the United States was closed as a practical market, France became the best customer for Portuguese vint- ages, especially those of low alco- holie content. But now France h self has a surplus of wine and a smaller market for it. Also the new French tariff dealt Portugal’ vintners a murderoys blow. The only encouraging part of the situation is the steadiness of Great Britain as a customer. The English still like their port and take about six million litres of it each year. The United States takes only 2,200 litres, all earmarked for medicinal pur poses. . 3 In 1928 portugal sold abroad wine? to the value of $16,852,300. we year exports dwindled to $14,640,5! and prospects for this year are jark. French purchases .dropped from 719,000 hectolitres in 1928 to 125,000 last year. Wine merchants compa these figures mournfully with ‘I? 1,500,000 hectolitres sent vo Franc’ in 1922, ro. Commercial organizations have urged. the government to end thy Franco-Portuguese commercial tre: f and retaliate. They point out OE country buys more goods across ee renees than it sends over th’ mountains. It is reported, therefor’ that the government is planning |” increase the duties on French mot cars, perfumeries and silks. ——__——_—_ in Support for needy persons ov? 0 Michigan State college was the first | Sears of age 1s provided throug! °! age persion laws by Massachis"\" to offer a ‘course in agricultral sta- | California, Nevada. Montana, Wiro” tistics, sin, and New York.

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