The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 6, 1930, Page 6

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» Mandan Defeats Scrapping ~ Dickinson Eleven 12 to 6 Brilliant Passing Attack Brings Midgets Touchdown Near Game’s End (Tribune Special Service) , N. D., Oct. 6.—Outplayed only in receiving kicks, the Dickinson idgets went down to defeat Satur- day afternoon by the score of 12 to 6 to the Mandan Braves. Right from the vick-off the Braves appeared to advantage in the kick- ing game, Russell getting little dis- tance to his punts and the Midgets handling the kickoffs and punts rag- gedly to lose great distance if not the ball. House and A. Fleck were the chief ground gainers but not consist- ent even against the much lighter Dickinson line, After holding the ball most of the period, Mandan had first down on the Dickinson six yard line at the end of the first quarter and Fleck went over in two plays at the start of the second. Boehm failed in a line attempt for the extra point. ‘The rest of the half was even and ended with it Mandan’s ball in the middle of the field. Saddler had broken away several times for end runs of 12 to 15 yards and Russell, too, made some off- tackle smashes but fumbles offset these gains. The game also was even through the third period with Mandan ‘gain- ing considerable yardage on a punt which rolled through three Midgets. From this advantage they plowed steadily down but were being held well when Coach Richards sent in a substitute, who drew a penalty for talking before the play. This put the Braves on the yard line with two downs to make it. Boehm: went through right guard for the touch- .. down the first play. A pass Boehm © to House failed for the extra point. Here Maule, who had started at quarter to be replaced by Mars, was sent in for Russell and the advantage of the Midgets in the passing game then} came to light. Receiving the kick-off Dickinson unloosed their aerial game and marched down the field, Maule to Anderson, Maule to Mars, Maule to Saddler, Maule to. Galloway. Although Mandan got the ball once in the remaining time of that period, their gains were limited to one first down before Anderson caught a beautiful pass from Maule from the 37 yard line and sprinted 20 yards for the touchdown. A pass, Maule to Galloway, was fumbled to lose the extra point. Fumbles in the final period ¢ost Dickinson the chance to score again. ‘The lineups: Dickinson— .+.-Remmillong Traynka Boychenko Berry 0 . Anderson le for S, ka, Herald for Anderson, Mars Anderson for Mawhinney, Maule for Tussell. MORTON DESIRES TO MOVE FAMILY AWAY Commissioners Declare Poor Family Should Be Returned to Oliver County e Morton county commissioners to- day were expected to go before Judge H. L. Berry, in Morton county dis- trict court, Mandan, to request that the Burton Wilcox family, residents of New Salem for almost a year, be sent back to Oliver county. ‘The. planned to make an appeal from a decision made recently by a New Salem jus- tice of the peace that the family be permitted to continue residence in Morton county. ‘The Wilcox family, consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox and their 11 children, September, was ex- sentence today when arraigned before District Judge H. L. Berry in Man- dan. Mrs. Joe Wichnencko Continues to Improve ‘| Youth Are Expected. ; Man Burns to Death When Spending Night In Auto Near Hannover Funeral services for Reuben De- Camp, 25, who burned to death while sleeping in an automobile early Fri- day, where held at Hannover, Oliver county, Sunday. DeCamp, who accompanied some friends to their home, went to sleep in the machine when it was found there was not room enough in the house, In some manner the car caught fire and the ruined machine and DeCamp’s body were discovered in the morning. A coroner’s jury re- jturned a verdict of accidental death. LAYING WATER PIPE UNDER HEART RIVER Will Furnish Mandan City Water to U. S. Experimental Station ‘Workmen today were attempting to install a water pipe under the Heart river in Mandan to supply the U. 8. Northern Great Plains Experimental a during the winter with city water. Twelve men, under the direction of 8. P. Ravnos, superintendent of the city waterworks, were employed in the task. The work is being done now because the river is so low this year. The plan is to dig a deep trench across the river bottom and lay the Pipe, already welded, into the trench. This system was tried before but. the work ended in failure because the river was so high it filled in the trench repeatedly. Last winter water was pumped from the city through a pipe over the river to the federal station. This pipe, however, froze up often and interrupted service. 50 MANDAN STUDENTS IN DRAMATIC TRIALS 17 New Members This Evening Will Be Selected for Jun- ior Playmakers Fifty students in Mandan high school this afternoon will seek mem~ bership in the Sarah Bernhardt chapter of the Junior Playmakers, according to Miss Mabel Frey, direc- tor of the Mandan dramatic organ- ization. Only 17 of the 50 will be elected to membership, the director said. The chapter has a membership quota of 40 and 23 who were mem- :| bers of the organization last year have returned to school this season. Candidates for membership, from 4 P. m. until 8 p. m., will be given try- outs in the high school auditorium. They will give dramatic sketches of their own selection before members of Hg on pada faculty commit- e of four, wl judge the uts and select the new members, he Making up the faculty committee are Miss Frey, Robert J. Adams, Mrs. Florence Bell, and Delia Olson, DUNN EMPHASIZING DRAMATICS, DEBATE Killdeer, Dunn Center, Werner, Halliday and Dodge Draft Program -jentneny Ot D., Oct 6—The an- meet school superin- tendents and principals of Dunn county was held here with the Kill- expected to waive preliminary exam- ination on charges of kidnaping two minor Mandan girls, it was announc- ed this morning by Louis H. Connolly, Morton county state’s attorney. The two youths were arrested in Forsyth, Mont., last Thursday after a nationwide search for them had been in progress four days. They admit they took the girls to Montana the previous week-end but deny that they enticed the girls, who, they say, went of their own free will. Hearings for the two girls before Mrs. Alice Bailey, juvenile commis- as had not been held at noon to- ay. Grannison Tharp Yell Leader at University Grand Forks, Oct. 6—Failure of Joe Grosson, Arctic aviator and friend of Ben Elelson, to appear at the convocation of the University of | Perts North Dakota last Thursday, disap- pointed one of the ‘largest crowds to sppear at the weekly event. A short. talk was given by Joseph Kitchen of the state board of administration, in which he brought the annual mes- sage of the board to the university. A pep rally, presided over by Rich- ard Heaton, Dickinson, followed the othy Tompkins, Fargo, were announc- ed as assistant cheer leaders. Alvin Austin, Grand Forks, student chair- man of Homecoming, also addressed the crowd on the improvised program, and asked student support for the, annual celebration. The 1932 Dacotah, University of North Dakota yearbook, will be form- ally dedicated to Carl Ben Elelson at convocation Thursday. Dedicated to “Spirit of Progress in the Arctic” the book will commemorate Eielson, a graduate of the University and a former editor of the yearbook. The annual will bear out the theme from cover to cover, according to Don Mc- Marthy, Minnewaukan, editor. Kennedy Fined After Tampering With Lock Pleading guilty to a charge of dis- orderly conduct, Jack Kennedy, Man- dan, today paid a $15 fine after a hearing before James E. Campbell, Mandan police magistrate. Kenhedy was arrested during the night by Night Politeman James Buckley, who charged the man was tampering with a lock on the back door of one ‘of Mandan’s business establishments. An unknown transient, who was found sleeping in the street during the night, spent the remainder of the night in jail and this morning was ordered to leave. Mandan. Large Crowds Attend Morton Church Fairs Large crowds attended two church fall fairs in Morton county Sunday, according to John Handtmann, Jr., Morton county deputy sheriff, who attended both. The fairs were conducted by the St. Anthony church and the Cath- olic church at Glen Ullin. Features of the fairs were sales of turkeys, pigs, geese, chickens, and other foods and articles. Investigation as To Cause Started By Air Officials (Continued on from page one) tion there was in contact with the dirigible. Sunday the dirigible asked its position and ascertained it. was }this about half a mile south of Beauvais. ine hima ~~ then sent that, at ent, the passengers, after enjoying an excellent dinner Fe heifl was a woman stenographer aboard at the time of the disaster. The shoe and a typewriter were found late yesterday afternoon by @ soldier of the 51st Infantry which was guarding the scene of the disaster. No Women Listed Police said they believed that, al- bee no woman figured in the cials traveling in the airship > at the last moment, have decided to’ Se~ cure the services of a stenographer for the voyage, The objects will be turned over to .| British experts for examination. ‘The next meeting of the league will be held at Werner, Noy. 3, at which time the Dunn county educators will meet with the superintendents and Principals of Mercer county. Funeral Services for Mrs. M. Stoltz Held Funeral services were conducted this morning from the St. Joseph’s Catholic church, Mandan, for Mrs. Magdalena Stoltz, 79, regident ' of in | Mandan since 1908 who died Saturday ou i iene 8 a Mandan fate etery, ‘3 ‘Mrs. Stoltz lea it children, 30 grandehildren, ahd ll'great-grend. Relatives acted as pall- children. bearers at the last To Waiye Examination ep saeee rene Ree tigating the disaster arrived tits fore- | hydrogen. whatever led-to the crash. | out France for victims of the R-101 noon and began their inquiry. Their | Such a.crash to a helium-filled ship] disaster. ‘Tardieu first act was to examine the airship's | might not have been fatal to rudder, and, system of trans- | soul.” i } mission from the position of the se steering apparatus. °°" MOFFETT WOULD SEND Gendarmes continued to scrutinize | HELIUM TO EUROPE the debris of all sorts which’ sttewed the scene and one discoveredsa big watch whose hour was marked at 10 minutes past two,'a possible indica-_ tion of the exact time of the disaster. A warship was on its way ‘today to bear home to @ sorrowing England py; the bodies of the victims. Despite searching examinations it was announced this evening that not a single body as yet had been iden- tified. Holt said the “British air ministry may have made a mistake in the! good count of ‘the persotis ‘aboard. He de- clined to make any further staternent concerning the catastrophe but added: that after a general meeting of ex- had been held a statement might be isstied late tonight. + Engineer Tells of Disaster. 8. Chureh,’an engineer on the ill- fated British dirigible R-101, was able to talk today despite his ‘bprns and indicated that the airship (was. afire before it nosed into the grdund near here early yesterday morning. “Tt was only at the last minute,” he said, “that we finally saw the al was doomed. I’ was on the‘ forward and observed then that ship, forced adrift by the 1 almost turned end for end, Wis ing toward the earth. “J suddenly perceived that she was afire, and a violent explosion followed at once threw me to the ground.” , « Says Framework to Blame Ait-Commander Holt was stated by the newspaper e to have advised the British eee FRENCH TO OBSERVE DAY: OF MOURNING Paris, Oct: cabinet ~decided .today> that row, Tuesday, should a day of national mourning ‘hrough- ture of ‘the metallic and not a derangement of, the finding of metal dirigible five miles from she crashed, MANY THEORIES FOR ; ACCIDENT ADVANCED i London, Aes Sule as to the cause of the R- As hranged today all the way from struetural defects to inability to maneuvér in 2 storm. i As related here the dirigible -which this year was with addition of an extra bay in center, eaded «into the French interior without incident but after six or seven hours out ‘of:Card- | ° ington began to respond to}: control and to wobble in the storm. The rain poured in torrents and. the: Girigible | 4 gathering on ic added weight ‘to it," dropping of ping of ballast. Beauvais saw it pass at about 400 feet altitude and in at least In ENGLAND 250 years Sgo was published The Daily Courant, 2 newspaper. no larger than 9 page t, meagre pq it was, it supplied 3 | ‘ Seah. Breat need. h : | , bumped slightly against the ground, and then, failing to:rise. abot the encircling rim of the valley, crashed into a hillside. The explosion, all accounts agree, followed imme- diately and fire soon consumed the shij F . May Have Caused Spavk oped sn, eects gonnection. and Saeed a dpark whieh igaited. the highly inflammable hydroget gas, or that friction of some of Through its 80,000 sepresentatives scattered theoughout the world " The Asuortated Frese ~ ‘wires daily for publication ia The Bismaxck Tribune es | 1 year (in North Dakota) .....95.00; by oarrir in Bismarck .j7.97207. Gmonths (in North Dakota) ... 2.60; by carrier in Bismarck, 6moe... 360.7 8 months (in North Dakota) ... 1.25; by carrier in Bismarck, $ mos... 1.80 ~~ vw : NAME 2... 5 ocewrsotteomienteie ojerreie ocmeee € Postoffice Address Pee oes State... mmeenie. \ 22: JPMRASW WRITE PLAINLY TO AYORD MISTAKES bi Meat ge ‘ Z =F gq

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