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odnmet ree eae eRe MMM EA Aue THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1931 NO FARMERS UNION from everything but the slimmest kind of a mathematical chance to take third place in the League's American division Tuesday night while the Yanks to Honor America Wednesday announced ar- | @——®——————___. rangements for the fourth annual!| Naismith Referees Mil en innesota pocket billiard tournament | Test Cage Contest ‘@| Prince George have different ideas|‘ “o | Iron Lung’ May ral. tee Sueeet | day night. Murnau Tues . Leal der his car when fg was pinned un pat ed over an avoid ‘striking a truck and overturn- B . Boston Bruins clinched the top of Mill Huggin to be held at the Minneapolis recrea- LOANS OFF ERED FOR NN valer Thu Sion parlor beginning March 23. lavraie, Re MRK I Th ie nee eee oe ed. Ree: enbetroll, alter & ties Sith, tneie|Will Dedicate New Playing Field], The Minnesota state pocket tour] (#}—Dr, James A. Nalemith, 70- ae ae the name | Accepts Construction rivals, the New York Rangers, lost in Friday to Former Chief- hament was inaligurated in 1938 with aie ‘into officiating oy ie Capital Punishm Punishment sometimes applied to an artificial Bid for Boulder Dam BREEDING OF STOCK Move Is Made by Livestock Commission to Discourage Over-Production Seeking to prevent further increases in the number of dairy cattle and sheep, supplies of which have been excessive, the Farmers Union Live- stock Commission will not make loans on cows for the production of calves or or breeding ewes to raise lambs. Arrangements are being made by the Farmers Union Livestock corpor- ation to set up a credit corporation to make advances to livestock pro-| ducers, C. D. Egley, manager, reports. It will require two months or more before final arrangements for loans on livestock are available. The credit corporation is being set up as a re- sult of the affiliation of the Farmers’ Union Livestock Commission with the National Livestock Marketing asso- ciation, the farmer-owned national co-operative marketing association recognized by the Federal Farm board. “Sor> funds, however, have been made available by the feeder and fi- nance department of the National Livestock Marketing association,” Mr. Egley said, for livestock loans. These Joans at present will be made only on cattle and sheep. No loans will be made on cows for raising calves or on breecling ewes for lambing pur- poses. “The over-production of these classes of livestock alreadg has re- sulted in burdensome supplies and the National Livestock Marketing as- sociation does not wish to take any action to stimulate the production of greater surpluses. Short term feed- lot loans are desired vather than other kinds, Loans for grazing pur- poses when the credit corporation is functioning will be usually about 70 per cent of market value. Chattel mortgages must be made and if there is any existing indebtedness against livestock, farmers must clear that off before the loans will be available to them. There will be an inspection fee in making loans which we hope to hold to abou‘ $5. ° “As regards surpluses of livestock, there have been greater increases in dairy than in beef cattle and the number of sheep is 43 per cent larger than 10 years ago, with holdings probably tie heaviest in history.” Te {Additional Sports | Oe Solons Continue Probe of Big Ten Heads Wednesday Stagg and Griffith Score lowa University for Athletic Stu- dent Loan Funds Chicago, March 11.—(?)—Adminis- trative affairs of the University of Iowa were up for further investiga- tion Wednesday. ‘The legislative committee conduct- ing the inquiry planned to cross ex- amine Major John L. Griffith, west- ern conference athletic eommissioner, regarding the reasons for the Bigj 'Ten’s severance of athletic relations with the Hawkeyes nearly two years ago. Griffith and Amos Alonzo Stagg, director of athletics at the University of Chicago, after six hours of testi- mony Tuesday, were agreed the oper- ation of an alumni loan fund, exist- ence of a merchants’ work fund, and failure of the registrar to sign eligi- bility lists, were the principal reasons for the disciplinary action, These funds were operated, Stagg and Grif- fith contended, with the knowledge of university authorities. Also there was a fear the athletic situation at Iowa was passing into the hands of the alumni. The so-called “belting fund,” de- posited in the First National bank of Iowa City, so athletes could obtain loans, was criticized by Stagg and Griffith. Harman to Coach an overtime session, 3 to 2. The de- annual tourneys being held since that Tuesday night to referee an ex- tion machine, apparently feat left them seven points behind tain of Club time. The winner is recognized as| hibition game designed to test ill Error Is has ecored again. ington, March 11—(#)—Secree with four games to go. Boston. while the state champion and automatical- migiented chinies in the ps4 Bill Error Is Found Charles Caughey, seven, was ay ane ‘Wednesday accepted the held to 3-3 tie by the Toronto Maple Leafs, gained a margin of °3 points over the second place Chicago Black- hawks, who dropped a 2-1 decision to Les Canadiens of Montreal. Canadian division leaders. The Hawks have five games left. The Rangers, appar- ently knocking at second place have two to go. The fourth game on Tuesday night's schedule turned out to be a third overtime clash as Ottawa won the “cellar” championship, scoring two goals in the extra period to beat the other tail ender, Philadelphia, 5 to 3. Henry Cage Five Is Still in Running As Meet Advances 16 Teams Advance to Quarter- Finals of A. A. U. Basket- ball Tourney Kansas City, March 11.—()—Six- teen basketball teams remained Wed- | nesday as third-round contests got under way in the National A. A. U. court tournament. Middlewestern and southwestern college quintets appeared to be hold- ing their own against independent clubs as the tourney neared the half- way mark, with seven of them down for Wednesday's tilts. The East Central Teachers, Ada, Okla., third place winners last year; Bethany col- lege, Lindsborg, Kas.; and the North- west Teachers, Maryville, Mo., are among the college fives which have displayed brands of basketball pre- saging trouble ahead for the non- collegiate favorites. The entire field of pre-tourney favorites again emerged triumphant in Tuesday's games, but the Henry's of Wichita, Kas., defending cham- pions, encountered some difficulty in disposing of the Brown Paper mill five, Monroe, La, The score was 31 to 23. The Los Angeles Athletic club had little trouble in eliminating Nebraska Wesleyan, Lincoln, 41 to 13. t Wednesday the champions were to meet De Paul university, Chicago, while the Los Angeles A. C. was to tangle with the Southside Turners} of Indianapolis. To Hold Auction Bridge Tourney Contestants to Play in Fargo| March 25-27; Winners to Get Trophies Fargo, N. D., March 11—(#)—The| fourth annual tournament of the; North Dakota Auction Bridge asso- ciation will be held in Fargo March 25 to 27, Howard Strack, Fargo. tournament manager, announced Tuesday. The date was set by Harry Lord, Cando, president of the association. Trophies donated by the Fargo Forum, Bismarck Tribune, Minot Daily News, and A. O. U. W. grand lodge will be awarded. Players may enter trophy matches or play in the open progressive games daily in connection with the tourna- ment play. Operate on ‘Tut’ For Appendicitis Will Cancel All Bouts During Month; To Resume Active Work in April Rochester, Minn., March 11.—(Pi— Henry Tuttle of Minneapolis, known in the ring as King Tut, underwent an operation for appendicitis at the Mayo clinic Tuesday. According to Dr. J. Pemberton, op- erating surgeon, Tut might have suf- St. Petersburg, Fla., March 11—(?) —The New York Yankees will take time out from their spring training on Friday to dedicate their playing field in memory of the late Miller Huggins. The memorial is a 1500 pound granite block on which will be placed a bronze tablet extolling Huggins as a man as well as for his services to baseball. Baseball Commissioner Kenesaw M. Landis, Presidents John A. Heydler and Ernest S. Barnard of the Nation- al and American leagues and other baseball luminaries will attend. Minnesota Billiard | Tourney Dates Set Minneapolis, March 11.—(>)—The | National Billiard association Fresu Ci Lansing,» Mich. March 11—(@7)— Capital punishment again was the center of controversy Wednesday as Governor Brucker prepared to sign @ new measure to replace the one he approved March 4. A defect in the original death Penalty bill was discovered accident- ally Tuesday. It was learned that: the enrolled act presented to the leg- islature was not identical with the phraseology adopted by the legisla- ture. The error invalidated the bill, which already has been sent out on sample ballots for submission in the April 6 election. The legislature, in @ last minute conference, had agreed to provide that sheriffs escort con- victed prisoners to Jackson and the death chair. By mistake, a house ly qualifies for entry in the northern | sectional tournament. Golf King Likes to Have Movie Retakes Hollywood, Cal, March 11.—(%}— Usually actors abhor retakes, but not Robert Tyre Jones, Jr. The holder of all major golf cham- Pionships halted in the midst of a tetake in his second day of active work before the camera with this smiling comment: Retakes sure, they're the best part of it. “Many is the time I would have | given a lot for the opportunity to try a shot all over, again. What golfer me. The University of Kansas var- “sity squad and a freshman quin- tet demonstrated the changes, which included the use of goals 12 feet from the floor, two feet higher than regulations specify. This was said by its proponents to equalize the scoring chances of tall and short players. The pivot men jumped in the center of a 10-foot circle from which all oth- er players were excluded. After the game, which the frosh won, 32 to 31, Dr. Neismith and F. G. Alle, K. U. court coach, who also refereed, said they did not favor the change, but believed the ideas worthy of further study. TWO PRINCES DIFFER of | do for you.” wouldn't? That's what the retakes Mar Del Plata, Argentine, March 11.—(#)—The Prince of Wales and amendment providing that the state Police deliver the prisoners was left in the act which the governor signed. taken to a hospital in Evanston last Friday suffering from throat and lung paralysis and placed in the boxlike machine. Diphtheria caused the paralysis. He was unable to talk from the time he was admitted until Tues- day; when he spoke two words. They were “ice cream.” He got it. If the doctors are successful it will be the second victory in the Chicago area. “The other was that of Frances McGann, a stu- dent nurse whose breathing was restored after an attack of infan- tile paralysis. MOVIE DIRECTOR HURT Santa Barbara, Calif, March 11.— (#)—F. W. Murnau, motion picture director was injured severely in an Smoke a Ci isipe condition have a moisture content of aboutl0%. It will be seen by the Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory Chart that cigarettes in the ordinary wrapped package lose more than half of their total moisture in thirty days and that only the Camel Humi- dor Pack delivers cigarettes to you in prime condition THIRT OSS-PER CENT 3 | iSTURE HE whole country is talking about the throat-easy mild- ness and the prime freshness of Camel Cigarettes in the new Humidor Pack. |... Chart Showing Moisture Loss of C Y DAY: TEST represents ave y packa igarettes Unwrapped Package $48,890,995 bid of the six companies, incorporated, San Francisco, for building the Hoover Dam, power house and appurtenant works at the Boulder Canyon project. ‘ Recognition of the company’s of- fer as the low bid was tantamount to awarding the contract and cleared the way for starting construction. Estimated cost of the dam, power system and appurtenances, such as the intake towers, spillways and di- j version tunnels, totals $109,000,000, but approximately half of this will be supplied by the government in ma- terials. REV. DR. HERVEY DIES Baldwin, N. ¥., March 11.—(?)—The Rev. Dr. Alpheus Baker Hervey, live~ Jong counsellor of Owen D. Young ‘and former college president, died automobile accident north of Santa | Tuesday night. He was 92. garette. d Glassine Wrapped Package Ordi nary Cellophane Wrapped Package Camel Humidor Pack Moisture-Proof Cellophane are blended.. tds lob tified R choice Turkish and Domestic tobaccos of which Camels Make these tests yourself © It is e0.easy to tell the difference between parched dry ciga- rettes and fresh prime Camels that it is no wonder everybody is reaching for a fresh cigarette today. . fered a ruptured appendix within a short time had the operation been put off. As a result of the operation, Leo Leavitt, one of Tut's managers, an-| nounced all bouts for which the| fighter had signed, will be canceled The above chart prepared by the Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory tells you why. Please examine it carefully. It is an unfailing guide to cigarette selection and enjoyment. Penn Grid Teams Will Work Under Newly Devel- oped Faculty-Coach Idea of Pennsylvania School Philadelphia, March 11.—(4)—Har+ vey J. Harman, director of athletics at the University of the South, Se- wanee, Tenn., is ‘the University of) Pennsylvania's new football coach. as Tut will not resume active work for more than a month. Among the scheduled bouts was one with Jackie Fields in Detroit, March 12, and a fight with Young Corbett | in Chicago, March 30. Others to be canceled include scheduled appear- ances in Milwaukee and St. Paul, Earlier in the day Ernie Fliegel, As you can quickly see by the three upper curves on this, interesting chart, cigarettes that lack the protection of the Humidor Pack lose their moisture rapidly from the day they are manufactured. And day by day as this moisture disappears, the smoke . While a Camel is fi lexible and pliant. Your fingers identify stale, dried-out tobaccos at once. Your ears can tell the difference too. For a dust-dry cigarette. crackles under pressure. But the real test is taste and there is simply no comparison An announcement by Dr. Leroy|Minneapolis, Tut’s other manager, i : ii moras euncement phys Agen eee ae AL eia es ane these i pre ttes becomes harsher, hotter, more unkind between the rich mildness of a Camel and the hot, brackish tion, that Harman had been chosen |sion to lift its ban on the “King.” Dr. smoker’ . emoke stal dry igarette. head coach and named a member of| Andrew Sivertson, chairman ee the e a ereet os ‘ig § the faculty in accordance with Penn’s| commission, said it would not act un- Not so with Camels! Switch to Camels just for today then leave them tomorrow revised athletic policy was published ‘Wednesday. Harman, 30 years old, learned his football at the Univerity of Pitts- burgh 10 years ago under the tutor- ship of Glenn Warner. He coached at Haverford college for eight years and went to the University of the South last year. His contract there hhad two more years to run, but he was released at Pennsylvania’s re- quest. The faculty-coach idea is a part of! an athletic plan announced several months ago by President Thomas 8S. Gates, after dismissal of Coach Lud ‘Wray. Under the new program foot- ball will omit spring and summer practice. Harman is to receive a salary in line with those paid to professors— anywhere from $5,000 to $10,000. He til the outcome of the investigation of the New York athletic commission into the Tut-Billy Petrolle fight held recently in New York. Decide First Round Winners in Tourney Donnybrook, N. D., March 11.—(?) —In a district tournament of the State High School Basketball league, first-round winners were decided here Monday night, while two sec- ond-round games also were played. In the first round, Kenmare de- feated Foxholm 36 to 26; Mohall downed Carpio 39 to 29, Lansford de- feated White Ash 44 to 10 and Don- nybrook beat Portal 51 to 23. Flax- ton, Sherwood, Bowbells and Burling- ton all drew byes. The Humidor Pack is moisture proof and sealed air-tight Hi 9pe fae at every point. It protects the rich, flavorful aroma of the Artificial heat in houses and 8. L. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N. C. CAMELS will work full-time basis fitle probably will be that of profes-| actatng "goons round pley, Kenmare @partments soon dries the mois- sor of football. Sherwood took the count 34 to 22 be- ture out of cigarettes wrapped a : fore the Mohall Cagers. s the old. It is the Eliminate Falcons : pie planed war : From Hockey Race pace OO tee ) oun iy meceeaf the Menider Pech ee et iat ia Sy cash pac toes Winter Haven, Fis., March 11—(P) Camels by the carton “hockey’s . stretch as reduced| —A report ‘Terry, Pa in freak awe ; fo tie, Naaons! Homey Gis? otitis ba cnn, would : ee office. eagu from eight tesms to. seven,| lies, was denied Wedsesday by Burt i : ‘ os Falcons. were Quaker manager. @ 1982, B. 3. Reyncids Tobacco Conpeny, Winston-Salem, i. Ca A v ‘ Tone tie s s) : ’ me SSCA TEED Sa an : ss at ements apr nsacencie ome a — en