The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 9, 1931, Page 1

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North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘The Weather For Bismarck and Vicinity: Part!: cloudy tonight and Saturday; slightly warmer tonight. BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1931 Athletics Capture Sixth Game PRICE FIVE CENTS Physician Says Edison’s Death Is Near 1,500 Attend Grand Opening GREAT VITALITY OF ” FAMOUS INVENTOR - KEEPING HM ALIVE Bulletin Says He Has Lost Con- siderable Strength, Dozes All the Time VISITING DOCTOR AGREES! Tella Family America’s Great Genius is Gradually Los- ing Ground ‘West Orange, N. J., Oct. 8-P}— ‘Thomas Edison, displaying surprising | vitality, clung to life Friday, although | his own physician and a consultant | said the end was near. A bulletin on the condition of the 84-year-old inventor, issued by Dr. Hubert 8. Howe, read: “Mr. Edison | has undoubtedly lost considerable strength and is in a doze all the time.” Dr. William R. Williams of Cornell medical college arrived with Dr. Howe last night to see Edison. Dr. Williams told the family Edison was gradually losing ground. The entire Edison family was at ‘West Orange Friday. Telephone and telegraph messages arrived throughout the day. Some of the phone callers were President Hoover, Cardinal Hayes and Henry Ford. FLORIDA MAN TELS FEDERAL JURORS OF CAPONE STATEMENT Asserts Gang Chief Said He Had Several Businesses, Mostly Gambling H Federal Building, Chicago, Oct. 9—{ (®)—A former Miami prosecutor who | participated in the attempt to drive Al Capone out of Florida, Friday quot- ed the gang leader as saying his busi- | ness was cleaning and pressing, real Tere and gambling—mostly gamb- ; . | ‘Vernon Hawthorne, state's attorney | of the 11th Florida district in 1928, the first witness of the day in Ca- pone’s income tax trial, related an in- terview between Capone and Miami; officials in the summer of that year. The: authorities, he said, objected to! Capone's presence there and wanted’ to know “what he proposed to do in “T’m just here for a rest,” he quoted | the scarfaced gangster as saying. Capone at first refused to say what his business was, Hawthorne testified, but later announced, “All right, I'll tell yqu.” The former prosecutor was the first | of the many witnesses the government has subpoenaed in Florida in their effort to show Capone had large sums of money, although he paid no in- come tax. f Admission by Capone through an attorney that he was liable on a four- year income of $266,000 was brought; to light by the government Thursday. | Documentary. evidence, intended to; show Capone once confessed this lia- bility, was put into the records of Capone's trial, over the objection of defense counsel. It included a typed two-page letter, | the contents of which, however, re-/ mained a secret to the jurors at the/ end of the third day's session of the trial. i But the world in general knew that} the letter was signed “Lawrence P.; Mattingly,” that it was addressed to the Internal Revenue Bureau, and that it contained the alleged admis- | sion by Capone that he was not only sable ub willing to pay tax on the 166,000. The jury heard a witness identify the letter and heard the court rule that it was admissable. But Judge James H. Wilkerson, at the close of the session, asked the prosecution to withhold the reading of the docu- ment. Boom Mrs. Morrow For Husband’s Post = Ridgewood, N. J., Oct. 9—(#)—The “Mrs. Morrow for United States Sen- ator” cry, raised by members of the ‘Women's Republican Club of Ridge- ‘wood, momentum Fgiday as persons prominent in New Jersey poli- tics approved the . ‘The club asked Governor Larson to appoint Dwight W. Morrow’s widow to his unexpired term. If appointed, Mrs. Morrow would be! the second woman to receive such’ honors. | LINDBERGHS ARRIVE | AT JAPANESE CITY Nagasaki, Japan, Oct. 9—(#)—Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh arrived here Friday from Shanghai and took! an afternoon train for Yokohama. ! ae will sail Saturday for the United ates. The Lindberghs abandoned their aerial tour of the Far East upon re- ceiving word of the death of Mrs. Lindbergh’s father, Senator Dwight ‘W. Morrow of New Jersey. jexpected to report mon-concurrence ‘unsatisfactory working conditions, | Actress in Real Romance Lena Malena, the German actress who captivated Hollywood with her scin-| tillant eyes, has become the bride of Wilmer Anderson, a banker. H | announced their wedding and declared they'd go to Lake Tahoe, Calif. for) 'g honeymoon and then would live in Beverly Hills. Her marriage license said her real name was Eleanore Ereth and that she was 22. | expects to press his views that disarm- ament and a naval holiday cannot be logically separated from the question of war debts and the world financial condition. There has been no indication, how- ever, that the administration would enter into a complete revision of war | Of Carnival, Minstrel Show w= = 2:1 +? | Philadelphia (AL) AB R i E | tual, instre OUD hee ab apse rose | Haas, of s.ssssssee 2 0 0 5 0 0 a | Cochrane, o . 160601 WAR DEBTS LINKED Black Face Program in City CONGRESS 0 STUDY | Simmons, Me siecle € 11 2 0 ‘ Auditorium One of Exposi- a, rt siiiecel pre | Dykes, 3b 31010 WITH MORATORIUM | = SersFes | BANKLAWSINMOVE joins S23 383 Grove, p ... 400000 TO CLOSE SATURDAY NIGHT Totals .........38 8 827 7 1 10 HELP BUSINESS St, Louis (NL) AB RH PO AE — Flowers, 3b . .411021 Minstrel Show Tonight Will Not! Hie i ue ta OG President Intends to Consider) Begin Until 10:15 Because q Martin, cf See 1s Two Subjects T a eae Use Hoover Outline to Plan/Hafey, if . 1401101 ogeth MAF ash toh) | Against Credit Strains of | Bottomley, Ib ...... 4 0 O11 0 0 If at All j Wilson, c . +300600 Approximately 1,500 persons packed | fees Getbert ss Sena ® Washington, (eos enti the World War Memorial building and | Derringer, p too 00rd Hen ted by the Unived States onty|*he city auditorium Thursday night| Washington, Oct. 9.—(P}—Micro- | IMME? or ceeiee er eres if European nations in -turn effect |for the grand opening of the Amer- scopic study by congress of the whole’ Rhem, » oleae A drastic curtailments of armament, licen Legion's three-night carnival|<vstem of national banking laws on 2 Blades .. 100008 President Hoover intends the twolana minstrel show. the basis of the last two year’s busi- zz Collins | 1100000 subjects shall remain indubitably abs ness events is certain. | agree, bap linked. In his approaching confer-| Featuring the “festival of fun and! The emergency economic 1’ ores ..---- ences with Premier Laval of France he SS eaenane Te | noise” was the minstrel show in the advanced at this week’s bi-partisan | agreed to the general program ad-} On the midway were the customary vanced by President Hoover, it was! side show features and games and the! city auditorium, include ‘white house conference will be the! choral Scent earatl| Incipal laboratory lesson trom|""Soore by tanitest paleng ¥ and! which congress will build to guard! philadelphia ++ 000 040 400—8 white face groups, vocal solos, and & against future credit strains. |St. Louis ‘000 001 000— dancing feature. While congressional conferees; Runs batted jams 3, cate RTE: Se STE i Box Score of Game z—Batted for Johnson in 6th. rane, Frisch, Simmons; two base hit Williams, Flowers; ine sacrifices, Derrin- debts. carnival was wound up with a bowery; Hoover recalled only Tuesday night at his conference with congressional i differences of opinion over details. apparent Friday there would be sharp | ger, Miller, Haas; double plays, Bish- {op to Williams to Foxx, Frisch to Gel- ‘The main controversy is expected to! bert to Bo + left on bases, center on the extent to which con-| utisbinay ene tat, They Indian Woman Is Killed leaders that in proposing the inter- governmental debt moratorium he had opposed cancellation of war debts. ‘The apprehension of French public opinion that President Hoover would Propose to the premier further sus- pensions of German reparations pay- ments was reflected in Paris news- Papers. , From the head of one of France's greatest banks came the assertion that Prolongation of the moratorium be- yond next June would involve a loss for France of 2,500,000,000 francs ($1,- 000,000,000) annually and would mean the government would have to raise budget. als to extend the moratorium. In Automobile Accident jana. TAPANESR EXPECT LABOR 10 FAVOR BEER PLANK Proposal for Outright Repeal of; 18th Amendment Will be Sidetracked ] Vancouver, B..C., .Qct. 9.—()--Or- ganized labor's demand for 2.75 per. cent beer crystallized Friday at the American Federation of Labor con- vention and committeemen indicated resolutions for outright repeal of the 18th amendment probably would be sidetracked. Matthew Woll, chairman of a la- bor committee working for congres- sional sentiment to change the Vol- stead Act, explained 2.75 per cent, beer would be of the same strength as the Canadian draft brew sold here,! and not the “dishwater” some del- egates had thought. . “By 275 per cent beer I’ mean about 3.10 per cent by volume,” he “Just' like the ordinary Can- adian beverage. I am not referring to bottled beer or the stronger ales.” President William Green, who also favors legalization of 2.75 per cent beer; W. J. McDonough, head of the! Building Trades Union, and other leaders indicated most discussion of resolutions dealing with alcohol| would take place behind closed doors, However, leaders of the “wet wing” girded for a possible battle on the; convention floor. ’ ‘The committee is expe-ied by both wet and dry leaders to report favor- ably on that section of the execu- tive council’s report favoring 2.75 per cent beer. The committee also is on resolutions advocating repeal of the 18th amendment and repeal of Volstead Act. The committee on resolutions awaited a report on the Hoover dam contract of the Six Companies, Inc., which was attacked bitterly at hear- ings. Delegates characterized the project as a “$70,000,000 outrage” and re- ferred to “inhuman working condi- 25,000 on Strike In Massachusetts oh ae setts Friday as workers, incensed by announced reductions in wages or by walked the streets on strike. The strike movement, hav- ing its center in the textile city of; Lawrence where tely 22,000: men and women left their looms and benches rather than accept a 10 per: cent reduction of wages, Friday had: spread to other centers. i ORDERS BRAZIL MORATORIUM Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, Oct. 9—(>)}— A 60-day moratorium on all foreign; commercial and private payments in effect Friday by Brazil was put in President Vargas. |D., of injuries resulting from an auto-; ‘brothers and three sisters. Say Agent at Belcourt Forced; Car Into Ditch Trying to Stop Speeders | Rolla, N. D., Oct. .9—()—Mrs. Jen-: nie Walton, 68, Bantry, N. D., died! Thursday night at the Mountain In- dian Agency hospital at Belcourt, N./ mobile accident near Belcourt Mon- day. The accident occurred, officials! were informed, when James H. Hyde, | superintendent of the agency passed and was attempting to stop the car in! which Mrs. Walton was riding, for al-! AFFAIRS TAKE ON SERIOUS ASPECT League of Nations to Meet Again On Matter; Nippon Issues Warning (By The Associated Press) New and serious developments loomed in the Chino-Japanese situa- tion Friday. / leged speeding through the Belcourt school zone. W. L. Walton, 71, of Bantry, brother-in-law of the woman, | was driving the car. Henry Longtia /®nd the celestial republic was said to} | and Ernest Boardin of Bathgate were | Passengers. None of the men were| seriously injured. | Walton said his machine tipped; over when he attempted to avert hit- ting Hyde's car after Hyde had driven in front of him and signaled him to stop. Mrs. Walton was found uncon-: scious several feet away from the| ‘wrecked machine. An examination at! the hospital revealed two ribs were broken and one had punctured a lung. No announcement was made re-'} garding an inquest into the case, but! it was believed such action will be taken. BOY IS KILLED AS AUTO STRIKES CART Moorhead, Mnn., Oct. 9.—(P)— Death came instantly to Lyle Wilkin- son, 11-year-old Moorhead boy Thurs- | day night when a coupe driven by a| Minneapolis woman crashed the rear} end of a potato cart on which the boy} was perched. | The impact sent the child's body | plunging through the windshield of | the car. It is believed he had been/ seated on the rear of the horse-drawn vehicle, his legs dangling over the edge. The boy driving the potato- laden cart was Edward Thompson, 14, son of Dan H. Thompson, Moorhead. He was not injured. Driver of the car, Mrs. C. A. Severt-| son, Minneapolis, was not seriously | hurt. She told Clay county officials! she was blinded by the lights of an| approaching car and was unable to see the unlighted cart ahead. North Dakotan Is Killed in Accident! Fargo, N. D., Oct. 9.—(P)—Clarence | Richard Lockhart, 34, native of Grand; Forks and Fargo, was killed in an au- tomobile accident at Los Angeles last) Friday night, his sister, Mrs. Ralph Gunkelman, Fargo, was informed. | Lockhart was a son of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Lockhart who reside at Grandin. He leaves his widow and parents, four Callf., | Burial was in Glendale, Thuraday. piliaise alco CLARA PLANS COMEBACK Hollywood, Oct. 9.—(7)—A film ac- tress who went into temporary retife- ment @ few months ago as a platinum blonde is coming back-—this time as a redhecd. It’s Clara Bow. i growing hostility with a Japanese planes dropped bombs on the Chinese city of Chinchow Thurs- day, killing from two to 20 persons, be in a fever heat of indignation as @ result. The League of Nations council was called for an urgent meeting next | Tuesday to review the situation, ac- \tion having been taken by the council i president at the request of the Chin- ese. Alexandry Lebroux, council president, appealed to the two na- tions to do nothing further which might aggravate the situation. President Hoover discussed the far-eastern situation with his cabinet in some detail but no announcement was made following the conference. Meanwhile, Japan met China's sternly worded note of warning. Issues Warning Note Mamuor Shigemitsu, Japanese minister to China, left here on a de- stroyer with a note warning the Chi- nese government to “take prompt and effective measures” to halt the wave of hostility or take the consequences. Simultaneously Japan moved strong bam reinforcements toward Shang- hai Shigemitsu said violent demonstra- tions against Japanese at Chengtu, capital of Szechwan province, and Yunnanfu, capital of Yunnan, had compelled him to order his consuls there to withdraw. Japanese resi- dents previously had evacuated. At Changtu the demonstration was especially bitter. Crowds surrounded the Japanese consulate, the minister said, shouting threats and insults and covering the walls with posters revil- ing Japan. ‘The note which Shigemitsu carried to Nanking said the anti-Japanese agitation “seems to be assuming ns” and declares alarming the “Chinese government will be held responsible for whatever may be the/ consequences of its failure to sup- press the anti-Japanese movement and afford adequate jon to the lives and property of Japanese sub- jects in China.” It further asserted that the anti- Japan agitation “is conducted as an instrument of national policy under the direction ‘of the Nationalist party.” Shigemitsu intends to interview the highest Chinese government of- ficials, including Chiang Kaishek, |president, and impress upon them the gravity with which Japan views the Yangtze valley situation and Tokyo's determination to take any measures necessary to protect its na- jtlonals. an equal sum in order to balance the Generally among congress members |eorn game, judgment is being reserved on propos- dance in the memorial building’s huge | auditorium. | Minstrel Show at 10:15 The minstrel show tonight will not! begin until 10:15 o'clock, it was an-! nounced Friday morning by Charles F. Martin, general manager of the! exposition. This decision was reached So that football fans who see the Bis- marck-Minot game tonight also may ‘see the minstrel show. The dance will begin at 9 o'clock. Among the many features on the! carnival midway were many games of; skill, ping pong tables, pink lemon-' ade, pop corn, candy, and cigar/ stands, blanket and doll stands, the! the feature “grocery| store,” cane stands, and the Auxil-| iary’s hot lunch stand, which special- ea ee serving “Coney Island Double Re ” In the basement gymiasiugr of | ante Hommes Et Huit Chevaux held) forth. i Finale Saturday Night The show will have its grand finale’ Saturday night. Curtis Dirlam and Arthur Tavis! were end men in the black face min-| strel chorus. Others in the black face; group included Roy Indseth, Russel A. Young, Ernest Grewer, Harry; |Bernstein, J. E. Beaudoin, M. O.| Steen, H. C. Beall, and Clarence O., Gunness. Spencer Boise was inter-; locutor. In the orchestra were Hazel John- son, piano; Sam Kontos, saxophone; ! Archie Olson, clarinet; and Joe Sulli-| van, drums. Steen, Crewer, Beaudoin, Indseth, | Boise, and Beall were vocal soloists | while Ward gave a dancing specialty.’ Nae —s | University Will | | Open Love Clinic | —— > Chicago, Oct. 9—()—Northwest- ern University of Evanston is go- ing to open a love clinic with branches in both Evanston and Chicago. Couples contemplating marriage may take their troubles to the lof the $500,000,000 National Credit! the | tures to subscribing banks throughout building the local unit of Les Quar-|the country, which would contribute |situation, pending congressional ac-' gress will go with the presdential | recommendation for broadening the, ;base of paper eligible for rediscount | by federal reserve banks. Corporation Near Completion Meanwhile, in New York, formation corporation, undertaken by private! financters at the suggestion of Presi- | dent Hoover, is near completion. With stocks, cotton and ‘grain pirces pushed upward already under the stimulus of the proposed organization, | Hoover was notified it would be for-| mally incorporated by Saturday. | Soon thereafter the enormous | strength of its pooled resources will be} injected into a nationwide offensive to free frozen assets for commercial | trading. j The corporation will be authorized | to issue up to $1,000,000,000 in deben-| 2 per cent of net demand and time deposits. At this time it is considered a temporary organization to meet the tion. Glass Is Opposed | Senator Glass of Virginia, former ; Democratic secretary of the treasury, gave notice he would oppose proposals | to include railroad, real estate and| industrial securities in paper eligible for federal reserve rediscount. Over in the house, Chairman Mc- Fadden of the banking committee also is carefully reserving judgment on just how far he would be prepared | to go in extending the base of eligible ; paper. i Senator Glass contends that banks are not taking advantage of facilities now offered by the federal reserve; system. ‘There is some doubt as to just how far the administration will go in re- commending that congress broaden the field on eligible paper. A report it would favor having the federal re- serve system ultimately take over the; paper to be liquidated by the private corporation brought a sharp protest’ from Glass. adelphia 8, St. Louis 6; bases on balls, MACK GROSSES UP EXPERTS PITCHES LANKY BOB GROVE Big Left-Hander Limits Cardi- nals to Five Hits to Win, 8 to 1 DERRINGER IS KNOCKED OUT His Wildness and Cardinal Er- rors Account for Big Fifth Inning St. Louis, Oct. 9.—(AP)—Connie Mack sprang a surprise on the b: ball world Friday and got away with it. Crossing up the experts, he start- ed Lanky Bob Grove in the sixth game of the world series and the left-handed ace came through with an 8 to 1 victory, limiting the Card- inals to five hits. _ The Athletics scored their runs in two big innings, partly because of Cardinal errors fale the wildness of Paul Derringer who forced two runs across the plate by giving bases on balls with the sacks loaded. For the first time in the series Pepper Martin, sensational Cardinal youngster, was silenced. He failed to get a hit. First Inning Athletics—Bishop fanned on a call- ed third strike. Haas grounded out, Gelbert to Bottomley. Cochrane off Grove 1 (Martin), off Derringer 4 (Dykes, Bishop, Haas, Simmons), off Lindsey 2 (Dykes, Haas); struck out, ‘by Grove 6 (Roettger 2, Blades, Ha-| Bishop to Fo \fey, Gelbert, Frisch), by Derringer 4 ea (Bishop, Grove 2, Haas), by Johnson 2 (Miller, Grove); hits, off Derringer 3in 4 2-3 innings, off Johnson 1 in 1 1-3 innings, off Lindsey 3 in 2 in- \nings, off Rhem 1 in 1 inning; hit by pitcher, by Lindsey (Miller); | wild \pitch Derringer; losing pitcher, Der- ringer; umpires, Nallin (AL), plate; Stark (NL), first base; McGowan (AL), second base; Klem (NL), third base. Time, 1:57. ‘LOAN REGULATIONS ‘REVISED BY HYDE AFTER CONFERENG Action Is Taken Following Talk With Governors From North- west States ‘Washington, Oct. 9—(?)—New feed loan regulations were agreed upon Thursday night by Secretary Hyde and the governors of Montana and North and South Dakota. ‘The agreement followed conferences between Hyde, the governors and their advisors over the four days, in which the states’ executives sought modification of agricultural depart- ment regulations. Loans for livestock feed henceforth will be made for seven head of cattle, six horses, 100 sheep and 10 brood sows, at the rate of $3 per head for horses and cattle, 30 cents for sheep and $1 per brood sow. Applications will be received until December 1 from farmers in Minne- TO INCORPORATE BIG CREDIT FIRM FRIDAY sota, South Daktoa, North Dakote, Montana, Uath, Washington, Ne- clinte and get a “stop” or “go” |ency bank organization to handle froz- signal from the experts. jen assets of interior banks along the Couples already married and lines proposed by President Hoover in wondering if they made a mistake | his $500,000,000 bank pool plan, was to will be given advice. be incorporated Friday as the National Professor Arthur J. Todd, head | Credit Corporation. of the department of sociology, | Mortimer N. Buckner, chairman of will direct the clinic, the purposes {the New York Trust company and of which will be to make folks ident of the New York Clear! ! happier and enable Prof. Todd House ‘Association, in announcing ie j and his associates to gather a Jlorganization of the new corporation ! greater collection of facts toen- |Thursday night, said the charter | rich the sciences of psychology, | would be applied for Friday in Dover, sociology and economics. Delaware. 7 The new credit eorpocation. with i main ofices in New York, will be auth- Uphold Lega’ ity of orized to issue up to $1,000,000,000 of Reapportionment Act)deventures and will ‘be capitalized with 12 nominal aieree Ok Sack of = $100 par value each to voted by a ireserve district. fang eae pearl state |" The opinion in Wall Street was that | was upheld by ® five-to-two decision | Buckner would head the organization. of the state supreme court Friday. | = ont ealeie suc caer, a Methodists Reopen just uel B. » held | prety Feet ae cereal constitution deiegat-| District Cut Parley ed to state legislatures the right to — jfix boundaries of congressional dis-| Valley City, N. D., Oct. 9—(7)—Re- ‘ricts and did not include any grant of scinding an action taken at the open- | | power to the governor in the matter. ing session of the meeting, the North | | ‘The Minnesota legislature passed Dakota Methodist Episcopal confer- the act reducing the number of dis-'ence Friday was undecided whether tricts in the state from ten to nine the conference shall be divided into| jin line with the 1930 census and the four or three districts. | inatfonal reapportionment act. | At the opening session the confer- | | ence had gone on record to continue | TO HAVE NEW MANAGER |the present four-district plan. Pittsburgh, Oct. 9—()—The Pitts-, The controversial issue was dis- burgh Pirates will have a new man- | cussed before the state meeting again ager next season. |Friday and a committee was named Jewel Ens, who succeeded Donie|to bring in a report on what course Bush as leader of the Bucs in 1929,|to follow. The committee is to make was unconditionally released by Pitts- | its report not later than Saturday | burgh club late yesterday. morning. | Dr. T. A. Olson, Jamestown, was ——__—_——_-——_.——# |elected second alternate delegate to 73-Bushel Crop Is the general conference at this morn-| | Raised by Ca: c= ing’s session. j Approximately 250 laymen from all| ‘parts of the ctate were assembled here | Edmonton, Alta., Oct. 9—(?)— |for the layman's program. i Bearish news for the wheat pit. | Dr. W. C. Sainsbury, Fargo, spoke | | James Hazlett of Red River has yesterday following the anniversary | been awarded the provincial gov- (program of the Woman's Foreign ernment silver trophy for wheat / Missionary society. Mrs. J. 8. Wilds raising. His crop averaged 73 ‘of Bismarck presided and Mrs. Wal- bushels an acre in a 13-acre field. jiace E. Brown was a speaker. New York, Oct. 8—(P)—An emerg-|braska, Idaho and Wyoming for loans ‘eighth game. covering five months’ feeding and maturing September 30, 1932. A compromise was reached on the question of mortgages, government agreeing to accept second mortgages except where prior liens exceed $25 per head on work horses; $30 on milk and pure bred cows; $17.50 on stock cows; $20 on two-year-old milk stock and pure bred heifers; $15 on two- year-old stock heifers; $10 on year- ling beef stock; gage holders shall not foreclose liens before September 30, 1932, with- out consent of the agricultural de partment. ‘The maximum loan per family was reduced to $500 from $1,000. Governor Shafer of North Dakota said: “We are quite well satisfied with the new arrangement.... It means that foundation stock, the very back- bone of our diversified agriculture, will be saved in drought-sricken areas. Our general relief program can now go forward without interruption.” Others who attended the confer- ences included: Governor Greene of South Dakota, Governor Erickson of Montana, M. L. Wilson of Montana State college, Dean C. Larsen of) South Dakota State college and E. A./ Ruden, South Dakota superintendent of banks. Rochester Wins in Little World Series Rochester, N. ¥., Oct. 9—(?)}—The Rochester Redwings, champions of the International League, won their second consecutive little world series Friday, defeating St. Paul of the American Association, 9 to 3, in the MARRIED AT HANNOVER Center, N. D., Oct. 9.—Melinda Henke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. Henke, and Alvin Skubinna, youngest son of County Commis- sioner and Mrs. C. F. Skubinna, were married in the Hannover Lutheran church by Rev. Wohlfeil. H.|the box for the Cards. lined out to Gelbert. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Cardinals—Flowers grounded out, Roettger singled to center. Frisch bounced to Bishop and a double play was completed, Bishop to Williams to Foxx. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left. f Second Inni Athletics—Simmons ceueihad out, Frisch to Bottomley. Foxx singled to Tight. Miller grounded to Gelbert and Foxx was forced at second, Gelbert to Frisch. Miller beat the relay to first, Miller went to second on a wild pitch. Selpe eo out, Flowers to Bot- ley. No runs, one hit, arte e hit, no errors, Cardinals—Martin up and the crowd bellowed. Martin fouled out to Foxx. Hafey flied to Haas, who made a ty running catch in short center. Bot- tomley flied out to Miller, who took the batt with his back against right- barrier. No runs, no hit = rors, none left. ae Third Inning Athletics—Williams bounced out, Gelbert to Bottomley, who made s great stab of the short stop’s wild throw. Grove faned on a called third strike. Bishop flied out to Roettger, who made a one-handed stab after misjudging the ball. No runs, no hits, cardinais—Wilsen ison skied to Haas. Gelbert singled on a drive that Bishop barely stopped with his gloved hand back of second. Derringer bunted and was thrown out, Bishop to Foxx. Gel- bert going to second on the sacrifice. proners ceeded Cae Pebeaeec to 4 ins, one hit, eae no errors, Fourth Athletics—Haas neat on 8 called third strike. Cochrane boun- ced out, Frisch to Bottonfley, on a closed play. Simmons flied out to Roettger, who made a_ shoes! catch and turned a somersault. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Cardinals—Roettger fanned, swing- ing. Frisch also struck out, swing- Martin lined out to Haas on the first pitched ball. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Fifth Inning Athletics—Foxx grounded to Flow- ers and was safe at first when a wide throw pulled Bottomley off the bag. It was an error for Flowers. Miller sacrificed, Derringer to Bottomley, Foxx going to second. Dykes Foxx scored on Williams line single to center. Dykes stopped at second. Grove fanned, swinging at the third strike. Bishop walked and the bases were clogged. Haas walked and Dykes was forced across the plate. The Cards protested Nallin’s decision on the fourth ball. walked and Bishop strolled home with {the fourth run. Derringer was re- moved for the second time in the ser- ies and Sylvester Johnson went to the box. Foxx was up for the second time in the inning. Foxx popped to Gel- bert. Four runs, two hits, one error, three left. Cardinals—Hafey got a single on a smash that Bishop stopped back of second with a diving play. The throw to first was from an awkward position and failed to catch the run- ner. Bottomley popped to Dykes. Wilson lined to Bishop and Hafey scrambled back to first. Gelbert popped to Bishop. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. Sixth Inning Athletics—Miller fanned, swinging at @ fast ball. Dykes filed out to Martin in left center. Williams drove a double against the left field wall. It was his second straight hit. Grove fanned, swinging. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. Cardinals—Blades batted for John- son. Blades fanned, swinging. Flow- ers doubled to left center. Roettger flied out to Haas and Flowers went to third after the catch. After foul- ing off five pitches, Frisch singled through the infield into right and Flowers scored. Martin filed out to Bishop near the foul line. One run, two hits, no errors, one left. Seventh Inning Athletics—Jim Lindsey went to oa sin- gled to right. Haas sacrificed, Flow- ers to Bottomley, Bishop going to second, Cochrane hoisted to Hafey. Bishop scored on Simmons single to (Continued on page nine) : / Ss RSS Gets ss

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