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~ 6 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1931 Sharkey Meets Carnera Tonight in Long-Deferred Fistic Encounter BOSTONIAN FAVORED NODA KS SMOTHER SOUTH DAKOTA U UNDER 52 TO 6 AVALANCHE 10 TAKE WIN FROM BEHEMOTH ITALIAN’ Sailor Rules 7 to 5 Favorite, Over Rival Despite Physi- cal Handicaps IS CONCEDED 60 POUNDS| dimmy Johnston, Promoter, Hopes to See Gate Reach $200,000 Total New York, Ot. 12—(}—The long- deferred heavyweight tussle between Sharkey and Primo Carnera will be held in Ebbeis Field, Brooklyn, to- night if the weather man is kind and no serious accidents befall the glad- iators in the meantime. Sharkey rules a 7 to 5 favorite over the huge Italian to whom he must. concede five inches in height and about 60 pounds in weight. The bout is slated for 15 rounds and it may go that far. Promoter Jimmy Johnston, who soon will be hanging his hat in a Madison Square Garden office, is talking of a “gate” of $200,000 but the irrepressible experts have cut that down to $100,000 in their calculations, Sharkey and Carnera together per- haps heve received more verbal abuse than all the rest of the heavyweights put together. Sharkey’s unpopular- ity, first based on his _ talkativeness, now can be blamed chiefly upon his inconsistency. As for Carnera, there have been too many setups in his campaigns and too many rumors of “arranged” bouts to suit the fistic populace. The winner of tonight's match probably will be asked to meet, Lough- ran in another “elimination” »mateh designed to find an opponent for champion Max Schmeling. FOOTBALL Big Ten Stanford, 13; Minnesota, 0. Vanderbilt, 26; Ohio State, 21. Michigan, 13; Chicago, 7. Notre Dame, 0; Northwestern, 0. Purdue, 7; Illinois, 0. Wisconsin, 7; Alabama Poly, 7. Texas A. and M., 29; Iowa, 0. West Carleton, 27; Hamline, 0. Corcordia, 18; Macalester, 0. St. Mary’s, 13; St. Norbert Moorhead, 54; Jamestown, Hibbing, 14; Duluth, 2. Defiance, 7; Findlay, 0. Ohio’ U., 33; Dennison, 0. 8. D. State, 20; Morningside, 0. Mount Morris, 20; Wheaton, 2. Nebraska, 13; Oklahoma, 0. Wahpeton, 0; Valley City, 0. Grinnel, 6; Cornell College, 0. Rio Grande, 18; Urbana, 7. Hillsdale, 20; Oberlin, 7. Kansas Aggies, 10; Missouri, 7. Akron, 12; Kent, 6. Alma, 12; Olivet, 2. North Dakota, 52; South Dakota 6. New River, 33; Dakota Wes., 0. Kansas, 30; James Milliken, 0. Knox, 7; Normal, 0. Valparaiso, 50; Aurora, 0. Luther, 67; Dubuque, 0. Lilinois College, 19; Monmouth, 19. Lake Forest, 0; Corrall, 0. Ei ast Harvard, 39; New Hampshire, 0. Hampton, 20; St. Paul, 0. Johns Hopkins, 20; Lehigh, 12. N. Y. Aggies, 13; Hartwick, 0. Susquehanna, 18; Haverford, 0. Union, 7; Amherst, 6. Ursinus, 7; Dickinson, 6. Columbus, 37; Wesleyan, 0. Georgia, 26; Yale, 7. Williams, 25; Bowdoin, 0. Army, 20; Michigan State, 7. Dartmouth, 14; Holy Cross, 7. Colgate, 16; Lafayette, 0. Brown, 19; Princeton, 7. Rutgers, 26; Springfield, 0. Syracuse, 28; Ohio Wesleyan, Tufts, 21; Colby, 6. George Wash., 14; Boston, 0. Swarthmore, 20; Washington, 0. Penn, 14; Franklyn Marshall, 0. Pittsburgh, 34; W. Virginia, 0. Rochester, 13; Hamilton, 6. Lewisburg, 23; Albright, 7. Gettysburg, 6; Mt. St. Mary, 3. Drexel, 13; Juniata, 7. Depauw, 7; Cincinnati, 6. Clarkson, 13; Renneselaer, 7. LI. U,, 7; C.C. N. Y., 6 Maryland, 6; Navy, 0. Mass. Aggies, 32; Middleburg, 6. ‘W. and J., 19; Marshail, 0. Worcester, 13; Trinity, Cornell, 27; Richmond, 0. Bucknell, 23; Albright, 7. Heidelberg, 7; Otterbein, 0. John Carroll, 19; Case, 0. Delaware, 0; St. Joseph, 0. Baldwin, 20; Hiram, 0. Carnegie Tech, 13; Georgia Tech, 0.) Allegheny, 39; Westminster, 7. Penn M. C., 25; Upsala, 7. Providence, 27; Vermont, 13. Montclair, 27; Wagner, 6. Western Maryland, 59; St. John’s, 0. Bates, 34; Norwich, 0. Brown, 36; 24 Inf., 0. Far West Oregon, 13; Washington, 0. U. S. C., 38; Wash, State, 6. Colorado U., 27; Colorado Mines, 0.| Wyoming, 13; Colo, Teachers, 6. Colo. Aggies, 32; Colo. College, 6. Utah Aggies, 38; Western St., 20. Idaho, 21; Montana, 19, Pac. Stockton, 7; Whitman, 0. South V. P. 1, 18; Davidson, 6. Farlham, 13; Macomb, 13, Sewanee, 3; Virginia, 0. Virginia State, 77; St. Augustine, 0. Morgan, 12; Greensboro, 0. Tennessee, 38; Miss., 0. Lowell, 26; Arnold, 0. Miami, 37; Wabash, 0. Chattanooga, 14; Howard, 0. Birmingham, tetson, 0. Alabama, 53; Miss. A. & M., 0. Tulane, 40; Spring Hill, 0. Duke, 18; Villa Nova, 0. Clark, 21; Claflin, 0. Shaw, 31; Vir. Seminary, 0. Tenn. Tech, 19; Murray, 7. Tuskegee, 13; Wiley, 0. | .OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY DOVE BARKER, T'Lt TELL You A BIT OF DROLLERY You CAN “TELL YouUR RADIO LISTENERS SOME NIGHT !-— HAW- HAW- We Hed-HEH-1 LAUGH EVERY TIME I-THINK OF IT ~HEH-HEH- ~~ [ HEARD IT SOME .NEARS AGO ,IN AN ENGLISH MUSIC HALL (-—~ A WAGGISH CHAP ASKS A RIDDLE COMES OUT ON “THE STAGE AND ~~ LET ME SEE Now ~ WHAT WAS (T? | IT CANT RECALL (T i BUT IT'S VERY i THINK “TH? Z( MASOR'S WAY OF TELLING A Dake THAT HES CANT REMEMBER, LIKE “THIS ONE - AEG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. ©1931 BY REA SERVICE, (mC. i ‘Series Receipts Pass Million Mark 'YALE TO INVADE U. M. I, 13; The Citadel, 13. Southern Meth., 46; U. of Ark. 6. | Grand Forks Wins | From Fargo Team Powerful Maroons Triumph Over Midgets For First Time | In Several Years | Fargo, N. D., Oct. 12—-\4)~-Record- | ‘ing its deserved victory margin of, jone touchdown in an undeniabie | (fourth period drive, a big, powerful ; Maroon football team from Grand ‘Forks high school swept triumphant-| ly over Fargo’s purple for the first) time in several years Saturday. | The final score of 13 to 6 was a) just indication of the teams’ respect- ive power. The Forkers jumped into a seven-' | poirit lead in the first pericd, watched the Midgets come back to tie the count shortly before half time, then: waited until late in the third period! {before advancing to the deciding | touchdown that came early in the fourth quarter. Three veteran Grand Fonks backs,/ Tom Boyle, Jim Bolton and Capt. Wilfred Blanchette, found soft spots) in the Midget line before the game) had fairly started. A 35-yard march) hesitated on the Fargo 15-yard line,| from where Boyle slipped off his own) right tackle for a touchdown. Blanchette place-kicked for the ex- tra point. | The Forkers ripped the Fargo ‘de-, fense for consistent yardage after their first touchdown, and it was not/ that the Midgets pushed into a con- FOR FIRST TIME IN HISTORY jbefore breaking into its Big Ten until midway in the second quarter|to MIDDLEWEST | Michigan and Purdue Have Won| Only Conference Games Played to Date {Conference football will offer a wide {variety of entertainment Saturday as; jthree championship - hopeful elevens {Set into action, and Yale and the Uni- j versity of California’s southern branch send their teams into the section. Michigan, ranked as a big possibil- ity for top honors this season, will meet Ohio State, the leader of the darkhorse group, at Ann Arbor. Pur-| due, doped to go through the Big Ten' season without defeat, will meet Wis- consin at Madison. Yale will send its squad into the middlewest for the first time to meet | Amos Alonso Stagg’s fortieth Univer- sity of Chicago eleven, and to honor! the “old man,” who was one of Eli's! first and greatest athletes. North-/| western will entertain a team from} the other end of the country, the Uni- } versity of California, southern branch, Schedule next week. Indiana, idle Saturday, will tackle Towa's battered squad at Iowa City, and Illinois will mect Bradley college, while Minnesota will have an open| date through which to rest after its journey to Palo Alto, Calif., where it was defeated by Stanford Saturday. | The argument between Northwest- | ern and Notre Dame got nowhere Sat- urday as they skidded and slipped through rain and mud in Soldier Field to a scoreless tie. Fumbles, a total of 19, wrecked any chance of scoring. | Michigan won its opening Big Ten | encounter from Chicago, but found; the Maroons tough and squeezed’ out a 13 to 7 decision, while Ohio State's Buckeyes, with the breaks going! against them, lost to Vanderbilt, 26) 21 Illinois? sophomore experiment gave tending position and scored on a pass. Twice in the third period, the Mid-| gets started promising advances, but] each time they failed. The first was} stopped by a fumble which Grand) Forks recovered. The second was} spoiled by a penalty that hauled the/ The Grand Forks second touch-| down march started in midfield and) a 15-yard penalty helped advance to the Midgets’ 25-yard line. Bolton, | Boyle, Blanchette and Ziegenhagen/ lalternately hit the Fargo line until the ball rested on the mnine-yard) stripe. Duplicating their previous toucn- down thrust, the Forkers called for jan off tackle play and Blanchette found a wide hole that led across the goal. His place kick attempt for the extra point failed. i fm) WOMAN STOPS TELLING | HER AGE WHEN HER, | SHES_A. NATURAL PUSTINUM BLOND, ball back 15 yards to the Forkers'|bowing to Stanford's final assault, 13 20-yard line. to 0. jfor touchdown against Yale. | | Washington State. | |two touchdowns and passed to Mark @ great account of itself against Pur- due, but was defeated by the veteran Boilermaker outfit, 7 to 0. Towa and Minnesota went far out of their ways to suffer defeats, the Hawkeyes losing to Texas A. & M., 29 to 0, at Dallas and the Gophers Wisconsin found Alabama Poly unexpectedly difficult and only ob- tained a 7-7 tie when Joe Linfor took ! a kickoff and ran the length of the | field for 2 score. The Big Ten standing, including jconference games only: | jspring. ' | “We haven't given that a Eboughe. | Cards Realize $4,484 Per Man;) Athletic Players Get \ 2,989 Each i { ———- - i (By The Associated Press) | Paid attendance, 231,587, and total receipts of $1,030,723, for seven games of which $320,303 went into players’ Pool. i Per man on basis of 30-share split. Philadelphia Athletics, on similar basis, get $2,989 each. Individual hero, Pepper Martin, who! furnished the sensation by banging out 12 hits including a homer, in first five games, winning two almost single handed, and winding up at top of bat- | ting list with .500, five stolen bases; and two records equalled. Bill Hallahan and Burleigh Grimes, each with two victories and no de-j feats, carried Cardinal pitching bur-' den successfully against George Earn- shaw and Lefty Grove. H Grimes and Earnshaw equaled 1906! series record by hurling successive! two-hit games. Hallahan pitched! three-hit game. { George Watkins hit $45,000 home; run off Earnshaw that provided win- ning margin in final game. { Chick Hafey, National League bat- ting champion, hit .167 and was benched in final game in favor of Ernest Orsatti, who fanned on all; three times at plate. | Rumors of Change | In Card’s Lineup Branded As False Three Pitchers From Minors » Should Add to Strength of | St. Louis Club ____By Ahern] GQVQTRS NOT ABLE TO STOP ATTACKS ‘OF POWERFUL FOE Burma, Richmond, and Coterie of Powerful Backs Run « Riot At Aberdeen { WEST USES RESERVES Losers Score Lone Touchdown In Final Quarter Against Substitutes Aberdeen, S. D. Oct. 12.—(@)— Proving superior in every phase of the game, the hard driving team from the University of North Dakota Sat- urday trampled the University of South Dakota to a 52 to 6 defeat on the local field. The game was the opener in the north central conference for both clubs. Driving the first touchdown over during the first two minutes of play, the Nodak regulars gained through the Coyote line at will. The Coyote defense was inadequate against Rich- mond, Pierce and Burma, Flickertail backs. Felber, end, played an important Part in the victory. Although the Coyotes gained only two first downs prior to a belated rally near the end of thes game, play during most of the second and third Periods was comparatively even. The regulars of North Dakota saw little action after being replaced early in the second period until they were sent into the fourth period to check a rally. South Dakota Redshirts kicked off to the ten yard line arid Richmond returned it to the 36-yard line. ‘Wexler tried the left side of the line and made two yards. Burma hit the line for six and got a first down on the 48-yard line. Richmond added five and Burma hit center for two more. Pierce took a cross buck and ran out at the 22-yard line for a first | down. Burma Scores Wesler hit the end of three yards; Burma hit left tackle for five more and then finished the distance to the goal for a touchdown. Richmond’s \ Chicago, Oct. 12. — (®) — Western! St. Louis Cardinals, by winning four |kick was blocked. The score: North jout of seven games, carried off $4,484 | Dakota 6, South Dakota 0. The Coyotes chose to receive and ‘Richmond kicked to Olson who fum- {bled at the 30-yard line and Bourne recovered for the Nodaks, Pierce went ‘around right end for another touch- down, and Richmond place-kicked the extra point. Score: North Dakota 13, {South Dakota 0. The second quarter started with South Dakota kicking. North Dakota blocked the Wick, big Nodak tackle, scooped it up near the side lines and ran for another touchdown. The kick failed. Score: North Dakota 32; 'South Dakota 0. West Substitutes ‘West sent in several Nodak substi- tutes. The play was on fairly even terms on the exchange of punts when Felber received a pass to get into scoring position. The Nodaks were held for downs and the Coyotes punt- ed to the 25 yard line. Felber got an- other pass to carry the ball to the five yard line. Babcock gained two yards and Richmond scored another touch- |down. Richmond kicked for the point. North Dakota 39, South Dakota 0. Stablien intercepted a pass to re- gain the ball for the Nodaks after the Coyotes received the kickoff as the half ended. The third quarter ended with no touchdowns, both teams playing fairly even although the wind played a de- Jacobson broke even and Nuen- schwander stole through center for a touchdown. Babcock’s kick was no good. Score 45 to 0. Buck went in for Martin for South a first down at the 25-yard line. Bab- cock made six more through the line. Converse went in for Babcock. Felber in for Gilson. Jacobson made two yards. Nuenschwander went over for a first down at 15 yard line and then lost two, but Converse. added five. Norton went in for Ostlund. South Dakota got a five yard pen- alty and Nuenschwander went over for the touchdown. Richmond went in to kick and it was good. Score 52 to 0. The rest of the first team went in for the Nodaks. Coyotes Finally Tally ‘Hanson, after receiving a punt for the Coyotes, ran ten yards and then 15 yard penalty took the ball to North Dakota five yard line. South Dakota U.. Plans No Shake-up In Line-up of A’s Philadelphia, Oct. 12—(7)—Connie Mack and his Athletics were hoyie from their battles of Waterloo Mon- day but it was only the battle itself which was relegated to the Elba of Limbo, and not the spirit of the 68- year-old patriarch nor the personnel of his two-time world champions. Shortly after the Mahout stepped: off the train from St. Louis Sunday night he put at rest reports he planned a drastic shakeup in the ranks of his White Elephants. All the principals of the late world series from Mickey Cochrane to Al Sim- mons will be on deck again next) spring, he said, possibly excepting some rookies whom he did not name. ‘And for all his 68 years,. the white- haired Connie expects to lead them again next spring as he has led sim- ilar campaigns since 1902. 1 Greeted at the station by = crowd| ‘of several hundred which withheld) ‘its cheers and by Thomas 8. Shibe,; president of the Athletics, who was unable to see the last two series games, Mr. Mack offered no allbis for the defeat. “The Cards played better ball than we did,” said he, “and that’s why we lost. Our boys didn’t click as they have in the past, but its silly to say they have permanently slipped. ‘They all tried hard and.I have noth- ing but praise for them.” Jockey Tracey Reno rode 72 win- ners in the second annual Agua Cali- ente, Mex., Jockey club summer meet- ing to head the list. Corwin Artman, former Stanford tackle, will play professional football with the Chicago Bears during the 1931 fall season. St. Louis, Oct. 12—()—Rumors; there will be numerous changes in the | world champion before another sea- | son rolls around are “mere idle ru- mors,” Sam Breadon, No. 1 man of} the Cardinals’ front office, said Mon- | day, when asked about reports the! Cardinals wouldn't look the same next | | We have been too busy with this world series to think of anything else | § jand we're now going in for a good Seq before looking ahead to the future. However, we surely look good for an- other successful season, for we not only have the best team in baseball right now, but we have three pitchers; coming up from our minor league} clubs who should add strength to our; club next year. | The three pitchers Breadon re-| ferred to are “Dizzy” Dean and “Tex”! Carleton from Fouston of the Texas, Won Lost Pct. | Michigan 1 0 1.000 |Purdue .... 1 0 1,000 Northwestern o 0 000 ‘Indiana ... o oO 000 Ohio State 0 0 000 {Minnesota . 0 0 .000 Towa .. 0 0 .000 Wisconsin . 0 0.000; Milinois 0 1 .000 Chicago o 1 000 oe —— —— Stellar Lights In ——— Saturday’s Games a (By The Associated Press) _ Homer Key, Georgia—Ran 73 yards} Orville Mohler, Southern California | —Scored four touchdowns against George Sauer, Nebraska — Scored| jboth touchdowns in 13-0 victory over Oklahoma on runs of 47 and 70 i yards. | Gene McEver, Tennessee — Scored for third against Mississippi. Louis Bush, Amherst—Scored three |times against Middlebury on runs of| |80, 45 and 25 yards. ATTRACTIVE CLIMATE . Seattle—The climate of Walla Walla, site of the state prison, is at-| tractive—even to convicts. Walter Muller, 27, arraigned before Judge Otis W. Brinker for theft, and given from six months to two years in jail, pleaded with the judge to send him to Walla Walla. like the climate better, your honor,” he explained. SONA Stas sae Sas sa ied a ace cadaemeana League, and Ray Starr of the Roches- | ©: J,,Glum, dirty - ter International League team. 1B, Sasse, clean (HR. Wrient, fairly clean . MIDDLEWEIGHTS MEET eee gnenuat cr; Milwaukee, Oct. 12.—(P)—Angel | A. Couch, clean Clivelle, of Porto Rico, and Frankie! O’Brien, of Hartford, Conn., both; rated as favorites to succeed to the| middleweight championship vacated; by Mickey Walker, are paired in the| main event of, tonight’s National Boxing association elimination tour- nament card at the Milwaukee audi- torium. i The Pecos Country club, Pecos, Tex.,| has posted all its grounds in a move! Dine With Us Businessmen’s Lunch -- 35¢ Enjoy the pure air, clean sur- roundings, prompt service and courteous attention. The | New Sweet Shop || On Main Avenue Opposite N. P. Depot 1B, A, | Mr. Edgerly, MILK REPORT September, 1931 Sept. 9— Milk or Bacteria Name Sediment Fat Sp Gr. E. Popelka, fairly clean . 4. 031 L. Barrett, fairly clean 4 1.033 Sept, 10— K, Popelka, fairly clean . B. Sasse, slightly dirty J, Keller, slightly dirty H. Campbell, fairly clea G: Bauman, fairly clean . P. Schmidt, fairly clean A. G. Graner, fairly clean! J. Fredrick, slightly dirty L, Barrett, fairly clean Bismarck Hospital, fairl Bismarck Hospital, fairly clean Bigmarck Dairy, ciean .. 3, Yegen, fairly clean . man-Russell, A. reen, clean H, Ode, fairly clean ._F. Gagner, clean M. Davis, fairly clean’: Sept. 14— A. Couch, fairly clean . Ed Conley, dirty, P. J. McNeil, fairly clean ‘A. Bertsch, fairly clean . G. Schonert, clean . J. C, Mork,’ clean AL R. Falconer, clean L. Garske, fairly clea JG. Glum, very dirty ept, 1b— | i. R, Wright, fairly c clea fa Conley, clean P, J. McNeil, clean G. J, Glum, dirty ... Sept. 18— . J. Irish, clean . BE. A. Green, clean H, Ode, clean .. W. F. Gagner, cle: Bismarck Hospital Bismarck Hospital, clean F. Slag. in Mr. Edger! Bismarck L. Garske, cl a. um, clean” an Bridgeman-Russell, clean Sept. 21-- G. 3, Glum, fairly clean ,. jept, 23—- F. Slag, fairly clean . Sept. 24— . Green, clean . W. F, Gagner, clean H, Ode, clean A.C. Graner, clean J, Keller, clean .. R, Campbell. fairly clean L! Garske, fairly clean . Anproved by: . E, STACKIIOUSE, City Health Officer. Oct. 1, oosoSe ones even e3 es Ss. fe SSMESSmeewiweowsess & ea iseiscienNomMainS om >So 51 2o250' 22 of S Bes ALT ORMIREE RPP REE RAED 3 3 SOTO O Te erate erate Tere rer eT ene Tee 3 4 Ses ees pay 25 Pet ome o> riomis! i. 4; 1 1, 1 1 1 1 eH 1 1 i groans sanvnnais = praesasassons & A.W. ECKLUND, M. Bacterlologist in Charge. » 1951 Street’s scrappy flock of having scored to the baseball peaks ari @ dramatic fight, will be diffi- Endorsement For ‘Chain Store’ Baseball &t. Louis, Oct. 12—()—Gabb: y Cardinals, Cards ‘Fortified in Pinnacle Perch Success of St. Louis Seen As ries, not only was pushed off his pedestal by the exploits of Martin but the great right-hander wound up as the hard-luck figure of the 1931 bat- tle. ‘The outcome of the series may has- ten Connie Mack’s reconstruction pro- gram for the attempt to win a fourth straight American League pennant and regain the world championship honors in 1932, He has already made the first move by replacing Joe Boley at shortstop with Dib Williams. The second time in six years, thanks mainly to the inspired heroics of their hawk-faced youngster, Pepper Martin, and the superlative mound work of ‘Bill Hallahan and Burleigh Grimes. The some years to come may be how to ae the sent in his entire first team to check lof player wealth. {just about the best young right hand- er in the minors. four National League pennants and two world champions in six years. They have broken even with the @ score. Jenkins tried end once and then went over for 9 touchdown. On of the the next try. Hanson's kick was outside. Score per Martin, Adkins kicked off and the game WaS | sensation, over. The lineups: North Dakota Felber % Ered Long r Dablow lg Clinker c Buck Malo rg «Leer tt Hoppel \isfactory. Meroak re Groves varsity for 1932, Wexler qb Hansen Pierce ih Ostlund Richmond th Burma fb Score by periods: North Dakota U.. Greatest two outfits the American chdowns—North Dekota—Bur-| League has been able to put together, Rates f na Pletce 2, Wexler, Wick, Rich-|the Yankees arid Athletics. They $2.00 mond, Nuenschwander 2. South jhave cine pea te 2 rtcdesgees si the New York Giants were at the top Galt Bath ten years ago. show of 1931, figured they could break even against the pitching of Grove and Earnshaw. ments, such as the amazing five-game streak of Pepper Martin and the bene- fit of the “breaks’ helped favor the Cardinal cause. Nevertheless, when it came to the seventh and final contest, the Red Birds were the steadier, scrappier, more resourceful club. next to be put on the chelf may be Max Bishop and Bing Miller. Waite Hoyt. who dropped his only series start because he couldn’t control Martin, may not spend next year with the A's. game. They rule the baseball roost for the Darna Ostopavich, giant Lithuanian mat artist, suffered a brain concus- sion in a recent match with Ed Lewis, but recuperated. ——_ problem next year and for of the new world cham- triking endorsement of store” baseball. As developed Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed ‘The eye 1s an organ you can’t afford to neglect. ~ Dr. H. J. Wagner Opt it tometrist Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 191¢ Phone 533 Bismarck, N. Dak. after proving himself The Cardinals now have captured HOTEL I SSON Minneapolis Few but the Cardinals themselves, to the million-dollar baseball Garage in Connection Extraordinary | develop- Seventh Street Near Hennepin Located in the center of the Business, Amusement and the Shopping districts. 4 Cafes esas pins so fit any purse. ” in the final game, Earnshaw, the hero of the 1930 se-; MELLOWED A HUNDRED MILLION YEARS When mighty armored fishes swam over PENNSYLVANIA, HE Devonian Age which occurred more than a hundred million years ago was the source of two wonders—mighty, afmored fishes and the Bradford-Allegany crude oil which is now being manufactured into Sinclair Pennsylvania Motor Oil. Sinclair Pennsylvania is de-waxed and freed from petroleum jelly at as low as 60° F. below zero—Sinclair Pennsyl- vania is a year-round Pennsylvania grade oil, Ask the Sinclair dealer. SINCLAIR . Cennsylvanta MOTOR OIL J. A. KOHLER Agent Sinclair Refining Co. Phone 78 or 1359 100 Third Street ‘Bismarck, N. Dab At Reduced Rents Modern apartments in a fireproot building, electric refrigerators. electric stoves, city heat, laundry privileges, etc. Inquire at the Bismarck Tribune Office ‘ i i ‘ay rer ay