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Bismarck and Mandan THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1932 to Renew Grid Rivalry Here Friday Night DEMONS AND BRAVES | YA NKEE SLUGGERS TROUNCE CUBS 12-6 IN SERIES OPENER TO MEET AT HUGHES | FIELD UNDER LIGHTS * Morton County Delegation Ex-| pected to Present Capable Team Lineup OUR BOARDING HOUSE THANKS AGAIN FoR ANNIVERSARY GIFT I'M GOING OUT SHOPPING TOOT WITH 1T/ (TS SO LONG SINCE THE WEDDING OF #300— ON A IVE BEEN IN A DEPARTMENT STORE THEY'LL THINK I ARRIVED IN.A COVERED GAME SLATED FOR 8:15 P. M. | Heavy Football Guns Will Boom | on High School Sector | Throughout State } Football's heavy guns will here Friday night when the Bi. Demons and the Mandan Braves new their gridiron rivalry on the turf at Hughes Field at 8:15 p. m., in the first contest of their annual two-game struggle. Both team rounded out campaign preparations with scrimmage drills Wednesday and both were expected} to engage only ignal drills and; light workouts Thu y to swinging into ac Coach Roy D. McLeod, Demon} mentor, has assumed the role of a drillmaster all week in an effort to iron out some of the defects which cropped out in the game with Glen- dive. | He has been giving his backfield considerable attention in an attemp* to develop a combination with bota speed and drive. Green, Schlicken- meyer and Agre appear to be his most potent weapons with Sorsdahl, Owens and Shafer making a bid for! first string honors. The blocking of | the locals, whjch was poor in th Glendive engagement, still is fault: and McLeod has been working on his backs in an effort to get them to clear the rovd for the ball toters. Captain Sclilickenmeyer is suffering | from a bruised hip and has been tak-| ing things easy this week but is ex-/| pected to be in the lineup when the} Starting whistle blows. | ‘The Demon forward wall has been plugging away at practice and will get an opportunity to prove itself against the strong Mandan line. The Morton county warriers will present a team that was impressive against Linton last week. Veterans in, the aggregation include Eckroth and Dahlquist in the backfield and Berry Byerly, and Syvrud in the line. Dahlquist proved to be bad medi- cine for the locals in their first game with Mandan last year. He ripped off long gains time after time in) spite of the best efforts of the Bis- marck defenses. Syvrud is an end of all-state calibre while Berry and Byerly are linemen with power both on attack and de fense. | boom | rek WAGON !~ THEY LL STEER ME UP TO THE FURNITURE SECTION > TH! To SEE CUPBOARDS, NKING I'M HOUSE OF HOOPLE = By Ahern | BY THE WAY, MDEAR, I WON THAT MONEY AT GAMING-~SO DON'T LET \T BE KNOWN THAT T HAVE ANY, OR THIS HOUSE WILL BE SIEGED BY AN ARMY OF MY CREDITORS / THE 1.0.U. SLIPS ALONE WOULD MAKE A PAPER. BLIZZARD? MOTHETe nupeaRDys),"9 pa 21 | . © 1932 BY WEA SERVICE, INC. RED. U.S. PAT. OFF, Ch Mack Apparently Breaking Up Great Athletic Team; Big Sum Involved New York, Sept. 29.—(4)—Connie Mack, venerable pilot of the Philadel- phia Athletics, has started tearing apart the great baseball machine he drove to three American League flags in 1929, '30 and '31, and the Chicago White Sox, at the same time, have thrown their resources into the mar- ket for players of proved ability. In one of the most startling deals of recent baseball history, Manager Mack announced Wednesday night he had sold outfielders Al Simmons and George (Mule) Haas, and Infielder Jimmy Dykes to the White Sox for cash, The price paid for the three stars Was not annotinced but Sox officials said it was the largest amount of cash they ever have handed out an® probably the greatest sum which ever isox Buy Simmons, Haas and Dykes |WEST HAPPY NODAKS HAVE NO SERIOUS FOE THIS WEEK-END | North Dakota University Squad Riddled By Injuries and | Sickness a = | Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 29.—(™—1 C. A. West, head football coach at the; University of North Dakota, is well| satisfied because he has nothing more| serious than the freshman team to) send his Sioux gridders against this week-end. It has been a long time since a! North Dakota squad was in the dilap- | idated condition of the 1932 outfit. | Completely riddled by injuries and) sickness, preparations for the game | with St. Thomas Oct. 7 and with} The game ts expected to draw ajexchanged hands in the American|Howard university Oct. 15 have been | capacity crowd from the fans of both | cities, Officials of the high school | announced Thursday that season tick- ets for the Bismarck schedule would | be honored at the gate. Other prep school teams in the State will be active over the week- end. Minot, Grand Forks and James- town will be in the spot-light Friday) when they play their third contests of the current campaign. Minot meets Jamestown and Grand Forks will take on Gratton. Devils Lake will resist a delegation of invaders from Fessenden Friday while Fargo will wait until Monday to take on Valley City. | The state football slate is as fol- lows: Thursday New Leipzig at Carson. | Friday i Fessenden at Devils Lake. Minot at Jamestown Mandan at Bismarck. Grafton at Grand Forks. Cooperstown at. Hillsboro at Ca: Sherwood at Bowbel Crosby at Sherwood. Sisseton, S. Dak., at Hankinson. Hazen at Beulah. Cogswell at LaMoure | Sheldon at Lidgerwood. | Edgeley at Lisbon. | Marmarth at Reeder. Turtle Lake at Max. | Sharon at Mayville. | Michigan at Lakota. Ellendale at Oakes. Watford City at Alexander, Garrison at Underwood Mahnomen, Minn., at Casselton. Elgin at Lemmon, S. Dak. Saturday Beach at Baker, Mont. | Rhame at Bowman | Grafton Reserves at Langdon. Ashley at Linton. | Stanley at Mohall. Moorhead, Minn., at Wahpeton. | Washburn at Wilton. Wishek at Eureka, S. Dak. Monday Valley City at Fargo. | id ii TEMPERATURE AT POLE Peary, the explorer, reported a tem- perature ranging from 11 to 30 de-| grees Fahrenheit below zero at the | North Pole. Amundsen reported a} temperature of about 18 degrees at the South Pole. i League. It was estimated the Sox put} around $150,000 on the barrel head. Whether the sale presaged a gener- al breaking up of the present athletic team, Connie Mack would not say. The consensus was, however, the 67-y« old leader had something of the sort | in mind, Just 17 years ago he wrecked a glamorous team because it had be- come satiated with victory. “It means we are through trying to velop a winning team with rookies,” aid Secretary Harry Grabiner. “This is only the beginning. We are going out to get the players we want.” a F i TS LAST IGHT, (By The Associated Press) Portsmouth, Va.—Tommy Baskara, Norfolk, outpointed Ray Collins, Erie,! Pa., (8). Stevens Point, Wis—“Irish” nedy, Iron Mountain, Mich.,, outpoint- ed Ace of Spades, Minneapolis, (10). Ken-} LUCKY TO ESCAPE Boston.—It wasn’t only one car that| Walter C. Johnson ran into—there | | were seven of them along the street | | when the car Johnson was driving came careening down the street. When | he finally had stopped, all seven cars| | and his own were in more or less of a| damaged’ condition. Johnson and} Thomas J. Donahue, a passenger in| the car at the time of the crash, were | arrested for drunkenness. | BLIND—HEARS’ TALKIES Evansville, Ind.—Although he is blind, Alex Hardigg, blind electric supply merchant, enjoys the talkies as much as anyone with good eyesight. | He distinguishes the characters by their voices, and follows the story through to the end without losing the trend. He is a familiar figure in the theaters. SO IT’S SAID | In order to build some of her air- | Ports it was necessary for Siam to organize hunting expeditions to kill | off tigers from the jungle land bor- | | dering the sites before natives would do any work. INTERNATIONAL FINALLOOMS FOR WOMEN’S GOLF TOURNEY ;Glenna Collett Vare and Enid } Wilson Favorites For i Last M Gn ; i Peabody, Mass., Sept. 29.—(7)—The olfing galleryites who demand up- ets for their money probably would ind Thursday’s women’s champion- ip ‘play at the Salem Country club ‘a tame spectacle, for the quarter- finals lineup promised but little in the of surprising reversals. re survivors sof the two play Virginia Van Wie of Chicago, against cate the grand slam made in 1909 by! Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd, who| quit England for Philadelphia several years later. Mrs, Vare had to overcome Peggy Wattles of Buffalo to qualify for the semi-finals and Miss Wilson faced opposition from Charlotte Glutting, the long hitter from Short Hills, N. J. Maureen Orcutt of Haworth, N. J., @ strong bidder for national honors during the last 10 years, had an en- The other clash on the card pitted slowed up to a point where the coach } cannot send his men into scrimmage | Thursday, seven members of the} squad were absent from practice while | eight more in uniforms were unable to take part in any rough work. Lar-|! ry Knauf, regular right wingback, | joined the list of casualties as he doc- | tored a blistered and infected heel. Milton Wick, left tackle, is ill with a cold and unable to even attena| classes, while Bowen, @ sophomore | tackle, went home to bed with a cold) at noon Wednesday. Wills and Murray, two reserve tackles, were absent from practice with colds while Bjorklund, promis- ing end, also is ill. Belgum, soph} back, still is out with a badly sprained | Charlie Ruffing, burly Yankee right- ner Bush had allowed on base, rest- pitched New York to a 12 to ing on second through the medium of ankle and Rip Datelow, blocking back. | did not report because of his injured | leg. with injuries, were Thorson, blocking | back; Meinhover, tackle; Schwartz, end; Cohen and Goethel, tackle; Mc- Corrison, wingback. West had only one sound tackle on his squad. was Kramer, big sophomore. Practice Wednesday was mainly | Signal drill as the coaches sought to jcorrect timing, but both backs and} linemen were given a long session of} tackling practice against freshman | ball carriers. Wins Opener os Charles Ruffing - hander, |6 victory over the Chicago Cubs in li york, hi | the first game of the world series at pulitee lent work but band apied | thervankes ‘Btedivin Wednesday. Cash in With a The Tribune Want Ads ] FOOTBALL SCH EA! Princeton ys. Amherst « | | Teams | rd vs. Buffalo nnsylvania v olumbi di Mary rittsburgl Lawrence fouth € own vs. Mt. St. Mary's.. J New Hampshire . Williams vs Rensselaer Wash.-Jeff. vs. W. Va. Wesleyan Maine vs, Conn. Aggies . . | New York U, vs. Hobart 1... | Northwestern v | Purdue vs. Kal Wisec Michigan M fiami | nee | f . Ohio Wesleyan. . ‘adley Tech South Dakota ; Ic | | i | | do Col, Montana $ Southern Calif. vs. Washington St. Oregon St. vs. Stanford . ee Washington vs, Montana Oregon vs. Santa Cl: Calffornia vs. Ol Oklahoma vs. Tulsa : Texas Christian vs. Daniel Baker ... Texas Tech vs. Southern Methodist. issourl Mines Alabama vs. Mississippi St. . ‘Va. Mil. Inst. vs. Duke jeorgia entucky Virgit Rosalie Knapp, Glenwood, N. Y. ROCKY MOUNTAIN EDULES, OCT. 1 ST Place ++Princeton .. Villanova Washington Williamstow + Washington, Pa Orono. New York AL Jowa City Bloomington Omaha (night Fargo . ; . Louis. i Gnight) Golden Salt Lake City | Los Angeles : Portland \GHIGAGO PITCHERS | + ARE DEMORALIZED -BY ALERT HITTER ' National Champs Got Off to Early Lead But Result Was Inevitable LOU GEHRIG SWATS HOMER Gomez, Facing Warneke, to Try For 10th Straight Series Triumph | ks ‘| New York, Sept. 29.—-()—Thanks to | an old established act, as dependable for drama, thrills, and the triumph of virtue as was “East Lynne” back in the gas-lit days, tne Yankees were booming azain. along the victory trail ‘Thursday, possessor of their ninth ; Straight world series triumph. Just when the skies were darkest in more ways than one, when it seemed as though Guy Bush was well on the way to breaking up an act that flour- ished through the post-season cham- Pionship struggles of 1926, 1927 and } 1928, the team of Babe Ruth and Lou | Gehrig rose in its might, smote the ; transgressor, and shattered the morale of the Chicago Cubs in the opening } game of the world series. At the end of a stormy day, next to | the poorest in the matter of attend- | ance a Yankee world series ever | known, a day that started ina rain-| | Julia Wants Babe || To Knock Homer |' Thursday if his step-daughter, Ju- {| lia, has anything to do with it. He|| The tall, 15-year-old girl with || big brown eyes like her mother's, || postponed going back to school to see her first world series games. “Babe's going to knock a homer,” she said. “because I've got to go back to my, studies Monday, I sure | the games there but I'm out of luck as far as that jaunt goes.” “Babe didn't do so badly,” sald Julia after the opening game, “but it didn’t loox very good for our side in the first few innings. I thought sure the Cubs were going to win any minute.” “Yes,” interjected Mrs. Ruth, “I was terribly nervous but I'm al- Ways nervous until the last man’s out. It takes us time to get start- ed, but when we do, there's no stopping us. Both were confident of victory | for the Yankees. || three hits. Before the lanky south- By Williams | WELL, TH PADDIN' 1S ON TH’ DOOR ANTINI TH! KEYHOLE $0 I CANT HEAR YOU HOLLERIN! AN OU HAFFTA COME UP To WAKE ME~AN' WHEN TH’ Door PUSHES TH ROPE, IT CLosesS, “TH WINDER AN’ OPENS TH’ HEATER I SHOULON' OF TOLD You cuz, IF YOU THINW I GIT A LOT OF GOOO OLTA SUMPN ,4Ouo TRY TO FIND A WAY AROUND IT. { OUT OUR WAY WHAT Hind OF A_CRACH-BRAIN STUNT 1S “THis, Now ? Millers Even Little World Series Jess Petty Master of Situation! ciubs nefore they (the Sox) have New York, Sept. 29.—(?)—The |! Babe's going to knock a homer | would like to go to Chicago to see | jerner left the premises in favor of the grizzled Grimes, a fielder’s choice scored Gehrig and another walk filled the bases again. Then it ‘was that '|Earle Combs banged a single off | Grimes, scoring two more. Thus did eight runs ride home on four hits. |! The Cubs caught ruffing slightly off guard at the start and Bill Her- |{man’s opening single, Woody Eng- ||lish’s safe drive to right that went ||through Ruth's legs for a two-base error, and the first of three singles iby Riggs Stephenson; veteran of the Chicago outfield, bounced two quick Tuns across. | breezed to the seventh inning, fanning along the way eight of the 10 men he {turned back all told on strikes, just | three less than the world series strike- || out record. Both managers nominated starting ||pitchers for Thursday early. Vernon | Gomez, crack youthful southpaw, was |; McCarthy's choice and Lon Warneke, j| the sensational youngster of the Cub |i staff, the hope of Charlie Grimm to | {even the series before the two teams Ruffing settled there, however, and’ as Minneapolis Beats Newark 3-2 Newark, N. J., Sept. 29—()—The Newark Bears and Minneapolis Mil- lers, champions of the International League and American Association, re- spectively, had a day of rest Thursday after two games of little world series shade of advantage. After losing the opener by a one- sided score, the Millers landed on even terms by winning the second game, 3 to 2, under lights Wednesday night, and Thursday Manager Donie Bush had ample opportunity to make careful plans for the third and final battle at Ruppert stadium Friday, after which the teams will move to Minneapolis to finish the series. Seemingly at a disadvantage as the result of using four veteran hurlers in ths opener against Don Brennan, ace of the Bears, Bush Wednesday night shoved gray-topped Jess Petty, 41- competition that gave neither team a| fused ---- |outside corner, and belted it far on a ‘|| that had pranced into battle, cocky! , |{run lead off burley Charley Ruffing, |of the American League champions. | But the final score told nothing of the | | successive games. | Ruth Marches To Plate | It was Ruth, just recovered from al mild attack of appendicitis, who | marched to the plate in the fourth in- | ning with the Cubs leading 2 to 0, and) Earle Combs, the first Yankee run-' ‘a base on balls and an infield out. The Babe smashed a long single to; iright and the grey-haired Kentucky {Colonel raced home. ltramped to the plate. The count|* ;Teached 3 and 2. He laid into the ‘deciding pitch, a “screw” ball on the ||line into the deep reaches of the right field stands. The Yankees led 3 to 2, and the game might just as well have ended there. | That home run smash unsettled | Bush, king pin of the Cub curvers, ||and shattered the morale of a team and confident, to grab a quick two- | best of the Yankee right-hand pitch- | ers. Bush lost his control and his; stuff. His mates faltered behind him. And the game wore on to its inevit- able conclusion, a dreary, pointless | {sort of duel, like two friends boxing | \for the fun of it, Ruth and Gehrig.: |their work done, faded into the} |background of the general scramble. | Only 41,459 Spectators Only 41,459 spectators, far under the record for world series attendance | set at 63,000 by the Yankees in 1926,/ braved a chilly rainy morning and! the decreasing showers that delayea| the start of the opening game 15 min-| \lutes, to see the highly-favored Yan- kees tear away to an impressive start. It wasn't so much that the Yan- kees, famed for their hitting array ||overpowered the Cubs as was expect- | led. or that the giant red-headed Ruf-: ||fing handcuffed the National League | hitters with his fireball and crackling) curve. Neither of those things hap-} pened. ¢ The Cubs, as a matter of fact, banged Rufus. the Red briskly in spots, but only after the Yanks had) ||sprinted far to the front. The Bruins} picked up 10 hits, among them a pair of doubles and a triple, while the men {jof Joe McCarthy touched Bush, and his successors, Burleigh Grimes and Bob Smith, for only eight. Instead the Yankees took advan- tage of every lapse in the Cub de- afflicted both Bush af the end of his stay, and Grimes during his brief re- upon him when he. stood on the Car- dinal peak last fall and twice whipped the champion Athletics. Patiently little Joe Sewell, Ruth and Gehrig waited in the sixth in- ning for bases on balls. Not until ths sacks were filled did the Yanks count their third hit off Bush. But when a ‘hit was most, after Lazzeri had out, Bill Dickey smashed a single to right and two more runs were in. Five On Three Hits ‘That was a total of jfive runs on fense, of the streaks of wildness that| 4 j-——. —jleave Thursday night to resume the storm and ended in glistening sun-/battle in three straight games start- shine, the score stood 12 to 6 in favor | ing on the Chicago front Saturday. Koenig Aggravated Injury | Only one possible change appeared gawdy return to world series play of ;in the lineups. Koenig aggravated the heroes of 1927 and 1928 when the |his damaged wrist sliding into third Yankees won two world titles from | in the eighth inning and Bill Jurges the Pirates and Cardinals in eight | was scheduled to replace him at short- | Stop in the Bruin array. The probable lineups: Cubs Herman, 2b English, 3b Cuyler, rf Stephenson, If Demaree, cf Grimm, 1b Hartnett, c Koenig or Jurges, ss Crosettt, Warneke, p Lou Gehrig Gomez, Box Score of Wednesday Tilt Chicago (N)— MULES x—Batted for Grim Herman, 2b English, 3b . g New York (A)— Combs, cf | Sewell, 3b Ruth, rf Gohrig, 1b Lazzeri, 2! Dickey, ¢ Chapman, ® ... Crosetti, ss . Ruffing, p Score Runs Ruth, Gehrig 2, Dickey 2, Chapman | 2, Combs 2, Lazzeri, Koenig, Herman, Hartnett turn to the spotlight that last shone fins) Bl wwe eenwan by innings— Chicago .. New York Two-base hits—| Yankee! Gombs, cf! ager Al Mamaux to start Wednesday Sewell, 3b| fifth. th Ruth, rf night, weakened in the fifth. In the Gehrig, 1b Lazzeri, 2b Dickey, ¢ Chapman, If year-old ex-major league southpaw, into the breach. And Petty, who used his speed for the Bears during part of the 1930 season, was good enough to go the nine-inning stretch and be- ifuddle the young Bruins completely. Given only seven-hit support by his mates, Petty was pretty nearly the whole show. He caused 11 Newark batters to whiff the air for strikeouts, not a man, and granted only five hits. ‘S| Harry Holsclaw, the choice of Man- sixth two runs gave Petty all he need- ed to register his winning classic. Pete Jablonowski is expected to per- form on the mound for Newark in the third game Friday, with Dutch Henry, SS/ another left-hander, his probable op- P| ponent. ——_—___—___________» ‘|? SPORT SLANTS ||: | o : By ALAN GOULD ‘®;| Jack Sharkey is the heavyweight E but you vy 4 some of the fistic fans in and around 0| the territory that has seen many & Scrapper come and go since the well: fixers within the last 10 years. RED SOX REMEMBER Babe Ruth’s prospective entry into the world’s series arena for the tenth EE Eee, F f : i z 3 | GE5E ret te : i chance to get started. sass NO FAIR KEEPING El Paso, Tex.—Francisco Cassay didn’t mind Ezequiel Valbuena sere- nading his wife. In fact, he rather liked the guitar playing Valbuena did under his wife’s window. “But Val- buena, got to climbing on the roof and Peeping in at my wife at night,” Cas- say told police. When Valbuena re- to go, Cassay got the coppers to put him in the jug. —_—_—_—_—_——_———___ * SUMMONS. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County, of Burleigh. : IN DISTRICT COURT, Fourth Judi- cial District. Gladys Nelson, Plaintitf, vs. Bert Nelson, Defendant. THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned to an- swer the complaint of the plaintiff in the above entitled action, which said complaint is filed in the office of the clerk of the district court of Burleigh County, North Dakota, and to serve a copy of your answer thereto upon the subscriber hereto at his office in the city of Bismarck, in Burleigh County, North Dakota, ‘within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of such service; and in case of your failure to appear or answer as above required the plaintiff will take judgment. against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, this 7th day of September, A. D. 1932, Geo, M. Register, Attorney for said Plaintiff, Office and Postoffice Address, Webb Block, Bismarck, North Dakot 9-15-22-29-10-6-13-20, NOTICE - OF MORTGAGE FORE. CLOSURE SALE Default having been made in the Payment of interest when due and the agsignee of mortgages having duly declared the whole amount of the mortgage due and delinquent, No- tice is hereby given that That’ cer- tain mortgage executed and delivered by George A. Tuthill and Ruth Tuthill, is wife, as ‘mortgagors, to The Mar- 11 McCartney Company, a corpors tion, as Mortgagee, dated May 14, 1928, ‘and recorded in’ the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh Coun- ty, North Dakota, on May 16, 1928 at 3:00 o'clock P. M. in Book 193 of Mortgages on page and which mortgage was duly instrument in writing gagee to Dora Runals, as assignee of Mortgage, dated June 2, 1928, and recorded in the offico of said R r of Deeds on July 18, 1932 at 9:00 o'clock A. M. in Book 175 of Mort- fase on page 691, will be foreclosed y a sale of the ‘premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the Court House in the City of Bismarck and State of North Dakota at, tw: scribed in said mortgage and which will be sold to s: ae same are described as follow: Vest Half (W%) of Sec- tion Two (2), Township One Hundred Thirty Nine (139), North of Ranj Bighty (80) West and situa! leigh County North Dak. ill be due on such mortgas day of sale the sum of Hundred Thirty Five Dollar: Thirty Cents ($1735.30), bes: costs of this foreclosure. D' of intention to foreclo pose has been given as aw. Dated September 6, 1932. Dora Runals, Assignee of Mortgagem nee of Mortgage. North. Dek Ste! Det. 6-13, 1932q, REQUEST FOR BIDS DEPARTMENT OF STATE HIG! aAxs Proposals for furnishing maint nance equipment will be received tat ight | he Stat Highways at Bismarck, North Dako’ not later than 10 o'clock A. M., tober 7, 1932, at which time and-pla they will be publicly opened and The proposals must to o Departs A. P. Guy, Attorney for P.O, Addres: Sept. 8-15-22-29 of the vai} otherwise deposited with the ibe ment of State Highwa: at Bi sealed endorsed “Proposal for pened AT cortitica shosk Tor 6%. toneth lor with = bidders bond in’ the. ful ¢ the gross sum bid, mi each propos: price bid fete include prepaid freight to point of destinati Contemplated purchases consist of the followin; 6 Moto: pe the proposal »! er obtain Bltmarek, North Dakots. All biddi no be termined te be for the bent in @ ‘State, STATE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENY By innon