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1 vce pnprses etch on 9 an “GAPITAL CITY TEAM | IS UNABLE 10 COPE ‘(Midwest and Bismarck Threatened Only, "day. “or knock THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1932 Minot Magicians Ro ! NODAKS SLASH STUBBORN TOMMI | Northwestern - Michigan and | Minnesota-Purdue Con- tests Inviting WITH FOBS’ ATTACK Weakness in Kicking Game Puts 1 ear)? i Roy M Leod s Eleven uy New York, Oct. 8.—()—A series of Hole Often ‘important conference clashes in the --- ~~ | midwest and south, the opening shot of Notre Dame's 1932 campaign and an intersectional struggle at New Haven between Yale and Chicago | headed the nation’s football slate Sat- JARRETT’S TEAM IMPROVED | Michigan and Northwestern, rated Once, When Boelter Nabbed | with Purdue the strongest outfits in jthe Big Ten, were matched at Ann Pass From Green | Arbor in the outstanding mid-western | battle of the day. Purdue met Bernie | Bierman’s Minnesota Gophers in an- ‘other conference battle only slightly less important. Minot, N. D.. Oct. 8.—vP)—A grea ly improved Minot t school foot- ball squad romped over the Bis! Demons 28 to 0 Friday fourth win of the The pleas fans was the back, who ca team when D; Virginia Poly in its first start last week, was called upon to face mighty Tulane in the southern conference's st game, Tulane was an over- wheiming favorite. The Ramblers of Notre Dame, ap- parently as strong as ever, drew the Hassell Indians as their opening op- ponents and the only question seemed to involve the size of the score. night for its | season. i at surprise for Minot g of Salo, half- V6 ajured in the week ago. He was a ' the Chicago-Yale contest drew plenty of general interest. Chicago's “grand old man,” Alonzo Stagg, was bringing his Maroons east to face his Alma in the hlichenmey eae in the Bisma Mater. Stagg himself said his 1932 i eld taking the hon- Chicago outfit was the best in years | ors coe nd Yaie. tied by little Bates, was only Mino! d. The | gy vored, first touchdown came the Other outstanding pairings in the east were Columbia and Princeton, Dartmouth and Lafayette, Fordham and Bucknell and New York university and Rutgers. Five eastern elevens faced teams from other sections, Syracuse meeting Ohio Wesleyan, rmy battling Carleton, Navy tack- ng Washington & Lee, Cornell meet- ¢ Richmond and George Washing- ton battling Alabama's powerful ar- after a drive rd line, with He added the rom 40-y don its own punt on the | ine. Another drive resulted counter when Hannaford went off tackle from the four-yard line. Leirbo hit the line for the extra point. | A poor Bismarck punt in the third | period g: Minot possession of the | ~ ball on the Bismarck 38-yard mark- | TY: The RO pI ne ead Put. Ot | MINNESOTA UNDERDOG ve |IN GAME WITH PURDUE is way to a teuchdown, | , Arnold drop-kicked for the extra|_ Minneapolis, Oct. 8—(/P)—Coach point. ;Bernie Bierman’s first Minnesota The fourth touchdown came when j football team entered Big Ten com- @ Bismarck punt was blocked and/ petition Saturday against Purdue, co- Fawbush recovered for Minot on the champion of 1931. Bismarck 14-yard line. Four plays| The Gophers were the underdogs. brought the ball to the two-yard line; The ace fullback, Jack Manders, was from where Lierbo crashed over. - to start for the Gophers. Smart Kicked the extra point. Purdue came with a team made up Bismarck opened an aerial attack|largely of veterans from last year's late in the game but Minot had a! strong aggregation. It trimmed Kan- | good defense and either intercepted|sas State 29 to 13 last week. d down the attempts. Late| ‘The probable lineups: in the game Boelter snared a Purdue Pos. Minnesota from en and it looked as thou; Moss le ‘Tenner he was loose for a touchdown. He was! Husar It Gay tackled, however, after dashing 35] Letsinger le Bruhn yards. Oehle} c Oen Miuot had little trouble in gaining} Peters tS Koski | through the Demon line. - | Ungers rt Wells , marck agereg did_not click as! Merz re Robinson smoothly as previous Demon teams| pardonner ab Griffin have and lacked power except for line} Hecker lh Lund smashes by Green. Basis th Haas Horstmann tb Manders pra 4 Defeated e ' WILDCAT-WOLVERINE yz erdeen Eleven) rivatry 1s INTENSE Aberdeen, S. D., Oct. 8.—(.P)}—Aber- Geen avenged a stinging defeat last year, flashed the form that won them a state title in 1931, and made the Pageant Day homecoming complete by routing the Fargo, N. D., eleven, 19 to 7 Friday. One perfect play, one extraordinay forward pass, and a sustained dri aecounted fcr the Golden Eage’ scores. In the first pe when Trish tt atter of three or four disputed Big Ten football championshps was ex- pected to goad the two squads on when University of Michigan and Northwestern university met for the first time since 1926 at Michigan sta- (dium Saturday afternoon. For the crowd, expected to number 70,000, the game marked an early sea- ‘son climax, from championship consideration Aberdeen scored faced the loser. Feeling between the Fargo, after being held on the one- tle in the mud” 3 to 2. Ties for yard line for four downs, came back championship in 1926, 1930 and 1931. shortly with a similar heave, Doherty| Purdue sharing in the latter, added to Kerlluk, to even the score. Olsen's fuel to the rivalry. dropkick put the Midgets ahead. Probable lineups: Hifflett, Aberdeen speedster, raced | Northwestern Pos. Michigan 40 yards off tackle on a triple pass| Manske le toskey behind the line to give Aberdeen a 12) Riley It Wistert to 7 advantage at half time. Dilley Ig Kowalik In the third period a 40-yard sus-, Weldin ce Bernard tained drive ended in a touchdown for Kinder rf Cantril Aberdeen, when Biegle plunged over./ Gonya rt May passed to Fossum for the point. Fencl re Williamson Fargo threatened constantly, Doh- Potter ab Newman exty proving exceptionally dangerous, Sullivan Ih Heston but the Eagle defense arose to the oc-' Rentner rh Fay casion in all instances. | Olson fo Regeczi ‘The capital of the 88 banks in the The first school in the city of New United States in 1811 was about $42,- | York was started in 1663 by the Re- 600,000. formed Dutch church. OUR BOARDING HOUSE In the south, Georgia, beaten by | i For sentimental reasons, if no other, ince probable elimination; them is in position to reach the ball ¢ pigskin 40 yards’ two schools has grown steadily since) into the waiting arms of Lenhart, but! 1925, when Northwestern won a “bat-/ South Have Big Games| | | i} Sammy Byrd (above), New York Yankee reserve outfielder, kisses i the bride (his own) after their wed bride, the former Rachel E, Smit! | HOME RUNS FOR DICKEY AND BYRD ding in New York. Sammy and his h, were childhood sweethearts in Birmingham, Ala. The following day his teammate Bill Dickey, Yankee eatcher. married Violet Arnold, a dancer, (Associated Press Photos) Flying Wedge From Opening Formation Is Prevented By Innovation ' | i ! This is the last of four explaining the football rules changes, written especially for the Associated Press). i By WILLIAM 8S. LANGFORD (Secretary, National Football Rules Committee) k, Oct. 8—P—The changes| jin the kick-off rule which also apply |to free kicks (1) allow for a drop- kick, if preferred to a place-kick and | (2) requiring at least five players of the receiving team to remain in 4} |. New Ann Arbor, Mich., Oct. 8.—("\—The | zone between their own 45-yard line|Dakota, the largest di | and the 50-yard line until the kick- off has actually been made. As soon} jas the ball has been kicked they ma | |retire to form interference for the | ponents, Under a third provision, the recci’ ing team is accorded the opportunity; of making a fair catch and if any of ‘before it touches the ground he has the right of way and players of the; icker's team must keep out of his | Way so as not to interfere with his | opportunity: | If they should interfere, the fair catch is aw d whether or not the \ball is actually caught and a 15-yard Penalty also is imposed. This change | places the rights of the opposing! jteams on kick-offs and free-kicks ir: practically the same category as on} \kicks from scrimmage. The regulations governing equip- Damm ment now prohibit the wearing of) knee and elbow pads which are made of any hard or unyielding substance and require that the outside surfaces “{ hard thigh and shin guards and braces must be covered with a soft padding at least three-cighths of an inch in thickness. This rule also ‘makes it mandatory for all players to wear soft knee pads. By Ahern TF - THE DOCTore SAID THE KZ REMEMBER TH BUMP I GAVE MY HEAD CAUSED A SLIGHT re, S CONCUSSION™ AND ‘) WELL, L WAS BEIN WEARING THIS ICE-PACK | TAKEN TO TH’ GOW WILL CLEAR 1T UPS FOR SUMPIN OR BUT ITS NOTHING, COMPARED To THE BLOW MY HEAD GOT IN A SWISS AVALANCHES. —s HITS A RUT ~~ BOomP GOES MY \F THEY DIDN'T BOOK ME ON { OL DAYS OF TH HORSE PATROL WAGONS 2 OTHER ~~ TH’ PADDY HEAD ON TH’ ROOF, AN’ I GO DIZZIER THAN A TOP—~AN' HANG ME |runback or advance to block the op ee exceed $8. KICK-OFF RULES REVAMPED TO __ INCREASE SAFETY ON GRIDIRON: 3,000 Partridges ' To Be Distribute | Throughout State, ' 1,500 Pair Have Been Ordered By State Game and Fish Department | Contracts have been closed for pur-'line. Pierce scored on a lateral from | 900, packing the Garden to the eaves, | jchase of 1,500 pairs of Hungarian the eight-yard line. partridges to be distributed in North | made in the state, Burnie Maurek, nounced Saturday. The contract calls for payment not a pair, f. 0. b., live 'y guaranteed on board cars at y. The firm of Horacek lovakia is furnishing the Nn, Dak. Pos are expected to arrive in G. Dablow le Bilski | Of the ring, could defy the oldest law th Dakota the middle of Novem- | wick It Vesovich Of the ring. ber. Malo le Frawley | They saw him muster much of his The birds are selected stock from} Sauer i Murphy | 0ld skill and, just once, enough of his| northern rope, Maurek said. He! Gehrke rg Lane | Old punching power to drive the dyna- declared that great care must be ta-! Meinhover rt Adams | Mite-laden McLarnin to his knees for n curing partridges, as many | schwartz re Schneider | the flash of a second in the first ve been made previously | Revell qb Chukker | round, then fade as he had to even- by game and fish departments by| Knauf th Walsh | tually into the helplessness of the merely purchasing Hungarian part-' R, Dablow rh McGee | Sixth. To most of them, at least, the | ridges, without determining the area | Leidholdt fb ‘Weides | Comeback trail had ended. r ich they come. Officials: Mickelson, referee; Kim-| In plowed McLarnin, the killer, Many of the southern Europe birds | imported into the northern part of | the United States have shown a large | mortality, resulting because the birds could not be acclimated to the severe winters, Maurek said. The birds will be distribuied in central and eastern | North Dakota. | | Maurek said the contract calls for ‘the right of North Dakota to reject | jor accept any or all of the birds. The | price, foi easonable, he said, been made for a similar type. The birds breed twice a year coveys averaging 18. Devils Lake Trims in Zh TAEM CRACKS ON TH TILE 15 SOMETIMES BAD. LATER ON! TAKE MY UNCLE wwA BRICK FALL, IT WAS~~RIGHT ON TH’ KANOODLE ~- TIVE YEARS LATER HE GOES GALLOPIN' AROUND, SAYIN’ HE'S PAUL REVERE nr § i ’ i, Jamestown by 19- N. D., Oct. Lake won its fourth of the season and Deviis Lake, De 8—P)— shutout its firs: ‘tory ‘conference game here Friday night, winning over Jamestown 19 to 0, The Satans p! d superior bali throughout the game, keeping the pigskin Jamestown territory con- tinually. The Bluejays made six first downs nd the Lakers 1!. Both | teams lost. yardage on penalties, with Jamestown the heavier loser. Eldon ‘Hunchy) Rutten, all star ‘halfback, ledgthe team until replaced lin the third period when hurt. Rut- ten ran 20 yards through tackle for the first ccunter in the opening quar- ter after a march downfield and passed to Stevens in the second period for another touchdown. Chuck Wood raced around end for the final coun- |ter midway in the fourth quarter aft- \er Bud Jensen carried the ball 50 yards on an off-tackle play to put the ball in a scoring position. Bill Burck- hard made one place kick for goa! good in three tries. CARRINGTON ELEVEN WINS Carrington, N. D., Oct. 8—(>)— Carrington high school defeated Hills- boro’s football team 18 to 0 in their engagement here. The victory gave | Carrington its second win in three | games played and was Hillsboro’s first | setback this season. PITCHER IS RECOVERING Chicago, Oct. 8—(#)—Pitcher Tom- |my Thomas, who was traded by the | Chicago American league baseball club |t@ the Washington Senators, is re- ;cuperating from an operation on his | pitehing arm for relief from a locked Neat VICTORS SHOW ONLY. OCCASIONAL SPURTS OF OFFENSIVE PUSH | Cadet Eleven Might Have Scor- ed Once Except For Fum- ble on Goal-Line OUT OUR WAY LARRY KNAUF PROVES STAR Three Speedy Sioux Backs Get Loose For Long Runs to Shoot Score Up | Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 8—(7)— (North Dakota university's football | team defeated a stubborn St. Thomas jeleven 27 to 0 Friday night, showing jonly occasional flashes of offensive | power as the Tommies played almost {entirely on the defensive. Knauf, veteran halfback, led x, turning in a great game ring twice. His 54-yard touch- unt in the third quarter was a feature. The Cadets made only one scoring | gesture and but for a costly fumble, might have crossed the Nodak goal line. A long pass late in the third quarter, Higgins to Schuverller, was good for yard gain and placed the ball on the North Dakota 10-yard line. Higgins made five yards in two plays, then Weides went to the one- HOH, Doctor ! THAT AINT. TH Guy WHO'S ‘UN CONSCIOUS ! THAT GUY'S WORKIN! — OVER HERES TH’ ONE WE CALLED YOU FER. yard line, where he fumbled and North Dakota recovered, Pierce punted out of danger and the threat was over. }. Walsh, brilliant St. Thomas half- back, was the visitors’ star, His pass ing, kicking and ball-carrying con- stituted all the Tommies’ offense un- til he played himself out. St. Thomas kept the Nodaks back! in their own territory most of the first quarter and it was not until the clos- ing minutes of the period that North | Dakota shoved over its first score on | Bill Leidholdt’s sparkling 75-yard run. Walsh kicked over the Nodak goal, giving the University the ball on its own 20-yard line. Knauf picked up| {essing gown his royal robes. five yards at right tackle, then Leid-| “It's nice,” said Benny Leonard, holdt found a big hole at right guard, |OMce one of the greatest of all light- | broke out in the open and ran to the|Welghts, “to lose occasionally. All |St. Thomas goal as his mates block- |Your old friends come in to see you. led the Tommies’ secondary. {They don’t bother when you win.” | Knauf missed his place-kick for the | Jextra point and the quarter ended with North Dakota ahead 6 to 0. rs The Tommies opened up with a|@ tumultuous six-round | passing attack Much For Former Light- weight Champion New York, Oct. 8—(#)—A ring phil- osopher sat upon the bare rubbing table that was his throne, a ragged lheaves, returning to the St. Thomas! Garden Friday night. /25-yard line. Knauf made 11 yards! to put the Nodaks ahead 13-0. j Started. I can lick a lot of fellows, A fumble by Walsh on a lateral pass|™@ybe even McLarnin, before I’m play led to the next score, Knauf re-; through. covering on the St. Thomas 19-yard| Out in the arena the crowd of 18,- | were cheering two earnest youths, bat- One well-executed play was the only {ling the night out in @ semi-final. stribution ever difference between the two teams in| They were young, eager. They shook! the third quarter, After Walsh had / Off punches, dealt terrific blows. And ate game and fish commissioner, an-| kicked out of bounds on the North|bY comparison, Leonard looked very|game, hitting well over 300 and Dakota 44-yard line, the Nodaks shook | ld indeed. Knauf loose on an off-tackle jaunt of |, But that crowd of 18,000 had come 56 yards and a touchdown. He kicked |to see Leonard, hoping the miracle the extra point. jcould happen, that @ veteran of 36, The lineups: ‘whipped back into condition by a Jimmy M’Larnin’s Youth Too) NAME JOE CRONIN MANAGER So it was that the new Leonard, a} |shadow of the old, shrugged away the|been named manager of the Wash- | first defeat of his comeback campaign, eens) technical in the second quarter | knockout at the hands of fiery young |and Pierce intercepted one of Walsh's | Jimmy McLarnin, in Madison Square |S#id Cronin had been given a one- “I wasn’t badly hurt at all,” he said on the next play and scored on an off- | Smilingly as friends crowded around tackle play. He added the extra point Dim. “I was timid. I couldn't get| St. Thomas / Score of bouts after seven years out} Was annuounced this week by Grif- mp Over Bismarck Demons for 28-90 Win ES FOR 27 TO 0 VICTORY By Williams | i TRL, SLIGHTLY MISTAWEN —VERY SUGHTLY. | ‘Leonard Knocked Out in Sixth Round OF WASHINGTON SENATORS | |26-Year-Old Shortstop Chosen ; to Succeed Walter John- | son as Pilot Washington, Oct. 8.— (?)— Joseph Cronin, youthful star shortstop has ington American League baseball club to succeed Walter Johnson. Clark Griffith, owner of the club, |year contract. In naming the young short top leader of the Senators, Griffith fol- lowed the precedent set several years ago in naming Stanley “Bucky” Harris, young second-baseman, a3 ;manager. Harris led Washington to lits only world championship, Cronin came to the Senators in |1928 and became a regular that sea- son. Once a fixture in the lineup he be-/ came one of the best infielders in the/ fielding sensationally. Only 26, he! will be the youngest manager in the major leagues. | The release of Walter Johnson, ! jmanager of the Senators since 1929, ' fith. Saints Are Beaten, By Hazen Gridders: ball, umpire; Hall, head linesman. Score by period: St. Thomas ........0 0 0 0-0 North Dakota 6 14 7 0-27 Scorin Touchdowns—Knauf 2, Pierce, Leidholdt. Points after touch-j} downs—Knauf 3, place-kicks. Sub- stitute: North Dakxota—Frederick, Pierce, Goethel, Mahowald, Cope, Thoreson, Winslow, O'Connor, Tate, | Eckholm, Gustafson, Bjorklund, the type of part-| Kramer, Neuenschwaner, Huddleson, | Trombley. St. Thomas-Wilson, Mc- as payment as high as $16 a pair has| Guyire, Schuverller, Higgins, Dowling. | 0sopher, as his trainer rubbed his neck ® Grid Questions as Seen by Jack West | —_—___—_—___—# (Editor's note: This is the sixth of a scries of articles on football rules and strategems written for The Tribune by Jack West, head football coach at the University | of North Dakota.) ° * OK TACTICS AND STRATEGY Question Pittsburgh (2); Bobby Pacho, El Cen- | 84ns. | When should a quick kick be used?jtro, Calif, and Frankie Klick, Sanj_ Barrett at center played a bang-up | Answer | Francisco, drew (8). ; Same for St. Mary's, both on the at- | A quick kick is a surprise play and |can only be called when the defense |is caught napping. An alert quarter- back, noticing that the defensive quick kick. Such a kick, sailing over the safety man’s head works a psy- | chological influence on the defensive team, GRID RULES Question Player of Team A (offensive team) team’s safety man is too close to the | phia, outpointed Johnny Datto, Pitts- line of scrimmage should call for 8! burgh (0). Imps Will Swing Into Action Against Turtle Lake Ag- gregation Tonight crowding the old man of 36. Benny jSet himself, whipped a right upper- jcut to the young Irishman’s heart, | flashed his left hook to the chin. McLarnin’s knees buckled. For one startled second he started to the floor. | But he barely touched it before he was up again, breathing fury, tossing de-! struction with both hands. Benny| fended him off, but just as the round: ended Jimmy reached Leonard’s chin | with a short right hook. | “And that punch,” said the _phil- Haven rolled up four touchdowns to defeat the gridiron forces of St. Mary's, 28 to 0, in a game played on sogey turf at Hughes Field Friday afternoon. It was the second time this seasct | the Mercer county aggregation had} jbeaten the locals who were on the} short end of a 13 to 0 score in a game at Hazen two weeks ago. { The invaders chalked up their} {with jee and smoothed the swelling | rst touchdown in the first period \from a spot above his right eye, “was followin, os ig a sustained march down the the punch that really did all the dam-| tieiq on ‘@ succession of power plays. jage.” They tallied again the second stanza . =e when SearaE Hipoed yet 55 Hig ’ '. A | through a broken for a counter. || Fights Last Night pi After a scoreless third period, Hazen oo | went ahead under full steam and! New York—Jimmy McLarnin, Van-| Pushed the ball over for two more j couyer, stopped Benny Leonard, New| touchdowns, scoring both times on | |York (6); Teddy Yarosz, Pittsburgh, | Teverses. { jand Eddie Kid Wolfe, Memphis.) Schwartz was the dynamite in) ;Tenn., drew (10); Baby Joe Gans,|Haven’s attack, consistently running |California, knocked out Eddie Moore, | through the Saint's defense for long) | tack and def Boston—Andy Callahan, Lawrence,| lefense. He broke through Mace, cutooinied tou Brouitlard,| the line to smear opposition plays Worcester, Mass., (12). cane nie ne maeiee aries weieh ai Z , and was the ‘ari Pittsburgh—Lew Massey, Philadel-| of the local’s forward wall. The Imps will go into action to- night at Hughes Field against Turtle Lake. It will be the first game of the current season for the Bismarck reserve contingent. The contest is rie capa to get under way at 7:30 Hollywood, Calif. — Vearle White- heat, California, outpointed Milo Mil- leti, Omaha, (10). | San Diego— Cowboy Charlie Cobb. San Diego, outpointed Mike Payan. San Diego (10). | fumbles the ball near the side lines. The ball touches a player of Team B (defensive team) who is standing on the sideline, the ball remaining in the field of play where it is recovered by leans, draw, Francisco, Cleveland (3). @; ‘The ruling would be: Team A’s ball | 15 yards from the spot where the player of Team B who touched the ball was in contact with the sideline. Alice has 12 penties (twice as mnany as Betsy), Wilma has eight pennies WILL MANAGE SEXTET \ Buffalo, N. ¥., Oct. 8.—()—Frank | Nighbor, who led the Buffalo Bison to the International Hockey league |. championship last season, has agreed | to manage them again this year. H Horses, like elephants and many | other animals, have the power of | | Mere while standing up. | t {reed 2 many ot Nc) Ley has six pennies (three-fourths as many as Wilma), San Francisco — Paul Negri, San Francisco, and Bobby Cox, New Or- Joe Bernal, San stopped Billy Hughes, layer of Team B. Whose ball?) °——[7-7—-, ~~; ®| wahpeton Science defeated the Val- Where? | Stickler Solution || ty city state teacners college 31 to 0 Answer a —_———-¢@/| in the opening North Dakota Inter- By Wahpeton Science Valley City, N. D., Oct. 8—(P}— collegiate Conference game for both teams Friday night. ’ | A drizzling rain resulted in a slip- | pery field and frequent fumbling. The Wildcats scored touchdowns in each of the first two quarters and three in the fourth period. Valley City’s green team was unable to muster an effec- tive offensive against Wahpeton’s Valley City Beaten | - = cRERTERGDE | Named Manager | ———— JOE CRONIN Bush Stands Pat on Offer to Cincinnati Minneapolis, Oct. §—()—Unless he makes a deal to manage the Cincin- nati National League club, Donie Bush said Saturday he would return next year to seck another American Association championship for the Minneapolis Millers. Bush said he was “standing pat” on. his proposition to Sidney Weil, presi- dent of the Cincinnati Reds, for a three-year contract at $25,000 a year. Plans for Minneapolis’ 1933 team al- ready are being made by Bush, who lost the little world series to Newark of the International League. ——_—_—__—_____¢ Football Scores | ° ee ——_- COLLEGES Augsburg 8; Hamline 13. Waukon, Ia., Junior 0; Rochester Junior 32. St. Mary's, Winona, 26; St. Nor- berts 0. St. Thomas 0; North Dakota Uni- versity 27. Eau Claire Teachers 6; Teachers 34, Augustana, Sioux Falls 13; Manka- to Teachers 25. Aberdeen Northern Normal 0; Su- perior Teachers 7. St. Johns University 7; Gustavus Adolphus 0. Wahpeton Science 31; Valley City Teachers 0. High Schools Minot 28; Bismarck 0. Devils Lake 19; Jamésown 0. Winona 'SPTS ADD High School Scores Grafton 6; Hillsboro 0. Bowman 0; Baker, Mont., 0. Carrington 65; Maddock 0. Lidgerwood 6; Oakes 0. Larimore 20; Cooperstown 13. Lakota 36; Aneta 0. Watertown, 8. D., (Sioux Falls) 6 (tie). Aberdeen, 8S. D., 19; Fargo, N. D. 7. Hazen 28; St. Mary’s (Bismarck) 0, ———— 6; Cathedral BOARD OF STATE CAPITOL COMMISSIONERS Advertisement For Proposals Sealed proposals for furnishii Elevator in the now State. Canin Building at Bismarck, North Dakota will be received by the Board of State Capitol Commissioners, at the office pe tne. Recretar7,, in Bismarck, North ota, until ten o'clock (10:00) a, October 22nd, 1933. baeecalaeeied Specifications for this work may be seen in the office of the Secretary at Bismarck, North Dakota, and in the offices of Holabird & Root, Architects, 333 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Hilnote, na p e Board of State Capitol Commis- sioners reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids or parts of bids, deem best for the in- | fast charging line, failing to score a | first down, | Archbishops and bishops of the es- | tablished church are permitted seats in the British House of Lords, terest of the State of North Dakota BOARD OF STATE CAPITO! COMMISSIONERS, ape State of North Dakota. George A. Bangs, President, | Grand Forks, North Dakota, Franik 1. Anders, Secretary, marek, North ¢ September 24, October e819 1930"