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| Naming of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1982 National Football Champion This Year Might Be Difficult ‘[ CANPAIGNUNISUAL [MINNESOTA LAST OBSTACLE TO MICHIGAN IN TITLE CHASE . INVIEW OF DEARTH | _ ou PoaRDiNe House OF QUALIFIED TEANS Pittsburgh-Southern California | Game Could Be Billed as Title Contest LZ VERY weir! START WORK ON IT IMMEDIATELY! EGAD SIR ~~ EVERY DAY THAT WE HAVE TO NOW, HERE IS A BOX THAT WE CAN FIX TO MEET YOUR. REQUIREMENTS TO FREEZE FIFTEEN HUNDRED ICE CUBES A DAY PTHE SPECIAL WAIT 1S MAKING JOB OF INSTALLING US LOSE #50 THE CUBE COMPARTMENTS) A DAY {--THINK THROUGH-OUT WILL BRING or iT THE BOX UP TO as SEVERAL ELEVENS IN LINE Michigan, Auburn, Brown, Col- gate, Army and Purdue Among Contenders lo stoppine G Him NOW _ ett -E have @ By Ahern | Now, \—F MY COUSIN ARNOLD WAS IN THIS PART OF TH’ COUNTRY, HED MAKE AN 3 CLEVEREST FELLA You EVER SAW—~ HE MADE ME TH’ SLICKEST HALLTREE OUT OF OL WATER. PIPE GILDED 17, SE Wisconsin Upsets Minnesota 20 to 13 Nek part hould to defeat nford in its | Mickey M’CGuire, Hawaiian Youth With Irish Name, Is Fly in Oointment the [NOTRE DAME IRISH TRIM "NORTHWESTERN BY 21 T00 to ree: a bid to c . Nov. 14.—(P}—Wis- | ~ the Rose Bowl to unexpected heights Sat- Hass broke through for a long New Year's day yr 20-13 victory over in to the Wisconsin 26-yard line Sc 42nd renewal of ¢ Lund elected to pass to Tenner. Tro, the oldest in' McGuire knocked the pass down but that of it was ruled interference and Min- well be McGuir |nesota took the ball on the 17-yard ional an i line. Manders was called into the was only overshadow-| game despite a bruised ankle and he week as til Than e passes in| plunged three yards. Lund then skirt- | down- ed end for a touchdown but Manders; decisive ac ccl-; failed to get the extra point Big Ten, which During the remainder of the third urday. eriod and for most of the fourth | rter both teams waited for the} that would mean victory. The got it when Lund received aj from center on fourth down final in the last minute of the game. The victory rep as Says Baseball Is ited the achieve- bad p io ae 7 ment of t ambition for Dr. Mystery in Europe ; Wisconsin's new) and was tackled before he could punt. — ” ach at Minnesota for} Wisconsin took the ball on Minne- Ulevelan @ saw his charges beat th 43-yard line. ioe PHEt times and tie them for passed to Schneller for 22) . Then McGuire shot a left- ied pass to Linfor for 10 more | Linfor heaved to McGuire who ht the ball near the sideline and gied over from the 3-yard line | with a tackler hanging on. Linfor's kick which gained the extra point ended the scoring. New Hockey League Season Is Opened New York, Nov. 14—(PI—A few sparkling performances by newcomers to the National Hockey League rather | than any especially fine work by a/ team as a whole and a new tendency | on the part of players to “talk back” to referees featured the opening |round of games in the new National ion on a long run by | Hockey League season. nde kicked for the ex- Saturday night the Bruins, white- Badgers retaliated soon |washed the Montreal Canadiens 4-0 The Beatie Linfor to while the Leafs beat the Rangers, 4-2. te Hawaiian youth leap- through the tie and a victory apiece, | in the air and snatched the cach team earned three points in the om the Gophers and then step- standing. The Raagers opened their | ee son with a 4-2 triumph over the | Badgers took advantage of a | Montreal Maroons. to get into scoring position for “yrontreal came back Saturday to cond touchdown. Lund fumbled | great Ottawa 2-1. on his 48-yard line and Wisconsin re- “SSSY Cun Biackhawks droppe Peace eae, mashes and & Pass ineir opener to Detroit 3-1 and Sun- | . 2 the 26-yard stripe Gay night they could get no better Where Tinfor faded back for his a¢- than a one-all tie with the New York | te shet to MeGu nen uling Is Important AMErCAnS, i » officials’ ruling on a pass in rter brought the Goph- Tribune Want Ads ers their chance to the count at 13- Bring Results | ed. yet the d came out on top. Were Outweighed almost man for man, re only superior in o ay, forward passi s ‘ed more first downs, t twice as much yardage ed in punting but could not aerial game. the crowd to its on the first play of the game he took the ball on the kickoff 85 yards for a touchdown. the ball near the sidelines through without a hand be- d upon him. Linfor kicked the w Ruth Chocolate, Carnera Will Headline Cards p 14 -Kid Chee Ramblers Heated to Boiling Point By Intense Rivalry of Years’ Standing South Bend, Ind., Nov. 14—(P)— Notre Dame's football machine, heat- ed to the boiling point by one of the most intense rivalries in athletic com- petition, flattened Northwestern, and the icy elements of winter Saturday. | Roaring along with the power and deception it showed before the dis- mal invasion of Pittsburgh, the big Rambler machine pushed over two} | touchdowns in the first five minutes and then added another in the final period to rout their Wildcat rivals, 27 to 0. It was Northwestern's worst defeat in the bitter football series since the powerful Notre Dame crew of 1920 hung up a 33-7 triumph. The 42,000 faithful, who braved a | freezing temperature and snow that spread over the stands with a cold south wind, were rewarded with a bruising but brilliant game, which saw the Ramblers come back to their football reputation. The battle, a bruiser from the |starter's whistle to the end, was full of thrills from the opening kickoff, when Big George Melinkovich electri- fied the shivering throng by running batk Ollie Olson's kickoff 98 yards for the touchdown that settled the issue. They saw Northwestern, valiant but outclassed, come back to threat- jen five times from Notre Dame's 23, 15 and 12-yard lines only to lose gold- en opportunities because of the watch- ful Rambler pass defense. “Pug” Rentner, star Northwestern back, was the only victim of the hard tackling and hard play, breaking a rib in the | first period but playing until the half! before the injury was discovered. Melinkovich’s run, one of the long- est of the current season, was a beau- tiful twisting dash. Olson's kick was q|Jow with the heavy wind behind it. | Scooping it up on the 2-yard line. Big George faded to his left and then switched to his right for the run. Three tacklers seemed to have him at different times but he wiggled away. Rentner made one last plunge at him from the rear as he passed the 10- yard line, but wasn’t fast enough. din some se eizht champion | worl the vet- | TM GONG Oot "AST. FER THINGS ? | OUT OUR WAY [ aso EAT OFF THE GOOO NIGHT! THis AINT KITCHEN SINK, ) | BEFORE 1 GET AN EME PUT OUT, OR A PUNCTORED NOSE . THE WAY HE SPEARS AN’ STABS AT THiInGs! HE JUST MISSED MH NOSE — HE WONT ASK FOR EaI\THINGS. ES X FER EACH COURS! WHEN LL AST FER SUMPN Repeat | SHE SLOWS TH’ BUTTERIN’ Harry Newman Leads In Big Ten Scoring Chicago, Nov. 14. — () —- Harry Newman, Michigan's clever quarter-| back, Monday led the race for the western conference individual foot-| ball scoring championship with 25 points, with Roy Horstmann of Pur- due and Mickey McGuire of Wiscon- sin right behind with 24 each. | The Michigan pilot, in Big Ten! games only, had scored three touch-| downs, five points after touchdowns and a field goal, two of his touch-| downs accounting for all the Wolver-| ines’ scoring against Chicago last Saturday. Massachusetts Star Still Head Scorer; (By the Associated Press) Lou Bush, Massachusetts State, halfback, scored only one touchdown | last week but widened his lead in| the race for national football indi- vidual honors when his clos- failed to tally at all. Bush has scored 19 touchdowns for} Second | TH’ LORD HELPS THEM WHO HELPS THERSELFS+ ZZ. NO BANQUET , WHERE YOU GOTTA WAIT A HAFFA NOUR | \TH TABLE ON HER AF SHES] ELBOWS , BUTTERIN’ A PIECE O' BREAD JIST TO MAKE ME WAIT— AST FER THINGS, PLAH! By Williams || A STABBED NOSE MIGHT CURE HER OF LOUNGING over AND A CRACK ON THE . KNUCKLES MIGHT VP { coRE YOU OF HARPOONING. TRLLAMS, c ING. REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. ad, i | Ice BOX FoRus!| | WOLVERINES HAVE | WON FIVE STRAIGHT BIG TEN CONTESTS Purdue Second With Four Vic- tories and One Tied Game This Season |Gophers Are Unexpected Vic- | tims of Improved Wiscon- | sin Saturday | Chicago, Nov. 14.—(?}—Michigart Monday led the Big Ten football race into its final week, seeking to estab- lish its right to the first. undisputed conference championship since Pur- due won by itself in 1929. The Wolverines, victorious in five straight Big Ten engagements and two outside the league, face Minne- sota in the highlight of the final day's entertainment, and the least that can be expected is a terrific battle. Purdue, breathing right down the back of Michigan's neck, meets its oosier rival, Indiana, and with its record of four triumphs and a tie, has a chance of overhauling Michigan. All is, of course, depends on a Minne- victory over Michigan, Purdue triumph over Indiana. Wisconsin, in third place with three victories, a tie and one reverse, meets Chicago. Illinois, rapidly hauling it- self back to its former respectable Position in the Big Ten, tackles Ohio State. In the other game, North- western, minus its leader and great defensive player, Pug Rentner, takes on Towa at Evanston. Minnesota's somewhat unexpected defeat by, Wisconsin by a 20 to 13 score at Madison Saturday leaves the Gophers as the underdog against the hardy Michigan machine, There, are, however, other things to consider. The famous “little brown jug” will be at staxe, and Minnesota will be primed to the neck for the Wolverines. Purdue, which overcame a greatly improved Iowa team, 18 to 0, ranks an over-sized favorite against Indiana. The Hoosiers, however, have been in the habit of cutting loose with one upset a season, and since they haven't yet produced it this year, probably ; will give the Boilermakers a rousing jafternoon. Wisconsin, successful far beyond the most optimistic Badger jhopes, should defeat Chicago, al- ‘though the Maroons made Michigan earn its 12 to 0 victory Saturday. Northwestern, even without Rent- ;Ner, rates the edge over Iowa, but | their losing battle against Notre Dame jmay have taken enough out of the | Wildcats to give the Hawkeyes an Jeven chance. Ohio State, victorious jover Pennsylvania, 19 to 0, will be favored over Illinois, which demon- jStrated it will be tough by whipping | Indiana, 18 to 6, in another upset. Tie Games Numerous | In Professional Loop New York, Nov. 14—(?)—The Na- tional Professional Football League seems to be aiming at a new record for tie games. The league has played 32 games s¢ |far and one-fourth of them have end- jed in stalemates. The Chicago Bears jhead all the rest in this department jwith five ties in eight games. Only the Brooklyn Dodgers have not par- ticipated in a drawn battle. The Bears’ fifth draw was a 13-13 ‘contest with Portsmouth Sunday. In the fourth quarter, Bronko Nagurskt plowed through for the Bears’ tying score. Green Bay won its eighth victory in ‘nine starts, routing Boston 21-0. \Chris Cagle was an outstanding star as the New York Giants crushed Sta- pleton 27-7. Brooklyn turned back the Cardinals 3-0 as Benny Friedman place-kicked a field goal from the 15-yard line in the first period. 17 Football Teams | and a New York, Nov. {not undefeated. | Texas Christian's 289 points; 16 more than Col | with gate. | goal lines Among teams suffering their ini | tial defeats last week were Columbia, | Illinois Normal, University of Cali: |fornia at Los Angeles, Hillsdale of Michigan. Wagner of New York and | Cincinnati. ie—— * Saturday Stars le i (By the Associated Press) i} Ran back Northwestern's ick-off 98 yards for touchdown. a successful forward | beat Kentucky 6-3. | Bob Chase, Brown—His drop-kick into a strong wind scored extra point that kept Brown undefeated with 1-6 victory over Columbia. Charlie Galloway, Georgia Tech— Sprinted 75 yards for only touch- | down in 6-0 triumph over Alabama. | Harry Newman, Michigan—Made | both scores in 12-0 victory over Chi- cago on runs of 70 and 28 yards. Walt Switzer, Cornell—Led attack on Dartmouth, scoring one touch- down and passing to Maftinez-Zor- ;illa for another. Chris Mathis, Nebraska—Prevent- jed two Pitt touchdowns with tackle \ and by runn:ng play out of bounds jand was Nebraska's best ground- jpaiber: MINNESOTA IS ELIMINATED| | Remain Undefeated 14.—(P)—The na- tional list of unbeaten and untied football teams had shrunk to eight ~~ | Monday with nine others tied but Horned Frogs, ‘poasting cight victories and one tie |in nine games, led the list in scoring Auburn ranked third with 241. | Colgate and St. John’s of Minnesota | wore the only teams with uncrossed Hasire tet cna | celica Sie iS George Melinkovich, Notre Dame— opening Don Zimmerman, Tulane—Made @ -yard run-back of kick-off, threw pass and | plunged over for touchdown that |Huskers Batt Little Chris Mathis, 447-Pound | | Halfback, and Fullback | Sauer Star | / Lincoln, Neb., Nov, 14.—(#)—Little |Chris Mathis, 147-pound Nebraska 1 rabbit back and George Sauer, dash- | ling fullback, stole the show as Ne- | braska put a crimp in Pittsburgh's na- tional football title march in a 0-0} tie game here Saturday. i | _It was the third successive tie game | the two teams have played at Memo- rial stadium here but the Corn husk- ers outsped, outyarded and outdown- ed the Panthers Saturday. They lo led the power to make a sustained \drive for a score and a last-quarter placekick was short. The speeding Huskers drove Pitts- |burgh’s shock troops from the field | the first quarter and then proceeded |to mark up five first downs in the second period against the team that stopped Notre Dame. Twice the Huskers narrowly missed a score. It was Mathis who started the first serious threat after the Huskers took a short kick on Pitt's 38-yard line. The Iusker speedster skidded around right end for 11 yards and on the third play Sauer tossed a long pass jnto Big Bernie Masterson’s hands in- ‘side the 10-yard line. Masterson held the ball momentarily, then it bolted from his grasp. He hurled himself on it, but it was ruled incomplete. Sauer gave the crowd of 27,000 a thrill a few moments later. He faked a punt from midfield, cut right as if to pass, then dashed around his right end. Knees charging high, he cut his way back and forth through a scat- tered Pitt defense for a 23-yard gain that put Nebraska on the 25-yard line. A moment later he hurled a pass to Masterson on the 6-yard line. Mathis started to sweep the right end but cut through a hole to the 3-yard mark, where the Panthers tightened. Sauer made only a. yard in two plays and a short pass across the goal to Steve Hokuf was batted down. Sebastian and Heller, Pitt’s hard- driving backs who swept Nebraska’s ends last year for six touchdowns and the worst defeat in Cornhusker his- tory, kept the Cornhuskers on edge. Nebraska made 14 first downs to 7 for Pittsburgh and outyarded the Panthers 277 to 198. Nebraska netted 260 yards by rushing to 161 for the Panthers, Two completed Pittsburgh passes gained 27 yards to the 17-yard gain on Nebraska's only completed heave. Hoosier Speed King Wins Driving Crown Oakland, Calif., Nov. 14—(?)—Bob Carey, Anderson, Ind., Monday wore the crown emblematic of the 1932 Na- tional A. A. A. automobile race driv- ing championship. Although he finished only second in the 150-mile classic at Oakland speedway Sunday, the final national championship race of the year, his previous point standing was sufficient to give him the title over William “Wild Bill” Cummings, of Indianapo- lis who piloted his whining steel “thoroughbred” to first place in one hour, 39 migutes, 29 4-5 seconds. Fred Frame, Los Angeles, finished second in the final capitulation. Frame, winner of the 500-mile Me- morial day classic at Indianapolis this year, had amassed a total of 710 points previous to the final race. Howdy Wilcox, Indianapolis, had 610 points, garnered previously, for third Place. Indiana Favored in Cross Country Meet Lafayette, Ind., Nov. 14.—(P)}—Be- tween 50 and 60 of the outstanding distance gunners in the middle west will meet at Purdue university next Saturday to settle the western con- | ference cross country championship. | It_will be over a four-mile course. Indiana, which has become almost | @ perennial winner of cross country honors, will be a top-heavy ree to grab its fifth straight Big Ten} title, with a team built around Henry | Brocksmith, individual champion last | | season; Charles Hornsbostel, member | | of the U. S. Olympic team, and Clif- |ford Watson, one of the nation’s leading steeplechase runners. Chicagoan Will Be Next U.S. G. A. Head New York, Nov. 14.—(4)—Robert M. Cutting of Chicago is to become the United States Golf association's president in 1933. Cutting has been selected by the nominating committee to succeed Herbert H. Ramsay of New York, who will retire from executive control after serving two terms as president. Nomination being considered tanta- mount to election, Cutting will be formally elected at the annual meet- =| ing of the association to be held in January, probably in New York. ‘| MANY FISH DISTRIBUTED ‘Washington, Nov. 14.—(#)—Just to | keep the supply plentiful, the govern- ment distributed 7.074,000,000 fish and eggs last year. This figure was nearly 50,000,000 smaller than for the preceding period. Most of the distribution consisted of commercial varieties, though many million game fish were included. UEBEC was founded in 160 by SAMUEL DE CITAMPLAT! | Lee 0. le Pitt to Scoreless Tie WARNEKE UMPIRES FOR CHARITY . a Two women’s parent-teacher assoclation baseball teams in Hot Springs, Ark., had celebrities In their midst during a game for charity in which Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis (lower left) threw out the first ball and Lon Warneke (center) of the Chicago Cubs umpired. They are surrounded by some of the players, (Associated Press Photo) Pn SAS RACE TA EG i Football Scores iI MIDWEST Morningside 54; Sioux Falls 0. Lawrence 25; Albion 0. Beloit 7; Lake Forest 7. Augustana 7; North Central 6. St. Viator 13; Illinois College 7. St. Bonaventure 53; Thiel 0. North Manchester 13; Bluffton 7. Defiance 19; Findlay 0. Ashland 6; Kent State 0. DePauw 25; Franklin 6. St. John’s U 6; St. Cloud Teachers 0. Michigan 12; Chicago 0.. Ohio Northern 20; Bowling Green 0, Western State Teachers 176; Ad- rian 0. Notre Dame 21; Northwestern 0. Purdue 18; Iowa 0. Pittsburgh 0; Nebraska 0. Hamline 19; Macalester 6. Cornell 0; Carleton 0. Drake 6; Washington 0. Wisconsin 20; Minnesota 13. Ohio State 19; Pennsylvania 0. Detroit 28; Villanova 12. Heidelberg 12; Akron 0. Denison 8; Oberlin 0. Ohio U 23; U of Cincinnati 0. | Western Reserve 19; Ohio Wesley- 6. Case 20; Hillsdale 8. Toledo 12; Otterbein 7. ‘Wooster 12, Mt. Union 7. Winona Teachers college 2; Roches- ter Junior 0. Luther 51; Dubuque U 0. St. Ambrose 0; Parsons 0. Dayton 7; Butler 0. East Stroudsburg Teachers 45; Bloomsburg Teachers 0. Illinois 18; Indiana 6. | St. John’s Military 26; Culver Mili- tary academy 0. Coe 6; Knox 3. Kansas 7; Missouri 0. Towa State Teachers 12; Michigan Normal 6. SOUTH Tulane 6; Kentucky 3. West Virginia 19; Washington &| Auburn 21; Florida 6. | North Carolina 12; Davidson 0. Southern Methodist 13; Arxansas 7. Mississippi College 20; Louisiana Tech 7. Loyola of the South 20; Ogle-| thorpe 0. { U of Mississippi 27; Sewanee 6, Oklahoma City 27; Phillips 14. Tennessee 0; Vanderbilt 0. EAST Yale 7; Princeton 7. Fordham 7; New,York U 0. Army 52; North Dakota State 0. Allegheny 16; Alfred 0. Cornell 21; Dartmouth 6. cut Aggies 19. Amherst 32; Williams 7. Richmond 7; V. M. I. 0. ‘Temple 13; Penn State 12. |son 7. Lafayette 51; St. John’s lis) 0. Rutgers 37; Lehigh 6. Carnegie Tech 15; Xavier 0, Louisiana State 0. Teachers 46; Union UO. Georgia ‘Tech 6; Alabama 0. Centre 13; John Carroll 7, N. C. State 6; Duke 0. Muskingum 7; Westminster 6. ' Furman 14; South Carolina 0. Oklahoma 19; Iowa State 12. Rochester 13; Kenyon 0. Brown 7; Columbia 6, town 0. Colgate 16; Syracuse 0. Manhattan 28; Clarkson 0. Buffalo 6; Hobart 0. Wesleyan 20; Bowdoin 0. Springfield 12; New Hampshire 7. Catholic U 6; Providence 0. Harvard 7; Holy Cross 0. Haverforde7; Washington college 6. W & J 14; Bucknell 0. Middlebury 7; Vermont 0. FAR WEST Washington State 0; Washington 0. Stanford 69; California Aggies 0, Pacific 6; Williamette 2, Callens 21; Idaho 6, jouthern California 33; Oregon 0, Colorado College 12; Colorado 0. OMEGA is the le::cr shown, The | MISSOURI is often called the BIG l MUDDY. i Colorado Mines 13; Western State 0. ; Oregon State 35; Montana 6, i Utah 27; Denver U 0, Franklin and Marshall 13; Dickin- | Re (Annapo- : Holle lost, some gains, North Dakota lost the ball on an incompleted pass on a fourth down, CADETS SWAMP NORTH DAKOTA STATE ON WEST POINT FIELD Bison Buried Under 52 to O Score By Powerful East- ern Football Machine West Point, N. ¥., Nov. 14—(7)— Army scored in every period of Sat- urday’s game with the North Dakota Agricultural college and buried the Bison under the weight of eight touchdowns to win, 52to0. + Coach Ralph Sasse started his reg- ulars in the first quarter, but after they had piled up 13 points in that period, he put the reserves into the game. The reserves continued the attack which the regulars found so successful and in the second quarter matched the score piled up in the first period, ending the half, 26 to 0. Army's regulars came back to start the second half and they remained in the battle until well into the fourth quarter, with the score standing, 46 to 0. The reserves came back to make another touchdown before the final gui in. North Dakota's attack could not penetrate the Army defense, time af- ter time the Bison failing in their at- tempts to go through the lines. Army attack, found holes in the visitors’ line and went through for good gains after aerials had put the ball in position. The however, repeatedly A fumble by Buckler, Army sub- stitute, came near proving costly for Sasse’s squad in the third quarter. Bob Paris of North Dakota recovered the ball in Army's territory. The advantage to the Bison was however, when after: making The crowd was estimated at 5,000, There was @ grey overcast sky and | the chilly air had a tinge of winter. The lineup and summary: N. D. State Pos. Army Meyers le Edwards Peschel le Lincoln Jahr lg Summerfelt Paris c Evans Orness , re Jablonsky Platt tt Armstrong Jacobsen re Kopscak ;Selliken ab MeWilliams McKay Th Fields | Hanson rh Brown Gove fb Kilday Score by periods: |North Dakota State.. 0 0 0 0-0 + 13:13 6 20-52 Brown 3, Kilday, ++ ++ «-/Frentzel (sub for Brown) 2, Stancock \fsub for Kilday), Buckler Rhode Island State 19; Connecti!-| Fields). Lawler (sub for Edwards). ‘sub for Points after touchdcwn — Brown © kick). Buckler (sub for Fields) 4 imons (sub for ter) to Burlingame (sub for Kep- ) pass. fe: ity: umpire, linesman, Berry, Pennsylvan’ eld judge, Korn, Swear A THRILL FOR WIFE Jacksenville, Fla.—Po A, Jonas and his \ iuming from a Gance one night w Jonag recognized the driver of & susp'cious looking auto as a Negvo well known to police. A thrilling ride in pure Suit of the auto resuifed in the Ne- gro’s jumping from his moving cat and escap:ng. ‘The coupe, which had erashed into a fence, carried 25 gale ‘West Virginia Wesleyan 14; George-| lons of liquor | ; mash, BUM BOOZE ‘Tacoma. Wash.—Even the custom. ers didn’t like the moonshine whisky that John Hoffer was selling. When Sheriff Fremont Campbell received complaints that Hoffer’s whisky made the drinker’s tongue swell and caused spots before their eyes, he sent Deputy Sheriffs Art Varco and J. T. Falin to investigate. with a re- sult that they seized a 20-gallon stil) and dumped 200 gallons of prune “Phantom of Crestwood? starts today at } brill y the Capito! Use the Want Ads ee ads re », ‘ wv » 5 ce: * Lan bal a 7