The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 19, 1932, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1982 . Finish Flag Waves for Score of Nation’s Leading Football Teams " TTULAR CONTESTS | BIG TEN FINALE EMBRACES BOTH EXCITEMENT AND SORROW ARE ON PROGRAMS |( our BoarDING HOUSE STACC’S FAREWELL, [Schneider will Lead 1933 Demons IN EVERY SECTION By Ahern SHE WAS ONE, * MASOR ~ I WANT You SURE—IF THEY ROECOE! ADDS SENTIMENTAL Team-Mates Elect Rangy End NAV Y PREPARED TO RESIST To MEET MY COUSIN, AIN'T INTERESTED UM-LET ME to Lead Football Squad In- OF N T AME Nita ie | ROSCOE NERTLES? IN: VACUUM SEE, NOW ~ j H 0 P to Action Next Year ; RAMBLERS 0 RE D. Harvard-Yale and California- ROSCOE GOES FROM 2 CLEANERS, THEN now CAN | Stanford Traditional Riv- | HOUSE To HOUSE AS A}, T SWITCH To TH FIX UP A CAGE Lawrence Schneider, rangy end! eyoect 65,000 or More to See r alries Renewed | VACUUM CLEANER SALES: GINGER ALE OF SOME TVPE fi Title H. in Bale| 224 & consistent performer on the ‘ a is | a t MAN ~~ AN’ HE SAVS. ICE CUBE SALES FOR YOU TO Conference Title Hangs in Bal-|sicmarck high school forward wall,| Classic Struggle in 1 AUBURN SET FOR GEORGIANS| FOR A-SIDELINE, HE CAN TALK ~~ BY TH" CARRY SAMPLE) ance as Michigan Battles wo) prsirella ny se ae aah a ium At Cleveland \ MAJORITY OF 1% r ee ! TAKE ORDERS FoR WAY, HOW ae GINGER ALE Minnesota his team-mates at the high school a caste ER ALE A VACUUM CLEAN Friday evening. Cleveland, Nov. 19.—(P)—. Nebraska Faces Oklahoma OUR GING OR . The man who will lead the locals| pattie on a muddy field was in pros- ‘ ss While Texas Christian Finds Ie CUBES / FOr unas PURDUE CLINGS TO HOPES) in their gridiron campaign next fall) pect here Saturday between an out-| Party Will Have 314 in Next P Rice in Wa | sriioa epost) “i getting, Under weighed but highly dangerous Navy] House Compared to 121 of sd y | Wi in Favored to Defeat] passes. He is a junior and the son of; team and the green-clad Ramblers Other Parti | isconsin jored to 4 er Parties : i Chicago as Old Man Di apt oe Ernest Schneider, 914) of Notre Dame. Despite a threat o " " “ wien - vent 5 , 65,000 or more persons were ex- ¥ New York, Nov. 19.—(#)—The finish aii Te Wha this (Scena eabosantve: tims ales to erie aoatait starting at| Washington, Nov. 19—)—The De- i flag beckoned for a score of the na-| rects Last Team that the Demons selected a lineman | Pe the Cleveland | mocratic party will have a majority } tion’s leading football! teams Satur- | to captain their ted oe Lats a 2 iat canine. in the Cle’ of 193 over the Republican and u y as many others one | ie enmeyer having been elevated to . Farmer-Labor membership in the ' Sahay ss ay cibers one} Chicago, Nov. 19—(P)—The West-|leadership while playing ‘kt center| Determined to throw their full| rouse in the new concress” ative ; game closer to the end of a spectacu- | Conference football ign | last year. power into the battle with the open-| srerch 4, as a result of the election. lar campaign. | St eae Ai aE Lettermen expected to be on hand| ing kick-off, Navy's mentors, headed | "si -' standing of the next house ict Vital struggles were programmed in| came down to the finish Saturday, for next year’s hostilities include| by Coach Edgar (Rip) Miller, plan- Democrats, 314; Republicans, . ¢ every section of the country, affecting | with plenty of dynamite left in the|three backfield men and seven line-|ned to start the same lineup that 116; Farmer-Labors, 5. Totals the title hopes of Michigan, Purdue.| championship situation, and as much|men. They are Agre, Shafer and|Swamped Maryland a week ago. 435, ° Auburn, Texas Christian, Nebraska | sorrow over the end of A. A. Stage’s|Sersdahl, backs, and Engen, LaRue,| Coach Heartley (Hunk) Anderson On election day the standing ot 4 Pitt, Utah and the University of Calt- | reign at the University of Chicago. | Lee, Lawyer, Schneider, Weisenber-|@f Notre Dame, however, said helio jouse was Democrats, 217, with I fornia at Los Angeles. | The Maroons were primed for one| ger and Boelter, linemen. probably would start the Ramblers’| tour Democratic vacancies, or s. total 1 And vying for national interest were | = > of those inspirational efforts, but the} Seniors who will graduate in the|shock-troops, saving the regulars as of 221 in Democratic membership; ; @ host of traditional duels, headlined | ‘nna powerful Wisconsin eleven, probably} spring are Schlickenmeyer, Green,| long as possible. Republicans, 209, with four Repub- by the renewal of the ancient grid- | last of the Old Man's Big Ten adver-| Joslin, Andrews, Burton, Woodman-| Facing the possibility that Notre] iicin vacancies or a tact oePue iron feuds of Harvard and Yale, and) saries, looked too good, probably by | see and Welch. Dame's heavy forward wall may stoP| chore is one Farmer-Labor member California and Stanford, and two | } two or more touchdowns. Navy's running ae the me in the present congress, outstanding intersectional clashes in Michigan was at Minnesota on the *. were prepai trust the meetings of Notre Dame and| (\ trall of its elehth straight vietory of |uack Clues in Probe an aerial assortment with Chung-| 4,078, Democratic ustrapierereite t Navy and Oregon State and Fordham | NOTHETe |the season, which would mean an un- Of Montana Slaying | #202, Hawatian halfback, lkely to do} oot Was four seats and ire epithe ie The end of the Big Ten trail found ERTLES |disputed right to the conference title | most ‘of the tossing. lican loss was 97 seats. Michigan, undefeated and untied,| NERTU The Wolverines, still somewhat of 8! pinings, Mont. Nov. 19—(#)—Offi-| Notre Dame was expected to de-| “The Democrats will have a major- ; facing Minnesota in the game that ae ia mystery outfit because of their habit; Billings, Mont., Nov. 19.—-(A Gay as| pend on a dazzling mixture of cut-| itv of 20 senate TAPMAbEES in thie teas was to decide whether the Wolver-| =e of being just about good enough to| Ces Were lacking in clues Saturday @5/ hacks, spinners and off-tackle thrusts congress, having elected 28 member ines were to gain undisputed posses- | a Te ail v . R F d:: were the choice, but an upset | fining rhea Jee a ie to rol up yardage and the sought-| Compared with sie ter Sis cReee ‘ tan of oe como, ec. Minnesota and Michigan Renew Feugd iiss ic te costes tht outline Muni nish er Gert Wi-| toto a tie touchdowns, | sate e SLL hnccdaed Ai Fannresaeewtn pies ee eee as lor the cust ons 4 .|Guctor and a former member of the! yorites to win but their Coach very ——— 1 Indiana, was ready to share or win \ | Ohio State and Illinois were match- | City counell ORLY wea HOME Mite bree On PILOT IS ARRESTED , 1 2 " d ga e| ” yeS | vary ai ‘ | Det oe bomtenene Should Michigan Be Gophers Hope to Juggle Big) INS BY KNO KQUT ace S RRP cae RG ENGRpe | icoxen was shot, through the remembering what fitsburgn aid to|, S88 Antonio, Tex, Nov. 19.—(P—A pI Sarai ie Alaticinén: ‘als “unbeaten | . é | [favored t ry Mh Be th | Beart soon after he had left his home.| them a few weeks ago. Notre Dame's |*Wift customs plane grounded a ship o MHEREGeHmIitS toi once, Ten Championship By | jleve anything could happen. | Both ofticers believe he was slain by two| subsequent success, he said, was due |Plloted by W. T. Ponder, an American and untied, aa to ae Se ie C BLUE Wweiven Jelevens had shown ape remient a men who attempted to hold him up. | “more to luck than brilliant playing.” | World War flier who claims he shot ir maintain its hold on the Southern) eating Wolverines | irecent games, and a hot tussle was in acieiceaianlaaies Rip Miller, Navy coach, said Navy |down 11 enemy planes, and Saturday a Peis ntin ee cen a pote | ' prospect. ft wine| AFTER CREAM BOOTLEGGERS | “expecis to win.” . Ponder was in jail. Customs officers € eign ice hte 5 oath | ‘Minneapolis, Noy.. 19—(7—Minne=| heared oat ban xr re os ie Washington, Nov. 19.—(?)—William| “The indicated starting Mneups, |eported they found 80 gallons of al- ' Nebraska. only unbeaten and untied /S0ta renewed its ancient feud with| mouth: field judge, H. B. Hackett. ! Jose Santa, 247-Pound Portu- sentl a on the outcome of’ the|C Fowler. health officer, says whiskey | however, were: cohol in his plane, but no charges team in the Big Six, faced Oklahoma's |Michigan Saturday and on the out | West Point; head linesman, J. J. Lipp, | : : oop Seg eet epee ae ees baodieeuens erie Dame ‘ ay have been filed. 4 : ame |Come depended allotment of the Big | Chicago. uese, Thumpsto Canvas |) Ron ie » have 1 airo le jurray : Hage Ghd Weerineon teen ©" |Ten, football champlonakitp, : ea sailed jhost to its Hoosier rival at Lafavette.|or cream. Profits of the “cream-leg-| Pfefferle it Brooks|TRADE BALANCE ENCOURAGING ang one of the East's leaders, was| Minnesota sought to beat Michigan] FORMER STARS HON Thrice in Six Rounds in ds fared better by acouple of |&°tS” Fowler reports, probably are| Wunsch ig Reedey (c)|__ Washington, Nov. 19.—(P)—The heavily favored over Carnegie "Tech |and at the same time obtain posses- | DR. H. L. WILLIAM: { ine a a — but Indiana. almost al-|Steater than those who deal with| Gorman c Harbold |largest favorable trade balance for . was Utah, Rocky Mountain Con-|Sion of the famous “Little Brown| Minneapolis, Nov. 19.—(4?)—Former | ae es the annual clash, was|/@U0rs, and he intends to arrest all| Pivarnik rE Burns|@ny month of the present year was ence pace-setter, ‘over the Colorado |Jug.” The last time the Gophers de-| Minnesota athletes and friends of | New York, Noy. 19.—(#)—The loud | *2¥S maroubaide: hanes tot ooliboting: he can catch with the goods. Roach rt Kane|announced Saturday by the com- ‘Aggies, in the Indians’ closing game. |feated Michigan was in 1927 at Ann! Minnesota athletics assembled Friday | ump heard ‘round Madison Square given a Moreen eqtiaven oer o——__— ————- @ | Devore Te Pray | Merce department, which said exports Pea vGniveratty alifor: ; | Arbor. |night to do something to demonstrate | rd ‘round Bi Towa and Nor! ern sai '| Weather Report || mupny qb Slack|in October amounted to $153,000,000, ‘The University of California at Les! , F nia Dr. |Garden Friday night was Jose Santa|at Evanston, with a victory just the} Lukat: th chi He and. $106,000,000. ee to oni teen peeseatelis ay sustaellaiaad au PAvilliams: playedtanriontiall hitting the canvas in the sixth round ‘thing to put a bright finish on other-| *——~ rorecastT | ranchean th EOE = wih Bouthe aie alto ie thee lit it downs the Gophers would take coach for 22 consecutive years at [Of his 10-round bout with Primo Car- jwise! bleak sedan The ee For Bismarck and vicinity: Un-| Leonard fb Campbell LEPERS AT LARGE noe ornis, *"| undisputed possession of the Big Ten | Minnesota from 1900 to 1922. as ine had vis- “re favored. but Towa expected oy settled tonight and Sunday, probably| “Referee—Lane (Detroit), ‘Umpire|_ Vienna, Nov. 19.—(@)—Press reports cific Coast title. mt That expression of loyaity took the! The 247-pound Portuguese had vis- | accomplish its first Big Ten triumph | We light snow; much! —paniels (Loyola), Head finesman—|Saturday said three lepers were at ee tee eds henry favorite | oe |form of the unveiling of a bust of Dr. /isted the resin dust twice before but since 1929. A SSG Scuiner tonight. | Wyatt CMissourl). Field judge—|large in Bucharest sir escaping over ihe Navy despite the lattersi! Meron Ubi to See Williams, which was to be presented Bot quite so emphatically. Conse- |" Clear, cold weather was the forecast) R For North Da-| Thi cpinecty, from the isolation colony at Tieleee much-improved showing in the Co-|| Myron A by the M club to the university be-|Quently when he ponderously hoisted | for all five games OS a ee ees aes nee Marfend games. Gophers in Action | teen naives of the Minnesota-Mich-|Fis six-feet-eight-inch frame to, | — a } i somethin; woaching the perpen- ° | day, some snow e e eee pore 2a igan football game at Memorial Stad- Something approaching pel i | d Bik probable; much | Minneapolis, Noy. 19.—()—My- | |ium Saturday. dicular again, Referee Jed Gahan| | @agers IN (ae warmer tonight. | ustnessmen 1 elec’ “Star |] ron Ubl, Minnesota footb: Men who carried the ball for Min-|stepped in. halted one of the most/ For South Da-| ualty, Satutday hoped to r nesota before Dr. Williams became |amusing fistic spectacles in Garden| A h di kota: Unsettled | in Circuit) 00 camden 2072 Coach: etn? dudee Wc. Leary, history and awarded camera the “e-/ Race Are Changed) fealght apa Sune | eam In Ircult'' team-mates in action for the first | halfback” from 1892 to 1894, joined | tory on a technical knockout. { j day; much warm-! an = 1] tiie titi ansese “| with stars of recent years in follow-| Just about 6,000 persons turned out —-—- er ‘tonight and! ———__---- - j Rerancements were made to || ius Jchn Grill, rooter king of 1929, in | for the pe of the pepemotis ning | Audy Peden Thomasekandel eae Portion Sun-/ . " A take Ubl in a closed and heated | cheers for the Minnesota team that |spent a hilarious evening watching: ia D { Unsettled . ae _ é Associated Press Picks Mythical || eee ee stadium |) Was to face Michigan Saturday. eo es giants make passes at one! and M'Namara-Crossley | unsettled tonight sad Barden eee AE Leaders Will Meet Monday ‘ct the American market for Ameri. q in Northern Teach- and park the car behind the west a 3 = 5 ee | : ‘i ler extreme east, slightly colder cen- | | Fai i ss, Eleven in No {opcnl pbosta/en thats He might nits H ° |_ Except for the first Sepeetiilaied| Are Pacing Field lets portion tonight, colder east of the | At Call of U. S. Chamber ae Crapo mene 5 ers Conference hess ‘the Minnesota-Miehican || MtA@IUM ontract | Santee Ande aae Sueno nants | divide Sunday. | of Commerce as part of its relief program. It also he || clash, | be /bods), At was. ell Gamers.’ The |_ For Minnesota: Mostly cloudy to- | [endorsed legislation to refinance farm “4 | Ubl suffered a fractured breast || B ttl I R: eT pelea ae aialion shelisel sae Minneapolis, Nov. 19—(#)—Jules) Might and Sunday, snow propane: | mortgages and guarantee cost of pro- Bc St. Paul, Nov. 19.—(7)—All members || bone in pre-season practice. Pneu- ATHE 1S NASM enmercituty throughout most of the Audy and ‘Torehy Peden, winners a|TiSine temperature ‘MAJOR OBJECTIVES DRAWN| Suction for their products. Other de- is 4 | monia developed and he has been || jrest of the duel, ig him ant * MAJO | ds for y of the Northern Teachers College re Seat pane ere 3 counts of eight in the second and|year ago, went into the last half of| — | mands were for higher income taxes, ~' d Conference are represented on the)| i & hospital since. He had re- |) A : ‘third rounds and then putting him|the six-day bi¢ycle race Saturday| Weather outlook for the week be- | @ moratorium on private and public all-star team selected for the Associ || por eon te ator eeey 0 || Suit Begun Against Chicago {0d ounds ony tne Ext before (leading the field for the second time| ginning ‘Monday, Nov. 21: “Por. the . | debts, reduction of governmental costs ated Press through a poll of coaches || 8*t Permission to attend the game. || , | GARE RIIcATa | Hatt entiNey Gn main: |nneteeNtce eg |region of the Great Lakes: Much|Grange and Farmers Union| and “careful consideration” of the ob. h Mankato won three places on the| - |, Blackhawks thor Mein eee ane Peden and Audy outrode the fiel@ cloudiness with several precipitation | Al .F Jectives of the Farmers Holiday asso- first eleven with Bemidji, Winona and | title, while a tie would give it a share | to Coliseum ie _ explained his defeat after |during Friday night's sprint to emerge Periods; frequent marked changes in; lave Met Already; ‘arm ciation, which sponsored the “farm va, Moorhead getting two each. Duluth in the title providing Purdue defeats | one seul lthe match by saying he had received |from a three-way tie, leaving Regeie | temperature. femeere ance: | Bureau to Meet Sooh strike” in the Middle West. bn and St. Cloud placed one man. ThejIndiana. However, if both Minnesota | ‘q fracture of the left knee |McNamara and Al Crossley and Bob-| FOr the upper Mississipp! and low Among Grange proposals are sur- fc second team has four players from|and Purdue were’ to win Saturday. | Gildas, “NOx Ibs aes ee lpy Thomas and Dave Lands in joint |¢t, Missourl Valleys and the northern plus control, monetary ‘stabilization, : St. Cloud, three from Mankato, and|the Boilermakers would gain the tract war between the Chicago Stad- GWILT HORSE WINS possession af second place. ‘marked changes in temperature, es-| Chicago, Nov. 19—(P)—Alded by iegies nore mortgage distress ant two ‘each from Moorhead and Wl-/crown, the only mar on their record ium corporation and the Chicago| Derby, England, Nov. 19—()—E.|\ McNamara and Crossley maintained | pecially in north portions; probably aor ear gaaiaae anes Bed 2 f oe. 4 ee PER Ce {Blackhawks of the National Hockey|D, Gwilt’s three-year-old Bob, at/a point advantage through the night/ one or two precipitation periods. orga ness, pati! of we Because all teams did not meet’ Game time was 2p. m league, was on in earnest Saturday. "| odds of 100 to 7 Friday won the der- |sprints, with a total of 321 to 312 for Rima | Mewed demands for legislation Hannaford Farmers each other the votes were well scat-| Probable lineups | ‘The Stadium group Friday filed the | hy cup at one mile and six furlongs,|the Lands-Thomas team, which was GENERAL C help solve the farm problem are be- 4 . 0 tered, especially for line candidates. Michigan Pes Minnesota | prs f for $150,000, charg- | 2%,cUP ° “lin second place. Low barometric pressure of con- Win More Prizes h The backfield was easy to pick, with | Petoskey fant pag og A peg agers — defeating R. F. Watson's Dick Tur-|"" ye réth-hour of the race saw the| siderable intensity is centered over| ing drafted for presentation to con- n the coaches concentrating on Kern of Wistert Gay | tract by moving to the Coliseum, ‘The | PIN by a length. S, Vlasto's four-|,_ 76.’ ‘pass the 1,228-mile mark. {Canada and is rapidly moving south-| gress. Kansas City, Nov. 19.—(?)—Addl- ny Winona, Robinson of Moorhead, Dis- Savage Bruhn |contract, a five-year document, still | Year-old filly, Rackety Lassie, was psec es costryard) It le atieniod by -uaseued | whileithe three matar.tann gromps| je ste oats ais cher of Mankato and Kreuger of Be- Bernard Orn ‘had a year to go. Major Frederic Me-| third. ‘Thirteen ran in the 37th Te-| pry sg Deer-Hunting _[fire of trom 10'to more than 40 de- | hold their annual meetings, with pri-| oF ivecock exhibits at the Americen niidji. ‘antril Laughlin, owner of the hockey club, | news d rees. High pressure overlies the! mary consideration given to pro- . € Kremer, Mankato center, was shift- | Austin charges the Stadium invalidated the | of the fall stakes. The purse was) Death Is Reported Pains rey region extending to anal peggy Tebebileatien: the| R0val Stock Show were announced ed to a guard as there were several! Williamson re contract by refusing his club its | $3,000 added. { the Great Lakes, with falls in tem-| Chamber of Commerce of the United | by Judges Friday. They included: Spsiaeune pivot men, including Cree | NeNTAD Ae choice of dates. = St. Paul, Nov. 19—P)—The third/ perature general over this area. Tem-| States has appointed a committee to Cattle S idji, Rice o} ona, Mo- | Everhardus q ni x - A ; Pe eratures aad Moe the ents ae ‘Wittmeyer of ‘St. \Fay rt Bie There are sald to be more Negroes |AY teuatea ie gente 4 death of the deer hunting season in| Koh" Daxots, Minnesota and Mani- salt recommendations on the sub-| Senior champion milking shorthorn ) ‘ Cloud. Booher of Moorhead and |Regeczi fh Manders in Georgia than in any other state. | owned their own homes, Minnesota had been reported Satur-|toba, Very light precipitation fell in| Ject. | bull—Marshall Buttercup, owned by é Feld Taschen oo SEES Anse y Z Z y. | the upper Mississippi Valley in the 24/ | Seventeen leaders in business and) 41"). “Hannaford, N. D. Oe of Honan were heavy favorites | ; z1 Alfred D. Tourangeau, 36, manager! hour period. : j agriculture will meet Monday at the Sy 1 N. D. p Goud received almost ever vore tor] OUT OUR WAY By Willi of an Ink company at’ Minneapolis,| Bismarck station barometer, inches: | call of Henry I. Harriman, president| Junior champion milking shorthorn DY. Cloud received almost every vote for y Willams drowned in Mountain Lake, near the | 28.16, Reduced to sea level, 30.04. | of the national chamber. female—Won by Hillcreek Camilla, pi a Canadian border. He broke through General Robert E. Wood, president | owned by Olsen brothers, Hannaford, ig The weal se the ice while tracking deer. NORTH DAKOTA i sala of Sears, Roebuck and Company, is} N, p, in ‘cam , of chairman of the group, : Wtimeyer, 1 “ee Cond . RCRneanniia Ceeseint do iilee taco BISMARCK, clay. men, economists bankers; farm ieede| HOOVER RESUMES EXERCISE g * q . H through » cldy. 5 omists, 5 ~ | _ Washington, Nov. 19. — — The Kienholz, it -Mankato T THN TH WELL, ALL THEY NEEOA, aeinpeabolis, traxpled 40 rllee bhrowd | evils Lake oki, ers,’ officials of cooperatives and|thud of a swiftly-thrown ‘six-pourd 5 Oksness, c . - Bemidji OL MAN CALLED Do 1S looK AT : Fargo-Moorhead, Prominent farmers. All sections Of| medicine ball is being heard once nt Kremer, rg Manakio A STocKHOLOERS' || THEMSEWeES. THER SHIRES TO PLAY _| Williston. peldy. . | the nation are represented. more on these chill mornings behind P Visavottl, rt .. ‘ air : . Nashville, Tenn, Nov. 19 (ii ten ane ee Will Be Supplementary the high hedges of the white house pal Germ, re MES. a SENS. Opin ine thd Shires, younger brother of Arthur| Minot; clear. . iqHiow Jong the committee will de-| south lawn. President Hoover has re- SHOW 'EM WHY BUSINESS 1S WHOT. (The Great) Shires of the Boston | ~™ ii Iberate and what its Soopers sumed his early morning exercise “ THEY AINT STARTS 'T , BUT. Braves, has been acquired by the} OUT OF STATE POINTS Hone noe ee rye tout} where it was interrupted by western -* F eS TH BUSINESS PAYIN Nashville club of the Southern, As- Fi teal | sari hoes at the atends tak, (campaign trips, determined, in the DIVIDENDS. OoT TO THEM 15 WHOT eewtion trom Durham tn the Fed: ' ‘38 38. -06|€n by the annual meetings of the|Words of his physician, to “keep mont League. He will be given 4/ Amarillo, Tex., peldy.... 38 38 for the demands of his remaining FINISHES IT. THEY trial at shortstop or second base. Boise, Idaho, raining... 36 34 National Grange, now in session a months in the presidency.” , IMPOSSIBLE. , LAY CINCY AGAI ieago, Tll., Hi ICHIGAN VO! ne E were ecu ter, 19.—()—The | Denver, Colo., clear..... 46 42 at Omaha, and the American Farm | ae ee kee Ae = 0 j University of ‘South Dakota Coyotes | Des Moines, Ia. ant Bureau federation, whose convention jyichiean’ Democracy. has challenged n again will play the University of |ramonton; Alta., snowing 20 10 ‘As distressful prices continue, farm|the vote in the genera: election for , lan | Cincinnati in 1933. The football | Havre, Mont., cid: 44 10 leaders have agreed on major objec- |sectetary of state, the only state office h | game will be played in Cincinnati | Helena, Moni 40 40 tives, with a possibility of reaching|it lost to the Republican party at the ih | the night of Oct. 7. It is the first | Huron, 8. D., cldy. 8 4 unanimity on specific legislation be-|Polls. The department of state was a i game of next year's schedule to be | Kamloops, B. C., peldy.. 44 34 fore roll calls are taken In congress, |busy perfecting plans for a recount announced. Cincinnati won this|Kansas City, Mo. clear 18 18 nivert O'Neal, farm bureau | initiated by Burnette J. Abbott, Sag- ' year, 7 to 0. ’ Lander, Wyo., peldy..... 32 28 va a Pa an inaw Democrat, who lost to the Re- nt ‘ Aide es Mediciie Hat, Ave." 40 0 ‘90| president, and 1. d. ‘Taber, Grange inaw, Democrat, who lst to the Re- oe Modena Utah cles): 22 32 00 peed ese Aes plan gerald, by a plurality of about 3,200 No, Platte, Neb. cldy..-. 26 24 00 for equalizing the tariff and petals Votes, based on unofficial returns. o oma iy, O., cles ‘. jus Cro} @ means a * Last IGT QuAppalle, &, day... |§ 28 06 Pee ee ee tate Ne ieean Reliway amooiatinn enti 50 Rapid City, 8. D. cldy.. 28 22 t\ ed a program which includes amend-|day placed car-loadings of revenue ee (By The Associated Press) Be ere os $2 38 00|ment of the agricultural marketing|freight for the week ending Nov. 12 at Bow York = Primo Carners. Italy, Be Bouse ee 2} Ot! act by adding the export debenture |537.093, a decrease of 51,200 under the ; : some Bente, Portugal, (6); Bi Peake ity, U. 40 00) plan, the equalization fee or some|preceding week. This was a decrease * 4 ‘Walter Cobb, Baltimore, outpointed oe rts ied 16 06|Stner method ‘ of 152,867 under the same week in lez Jack Docval, Quincy, Mass. (6); Bob Seattle, Wash, 54 52 00!" Since then the domestic allotment | 1931 and 201,980 under, the same week bs Olin, New York, outpointed Tommy an, A 26 24 .00|pian has been pushed into promin-|two years ago. ob Walth, New York (6); Andy Mitebel Sioux Gity, ta ee nce, / : ae ene New York, stopped Yale Oknn, New Spokane, Advocates. ‘Honest Dollar’ OPERA SEASON TO OPEN rc York (4); Charley Massera, Pitts- Swift Current, 4 8 42) as the first step toward helping| New York, Nov. 19—UP}—The 50th p tte burgh, outpointed Juanito Olaquibel, REENLAND? Eskimos _some- Pris 28 “28 00|Aagriculture, O'Neal advocates an|season of the Matropaliten (Opere ~H Pittsburgh—Teddy Yaross, Monae oe ee WES ONO, GTORE 3 22) intntion aes thenetaey denen | ine notse We virtaslly eeid cues "The 4 f GEN! or when - . 2 af : Pa. outpointed Jack King,’ Chicago HOUSING MATERIAL I8 AVAIL- He also believes the short mammoth stage is being set for Ver 10), . . ABLE. The garment shown is a Small diamonds have been discov-|of congress should ‘relieve the farm) di’s “Simon Boccanegra,’ Se Cee oat PARKA. LITTLE AMERICA was | ered in meteorites which have fallen |mortgage situation, coordinate the|ing presentation. | Lawrence Use the Want Ads i BYRD'S Antarctic base’ on the earth service ‘agencies abd pro-| will have the leading role. 3.

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