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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1938 _ Bismarck and Mandan Elevens Battle to 7-7 Draw Armistice Day BOTH TEAMS SCORE [ARMY STANDS BEST CHANCE OF KEEPING RECORD CLEAR Texas Christian Rallies in Closing TOUCHDOWNS WITH [our BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | PASSING ATTACKS TT Be ra tah Half to Defeat North Dakota 19 to 7 boon ot Ey Ltd Wn Sr a THROUGHOUT are eR ELEY Eo an TO 6 ON MY GLIM,AN' TLL to Sorsdahl ee SWING A HAM, AN’ ——4* Football Scores eS : ...- NICE SET OF SIAMESE SHINERS YOU BOYS HAVE! YES, AS FINE AN EXAMPLE OF BLACK EYES AS IVE EVER SEEN, SINCE THE ERA OF SWINGING DOORS? GET “EM FROM TH’ SAME MAN 2-LOOKS LIKE TH SAME TECHNIQUE I—~BETTER 1 |Ralph Pierce, Nodak Halfback, Intercepts Pass and Runs for Score THEY CAN RUN UP A MAIN SAIL ON Michigan, Oregon, Georgia, » 13. ‘ Duke, Princeton and Ne- Fort Worth, Texas, Nov. 13—(®)— KNOCK YOU SO STIFF ' “ | Wolverines Fight Oft Second- A last half attack that netted two MUFFED PUNT 1S COSTLY | Braves Counted Their Points Seconds Before First Half Ended i Bismarck and Mandan high schoo! | elevens Saturday afternoon battled to | @ 7-7 draw in their annual Armistice Day football battle at Mandan, end- ing mediocre seasons for both clubs. Both teams resorted to passes for their touchdowns, finding themselves unable to gain consistently through the lines. The Demons got off to a flying start and scored when the first quar- JAMESTOWN CLAIMS TITLE | Having defeated Fargo 12 to 6 in @ terrific struggle at Fargo Satur- day, Jamestown high school’s | strong football team, having come | through the season undefeated and | untied, has laid claim to the cham- | pionship of North Dakota, | ter was but a few minutes old after @ march down the field, interrupted temporarily by an intercepted pass but BE CAREFUL ABOUT GOING HOOPLE NIGHT —~MAY - GET PINCHED, WITH JUST ONE <> HEADLIGHT, NOU J--AN* JAKE CAN DO 5 s s er a teen ee | ISON Land Second Place in North yard. On the second down Norman Agre dropped back and put a perfect pass into the arms of Ollie Sorsdahl, who scampered over for the counter.! zane seme," 2¢2"- STANFORD DEFEATS TROJANS braska Soar FACE TOUGH ASSIGNMENTS Michigan-Minnesota and Ore- gon-Southern California Games Near major undefeated and untied teams ‘ad moved into the throne room of American football Monday, ready to pick up the sceptre relinquished by Southern California. golden-helmeted warriors seemed cer- ta, 7. tain to preserve its unblemished rec- ord for another week. All of the others, Oregon, Michigan, Georgia, Duke, Princeton and Nebraska were booked against traditional rivals of formidable power. Briefly here's what these contend- ers still have in front of them; Army—Penn Military is a breather this week after which the Cadets face Navy and Notre Dame. Michigan—The Wolverines must get. Past powerful Minnesota this week and then Northwestern to clinch Big 'Ten honors and possible national championship recognition. Central Loop by Crushing Coyotes). 220305 assignment, Oregon must tie or de- feat Southern California this week. ers, 6. But of these seven, only : ‘Texas Christian, 19; North Dako- 3 Bt St. Olaf, 25; Concordia, 13. North Dakota State, 14; South Da- New York, Nov. 13—(AP)—Seven | kote, 0. St. Cloud Teachers, 12; St. John’s, 0. Carleton, 19; , 19. La Crosse Normal, 26; Eau Claire Normal, 6. River Falls, 7; Moorhead Teach- EAST Georgia, 7; Yale, 0. Colgate, 72; Ohio Northern, 0. Brown, 10; Syracuse, 7. Princeton, 7; Dartmouth, 0. 14; Navy, 7. . Boston College, 9; Gettysburg, 10; Dickinson, 0. Bucknell, 12; Furman, 0. MIDWEST Michigan State, 0; Carnegie Tech, 0. Detroit, 26; Catholic U, 0. Kansas, 7; Ames, 0. Lake Forest, 0; Beloit, 0. Half Attack to Remain At Head of Parade Ann Arbor, Mich. Nov. 13—(P}— Herman Everhardus, the flying Dutchman from Kalamazoo, unleash- ed @ toe as true as a navy siege gun and Bill Renner displayed uncanny Passing aim Saturday as Michigan's Powerful fgotball team, playing in snow and ice, swept toward a fourth consecutive Big Ten championship with @ hard-earned 10-6 victory over ‘The fighting team from the tall corn state harvested a well-deserved touchdown early in the third period on & pass from George Teyro, sub Towa back, that Bernard Page, shifty end, took on Michigan’s 13-yard line. Captain Fay of Michigan tackled Page as the pass dropped in his arms, but the elusive Hawkeye slipped from Fay’s grasp and raced across the goal line. Petoskey smashed through to block Fisher's try for the extra point. Michigan had scored its 10 points when the Hawkeye counter came. The |first score came at the end of the |inittal period, when Everhardus made good his second try for a field goal. i He kicked from the 24-yard line, and the ball sailed true. Previously each side had failed in attempts to place- kick. Everhardus trying from the 35- yard line and Fisher of Iowa from the 26, The Michigan touchdown came early in the second period, after Ren- ner entered the game. Everhardus | touchdowns gave the Texas Christian. Horned Frogs of the Southwest con- ‘ference a 19-7 victory over North Da- ikota university in an intersectional game Saturday. The Frogs: led by Charlie Casper, fleet senior halfback, counted early in the first quarter to take the lead. WILL PLAY DIXIE Dallas, Tex., Nov. 13.—(?)—Jack Kells, Jr., business manager of Dixie university here, announced | Saturday night the Dixie Rangers would play an intersectional foot- ball game with the University of North Dakota team at Fair park stadium here Wednesday night. A long pass to Wallace Myers, star end, placed the ball inside the 15-yard line. Plunges and an end sweep by Casper were good to the one-foot line and Casper rammed it over. The try for point failed. The Frogs had the best of the play all the way but in the second period just before the gun, Captain Ralph Pierce of the Nadoks intercepted a Pass on the Frog 40-yard stripe and was away untouched for a marker. He also added the point to make it 7-6 for the invaders at the half. In the third period Dan Harston hurled a flat “zone” pass to Casper. The Frog halfback cut back, circled and raced 65 yards to the North Da- kota 3-yard line. Jimmy Lawrence plunged the remaining distance, Cas- " | } rook the starch out of the A The Webfoots’ final game is with St. Nebraska, 12; Kansas, 0. wormed his way through desperate|)er's Tun t a ; 2 North Dakota State wdc test ees 8 ai: re: Town itabliers toe-ndtopard:tun, trees fae wees and the Frogs had a creer oo faerie ae noni teeweer | Functions Smoothly in Georgia—The Bulldogs have Au-| Marquette, 14; Creighton, 9. Iowa's 87 to the 16-yard line, where) (ings Wek Own way in the last peri- : 1 iva als 9- 0, Ms about 10 ee it 000 W LD FANS, 14.0C t burn to meet this week and then| Washington U., 36; Butler, 12. Fisher downed him. Three plays lat- 02.7, ies bal havdane drive and 4 a ee ee ’ : jonques Georgia Tech and Southern Califor-| Oklahoma Aggies, 21; Drake, 0. jer Renner found a receiver in Cap-|feePing the, ball in dangerous terri- two ea ae isessate oe MERE ASS ~ ! ig | SOUTH 33 tain Fay, d in the end zone. peo e rest of the way. The sum- | = 4 South Carolina, 14; N. C. State, He hurled the ball to Fay, who went i ‘att eee cue srcone cunt FaOl HARVARD CRUSHED Place Kicks Near End Give| Vermilion, 8. D. Nov. 18—The|une State and Georgia ‘Tech is a| Wash & Lee, 6; Vinginis, 0. over the goal line untouched. Everr| ,rexas Christian North Dakota f ee ee et ee re Jones’ Men First Defi North Dakota Agriculture college | sig order for the Blue Devils. North Carolina, 26; Wake Forest, 0.hardus’ placement was good. Lathe 2 Reichert covered on Bismarck’s 26-yard line. i lones’ Men First Defeat | Bison tamed the University of South |""Drinceton—Navy this Saturday,| Vanderbilt, 27; Sewanee, 14. j From then on the embattled Hawk- | Perkins : Sowle Ordway got off on a 15-yard jaunt \ in 28 Starts Dakota Coyotes, a team once might |tnen Rutgers and Yale. Tulane, 33; Mississippi State, 0. [eyes tried desperately to score, but “poral ig Schwartz to the ll-yard line for a first down have been held as the big bad wolf!” webraska—The Cornhuskers have , 27; V. PT, 0. ‘were unable to gain consistently elth-| ater 2 Bentz, ee ee if that much-publicized animal had| pitt and Iowa to face on the next two| Georgia Tech, 19; Florida, 7. er through the line or around the| Tavior % Gerhke three downs. On the fourth try, M. eerie ee, Los Angeles, Nov. 13.—(#)—Stan-|been as popular as he is today in Saturdays. ‘Tennessee, 35: , 6. ends, So vicious was the Wolverine | GToseclose rt Meinhover Ei Ferder dropped a pass into the aIMS| Texas Jack Buckler Master of! ford’s fighting football team outplay-|song. The score: N. D. A. C. 14; Briefly, here are the outstanding] Kentucky, 21; V. M. I, 6. defense of its slender lead that Iowa aoe re ‘Tait : of Stumpf, who scampered over un- Prac ed and outscored Southern Califor-/U. 8. D. 0. “| teati "py sections, of this week’s| Centre, 13; Birmingham Southern, 6| actually had a net loss of one yard son. qb Falgren touched for the counter. Ordway just Ceremonies in 27-to-0 ‘nia before 90,000 persons Saturday, to} Warned the Coyotes were desperate tain : ‘Auburn, 27: Oglethorpe, 6. from scrimmage, gaining 49 and los- | C®SPer lh Pierce barely scored ae ee a ae Conquest |win, 13 to 7, and administer the first nan attempt to, vindicate themselves, | PFOeram: fant SOUTHWEST ing 50 yards, unload aD Ay Johnson the count a line plunge whic! ‘defeat the Trojans have suffered in|their coach and any other involved thodi ; Texas A & ‘bonneau a put the ball over the line by # frac- (28 games. because of a somewhat turbulent sea-| Pitt probably will start a slight fev-| Bonthern Methodists, 19 te Oak DeLsne Wan oriretna taitoeee | geome: by. periods a tion of an inch. The touchdown was Mass.. Nov. 13—(#)—{ Not since September, 1931, when St. |sn, the Bison had feared the Coyotes over-Navy.. Army's reserves probably suffered @ possible leg fracture in North Dakota . +0 70 0-7 ; scored just a second or two before the | with Texas Jack Buckler acting as | Mary's won, 13 to 7, had Southern niet eae ce aoa which 80] 771 take care of Penn Military. Ore. the second period when he charged Ren “77-8 0) 01810 o half ended. . | master of ceremonies, the undefeated | California suffered a reverse, although e three little pigs of fairy! ?on state's clash with Fordham at into the Michigan line with the ball.| ¢, » Bell, Vanderbilt; umpire, The second haif found the two Army football team Saturday cele-|the record was spotted by one score- Story fame. But the Bison never urtis, Texas; head linesman, Price, ¢ teams battling eve | for the most part fighting off Man-/ Larry Schneider. on an end-around play, broke away for 17 yards to put expected. The fairgrounds gridiron Fargo Game Dropped 7 with Bismarck |wrated the 15th anniversary of the |1ess tie with Oregon State this season. de - [Armistice with a rousing 27-0 victory! The big Red team from Palto Alto dan thrusts, but threatening to score| (ver Harvard. But a crowd of 50,000 |Crashed in on two field goals from as the game ended after Captain it. jargest the stadium has housed |sure-footed Bill Corbus in the last this season, came prepared for a rout. | four minutes to climax a drive by the Dn j late in the | Indians starting just before the home the ball on the 18-yard line. jthird period. was probably the factor |SUard took a first’ period lead The field. though heavy. was in/that enabled Harvard to hold the|through the medium of a 43-yard much better condition than had been| core down to 27 points. Buckler’s retirement, Early in the second ‘iod the - | ton, had been cleared of its snow blanket | aete started marchine. J es the day before the contest and 8 warm | nntercepted!Dean's pass on Army's 40- |t0 good adavntage but played a sen- sun Saturday helped dry out the turf.) yard line and he raced back 37 yards |<ational defensive game. before Sherman knocked him outside Coach Roy D. McLeod of Bismarck}, Harvard's 23, was cancelled 10 days ago because of His first pass, to Sebastian, was|Was then only four minutes left to Joe Stancook the spot where |0f the great crowd as to the result announced that plans for re-schedul-! Buckler opened up his passing at-|When Cortus kicked his first field ing the Bismarck-Fargo game, which | , touchdown gallop by Cotton Warbur- Corpus not only used his right foot There was little doubt in the minds goal, after he had missed two. There were in any extreme danger as they successfully throttled the Coyote at- tack and despite the fact their own offense failed to function with the same effectiveness as it has during the last two weeks, summoned enough Power to batter across the touch- downs which left them safely in front. The victory assured the Bison of second place in the North Central conference, behind South Dakota State’s Jackrabbits, the only team which conquerred the Bison this sea- son. Morningside and South Dakota fell victims to the Bison attack while North Dakota gained a 7-7 tie. The Coyotes tackled poorly and blocked with little effort. The Bison the Polo Grounds and George Wash- ington’s tussle with Tulsa complete the intersectional slate but the prin- cipal stress is laid on such domestic Guels at those involving Dartmouth and Cornell, Syracuse and Colgate, Harvard and Brown, Penn and Penn State, New York university and Rut- gers, and Columbia and Lafayette. Ten Michigan and Minnesota tops the qay’s fun here without dispute. Pur- due, favored over Iowa, will be in a position to take the lead should Mich- igan be beaten. Illinois and Chicago, Wisconsin and Ohio State are the other conference pairings. Northwest- ern plays a Notre Dame team shut Tech, 0. Tulsa U., 39; Oklahoma,City U., 0. Oklahoma, 21; Missouri, 0. Oklahoma Aggies, 21; Drake, 0. Utah, 13; Colorado, 6. Mountana State, 6; Idaho, southern branch, 13. Brigham Young, 25; Colorado Col- Colorado Aggies, 3; Utah Aggies, 0. Colorado Teachers, 26; Colorado Mines, 9. Hawaii, 7; Denver U, 6. Nevads, 21; Chico state, 0. | 2 \ ~GHAN STORE PLAN Set May 15 as Last Day for Clubs to Obtain Players From Sponsors Kansas City, Nov. 13.—()—Direct- Hustin college; field judge, ‘Texas A & M. ees Chicago Bears Feel Title Slipping Away Chicago, Nov. 13.—(}—Slippi back with a defeat and one tle in their two engagements in the east, the Chicago Bears felt their lead fall- ing in the national professional foot- ball championship race Monday. The Bears were surprised Sunday 9g the Philadelphia Eagles threw up a hard defense and then gained a 3- Portsmouth turned back the Green 19; New Mexico State, 7. te snowstorm, have been definitely grounded but the second landed in |play. When he kicked the second Png porta pet asada ae erg FAR WEST ing a blow at the chain store system | Bay Packers 7 to 0. . f | Stancook’s arms and he went over for | there was just one minute left for the Stanford, 13; Southern California, 7. 2 associat In a memorial game for the be eeune: ee eae Trolans 0,00 scrnel bing. apantitiets sereral times, But somatiine tare tulle for the third vear inva rom Kene| Washington State, 14; Idaho, 6. Dee domed Sree ene ies SF cas Major Frank Cavanaugh, war mee i Mani Bismai immediately after taking the re-|record and they could not do it. pened at crucial moments to rend and Towa State, Oklahoma and| Fresno State, 7; Washburn. 0. = pre tolese coach. the New. ‘York 4 Stumpf le Schneider! sulting kickoff, the failure of the Har-| Stanford completed six passes out in Tender} sas ne Rae, Oregon, 13; Oregon State, 3. their Major league affiliates except! Giants defeated Boston 7 Berry It Engen||vard running attack forced Dean to| =f seven attempts and its touchdown ‘"tme’Gorater threatened only once, |e tee aNaT® oft a8 the drive | Csliforais, 33; W jduring the early stages of the annual!” yt was estimated that Mrs, Cava- ' eacae i. Come at Hophls se sata ine, Season 5 0900 aateeiian ore beet ators mae early in the third period, Lem Sher-|Missourl plays Washington Univer-| U. C. L.,A., 14; San Diego Mar- are oge pees nana, who was left with seven minor ? lurphy end run and his pass from Buckler | advanced the bal ie shadow of | wood € yard L ines, 13. ; ‘i » = n and no estate upon the “ Dietrich 7” teuver|Put the Cadets on Harvard's 12-yard] the goal posts jaunt to the Bison Teyurd line, he'bal | eo South St. Marys, 7: College of Pacti, 0, |tion toskccnd adapted a reechation |= ie vn ae would sect Schmidt ine, from where Tex#s Jack scored ————— ’ on nn more than $15,000 from thi i Partridge re -Beylund|after three off-tackle lunges. CANADIAN BOXER KILLED — |Goyotes penalized, "ev" “MH the] | Stx Southeastern Conference games Football Stars | |*ivine, May 25 as the last date on/40°per cent of the receipts were to if Helbling ab Sorsdahl| “Buckler scored again in the third} Monongahela, Pa. Nov. 13—(P—| Behind splendid interference, Wen-|taneie with Aubere Alcbeme tonne Soh loca tees tect aalee eogne auras | ane : mercer aad cee pened, after sohuny Beall his right | Howard Mayberry, 42, one-time claim- | dell Schollander, Erling Schranz, Fritz on ‘Btate and Vanderbilt, all of (By The Associated Press) Fae eg pop eeenranly Shipwreck Kelly and his Brooklyn , . . tackle, recovered a fumble on Har-|ant of the Canadian lightweight box-|Hanson and Acey Olson ran for I Doug Nott, Detroit—Scored on 55- mates celebrated the advent of Sab- ? Ordway fb Kanz|vard’s 43. Quarterback Johnson ran|ing championship, was struck and|gains. Schranz especial OF ioe | Salen aye oulise chances Ot TiauEe yard yer! ene ‘pass Would ‘be subject to a fine of $1,000! hath sports in Pittsburgh by crushi 4 Substitutions: Mandan—Percy for|1g yards through center after faking | xilled Saturday by an automobile.|tive, and time after tine fe Cece me im the championship award, take pol - othe! ee ioe cach game, and games won BY the Pirates 31 to 0. a | Murphy, Nelson for Schmidt; Bis-|to Buckler on a spinner and then the | Mayberry was crossing a street at the |into the open and got aney ter one Peel eat tee oe actively tee Joi rel aia Ott, ne team would be thrown) At Chicago the Cincinnati Reds \g : marck—Harris for Gorman, Mote for/ Army's crack ‘passer tossed to Stan-|-ime. The fighter, who retired about|thy runs, Hanson was a constant ale ins Kenuioee oo piettehie :{ “SBilt Corbus, Stanford—Kicked two ovFollowing tie eines otitis Janeen scored their first victory of the sea- a’ Beylund, Logee for Mote, Beyiund for|vook. Four play's later. three outside j three years ago and moved to Donora, jthreat, and although caught more|pl State confronts Sewanee, Duke| field goals in last five minutes to beat | sunday club owners and officials left|20" °Y “efeating the Cardinals, 12 to Logee, Neff for Elofson, Elofson for his right tackle, Buckler scored again. | Pa., once was credited with winning |often than usual for losses, contrib- |: Ch f Ms ale (Mandan) headlinesman. a He placekicked the extra point, his |59 consecutive ring battles. Officials: Frank Richards (U. N.|third one, and then retired in favor | D.) referee; Gerald Griffin (Minne-|of Maury Simons, who provided the sota) umpire; and W. T. ee | Ay wa is final score, early in the| a census in 1930, the Indians in that ‘ourth period. OUT OUR WAY By Williams When the Republic of Panama took country were not counted. uted his share of the ground rolled up by the Bison, who had nine first downs against four for the Coyotes. Neville Reiners and Leo Gerteis contributed the shorter gains through the line when the Bison found the going tough off tackle. The lineups: ina. Pacific Coast Oregon's crucial game takes the Webfoots against Southern Califor- nia with a tie or victory clinching the title for the sturdy northwest outfit. Washington-U. C. L. A., California- Idaho, Stanford-Montana, complete Jack Buckler, Army—Led attack Tough Oregon Eleven Crushes Oregon State Portland, Ore., Nov. 13.—()—Ore- gon State’s famous “iron men” foot- may have trouble with North Caro- |Southern California, 13-7. for Galveston, Tex., to attend the an- 1 moet Dakota N.D.A.C. | the conference program. St. Mary's| quarter to defeat Virginia 6-0. ead ball machine was melted to a scrap Boris % —--Marguardt|niays annual game with Santa Clara| Aubrey Stringer, Baylor—iicked Head for Galveston Saturday by ery Univerty of Ore- i one on 4 Tu BET IT Peano. rd House * Southwest Pepe ag ot ase pe_incinnatl, Nov. 13.—dP)— While the |tory to take an unchallenged position \ froin yy TOOK You JusT ee £ Thompson) Arkansas plays a non-conference| Homer Key, Made two 40- jad or the Oinatnnent | the head of the Pacitie Coast, con- .) AN’ You'D TWICE AS LONG . Isley 2 pillller| game with Hendrix but Texas, the|yard runs against ‘Yale, paving way |Poqs salted forth; Monday the 19th | nies iron or OF HOWLED | + to GET THEM Groves re ae other lender. faces ‘Texas Christian [for touchdown with second. won the first lap of ait expedition to| wo" previnusiy nan eye Corral \F TD LAID THERE-AS ur cS ih ‘penne lor's Bears, surprise conquerors of| goal, touchdown Tend point ° after Bene #, boone Amine tae Rees podria ge aes pists ON ‘EM— Clinker Ps Hangon| both Texas Christian and Texas, de-| touchdown to gain 10-7 victory Over tne National League. Bipait io seni be nie anty ‘SO ‘WOULD TO HAVE GEE Reiners | Ploys against the strong Texas Tech | Syracuse. Wins q > 7” ME Wing PUT THEM WHERE THEY [ Ja \. BELONG. . o — “~< Monmouth, head linesman, ao-v eae 2 >————_——————_. | Happens Too Often | | To Be Called Luck Chicago, Nov. 13.—)—It hap- Utah can dispose of one of the two rivals who still dispute the Utes’ right to the conferenc® crown by beating Denver this week. The other con- tender, Colorado Aggies, will be idle. ‘Three British déctors recently suc- ceeded in isolating the virus of in- down and paved way for ern | with 47-yard run in 10-6 triui over Towa. Bud Dammann, Colorado Aggles— Larry MacPhail and Donie Bush—|11 men, wilted under the relentless onslaught of the Webfooters and all were replaced in the fourth quarter. Paul Runyan Winner In-Capital Tourney Washington, Nov. 13.—()—An ap- Proach game that at times seemed Bens too ice unas the coaching regime of Harry to be “Sichigan luck” © Pe dust He and his smart, hustling Wol- verine teams must have pole, . something almost unbelievable enabled Paul Runyan, Westchester county, New York, professional to leave Washing- 9600 richer. golfer took ai from 7 first-class professionals in ae s play, ending Sunday night, as Eendwood club, ae. In getting his 211; “Little Poison,” as his competitors often call him, time with irons that counted, ” 4 [ahaa Edith Cavell was.a BRITISH NURSE executed by the Ger. mans at Brussels in 1916 for Z ! assisting allied soldiers to es. In event of such a tie a three-game | Weight championship in @ 10-rounder | year-olds, 4 . L, Harmon, Wisconsin, referee; D, | *tfit Friday. | Harmon, Wisconsin, umpire; Smeby Rocky Mountain | . Killdeer, N. D., Nov. 13,—Killdeer| cape. The Homestake Mine at | series would be played. the first Mon-|a@t the Chicago Priday night, —_ STANT PFA ISNA high seta ns beryrger’ team defeat-| LEAD, SOUTH DAKOTA, is the night ‘and other Tuesday. || On the same Madison Square MAT PROTEGE OF LEWIS i iN) iN q Ronee opening game! largest producing gold mine in », all three are assured of |Garden will resume fistic activities} Vic Christie, a new arrival in the | a Feder erring, Sela Wepahtaed| fit Row ik tax Weeaat s| Spt aiaed eto coets| Sa ate oe iy mraeeruan |paemae nau the poe a C . . now New York, was founded ii a Ww ie is, Bice of the Pirates were outstanding. | 1636, ” | next month. and Young Terry of Treston, N, J. | Welght mat champ.” met Henvy