The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 29, 1934, Page 16

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FRc eI ATR co ith a “Sh Scomermneeene 2HP VELEN? HAB.. BOS 992 Hee aman Additional Sports FIGHTING ST. MARY'S “TRAM DOWNS HAZEN Tommy Lee Lee Plunges 01 Over Goal. Line for First Touchdown; Final Score, 12-0 ‘|while, made 11 blows and received official credit for another that had been previously overlooked. As @ re- sult his mark went up five points to 357, ‘The National League rivals both showed slight gains. Waner’s mark | went up two points to 362 with nine ‘hits in 21 attempts while Terry hit jeight out of 20 for a one-point gain. A fighting St. Mary's eleven march- ed down the field from the opening Kickoff to score 8 touchdown and add- ed & second counter just two minutes | before the final whistle to triumph) over a heavier Hazen team, 12 to 0, | at Hazen Friday. Tommy Lee, stellar Saint fullback, ploughed over the goal line for the first touchdown after a steady ad- vance from the kickoff in the first quarter. In the final period a 30-yard pass Big Ten Favorites Ready for Bison \Vern Oech, Beach, N. D., Will Start Game in Gopher Lineup Saturday Minneapolis, Sept. 29.—(7)—Rated as a favorite in the Big Ten football race this season, Minnesota makes its from Lee to Fisher was good for an- | 1934 debut Saturday in a pratice game other touchdown. in the line, the Hazen eleven lacked the experience necessary to cope with the deceptive running game of the Although heavier | with North Dakota State. Headed by its versatile captain, “Pug” Lund, who last season alone gained more yards than the combined St. Mary's squad and the ball was in jefforts of the Gophers’ opponents, am territory during most of the} oo “Mary’s made 16 first downs to} Hazen’s six. 2 Lee and Fisher turned in good games from their backfield posts | fi Minnesota wap going against the small Bison aggre- gation, Gopher doped to have easy Three new players appeared in the lineup. Dale Rennebohn illed the center position handled in while the blocking of Hagen was in| 1933 by Roy Oen, the only regular lost @ good measure responsible for the | tl Saint's gains. In the line Shultz at|si end and Guthrie turned in fine per-' Zormances. Art Clarkson supplanted Julius Alfonse as Lund’s hrough graduation; running mate at right half, and Vern Oech was at left guard in place of Coach Ted Meinhover used every) Milt Bruhn, disabled early in the week one of his 16 players in the game. Shultz and Reff started at ends, with a leg injury. Game time was 2 p. m., central Dolan and Kaiser at tackles; Steiner} standard time. ‘and Welsh at guards and Guthrie at center. Lee was at fullback, Erick- son and Hagen at halfbacks and) Fisher at quarterback. Reserves who! saw action were Hessinger, Smith, Thach, Litt and Schlosser. Next Priday Meinhover sends his charges against Beulah on the Beulah eld. Paul Waner Appears To Have Batting Title) New York, Sept. 29.—()}—With only two more games apiece for everyone, concerned, Paul Waner appeared to have the National title safe in his grasp Saturday as he led his nearest rival, Bill Terry, by 11 points. But Lou Gehrig and Char- ley Gehringer were ready to make a trace of it for the American League; trown.right up to the final putout. Gehringer regained a lot of lost during the past week and re-| turned to second place two points behind Gehrig while Heinie Manush slumped to @ poor third, 10 points away from the lead. Newman Sturgeon House Thomas Perschel Dobervich S| Olson Reiners | Schollander Schranz | Brickson The lineups: North Dakota Minnesota Tenner R. Smith Oech Rennebohn w. Bevan Referee, John 8. Getchell, St. ‘Thomas; umpire, T. C. Kapser, Notre Dame; field judge, L. Holsinger, Mich- Leugue batting! igan; head linesman, C. MacDonald, Minnesota. MINOT HIGH WINS safety and a touchdown in the first quarter of a bitterly fought skirmish to defeat Mohall by @ score of 8 to 0 here Friday night. HETTINGER WINS Hettinger, N. D., Sept. 29.—()— Gehrig added two points to his; The Hettinger high school football Average during the week, hitting team romped to a 20 to 0 victory over seven times in 16 attempts to reach|Rhame here Friday in an opening the mark of .359. Gehringer, mean- game of the southwest conference. Harvest Sale Now in Progress DRESS SPECIALS A remarkable selection for this time of the season. Sizes 14 to 46. In navy, black, brown, green and tweed mixtures. Tailored, $8.95 Wool and Crepe Frocks $3.95 $4.95 Cleverly tailored soft wool in becoming thades of mist blue, brown and green and Plaids. A perfect dress for school and sport. IN BETWEEN DRESSES $2.95 Crepes, Wools and Plaids. Sizes 14 to 4%. NEW FALL New Felts - New Crepes - New HATS $1.65 Velvets. Black - Brown - Navy Green and Wine OHM DRESS SHOP 24 Fourth Street NASH-FINCH lear, B: Dok Across from G. P. Hotel Bismarck, N. D. COMPANY THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1934 Fog New hh ae in Oil Fires Major Grid Teams Open 1934 Season Oregon State Bows to San Francisco University in First Major Upset New York, Sept. 20.—(#)—Full into the sports picture blew king football Saturday, roughly shouldering aside ali competitors except major league baseball. The first big program he offered consisted of a sprinkling of intersec- tional rivals, a scattering of other Clashes of evenly matched major: ri- vals and a host of warm-up tests in which the bigger schools fully ex- pected to roll up lop-sided scores at the expense of minor foes. In the east it was Temple and Virginia Poly, Army and Washburn, and Navy and William & Mary, from the intersectional angle, and Pitt and ‘Washington & Jefferson for tradition as well as close competition. Other major teams such as Brown, Cornell, Dartmouth, Boston College and Holy Cross booked small-college foes. Six members of the Big Ten were inaugurating their campaigns but only Northwestern and possibly In- diana appeared in any danger. The former played Marquette ad Indiana met Ohio university. Chicago against Carroll, Illinois against Bradley, Min- nesota against North Dakota State and Iowa against South Dakota were the other pairings. Nebraska and Kansas carried the Big Six banner iato intersectional games with Wyo- ming and Colorado university re- spectively while Rice and Louisiana state furnished the southwest feature of the day. In the far west where the first up- set Friday saw Oregon State bow to San Francisco University, 10-0, Ore- gon and U. C. L. A., Washington and Idaho and Washington State and Montana locked in Pacific Coast con- ference games while Stanford ex- pected trouble from Santa Clara. Duke and Virginia Military, open- ing the southern conference cam- Paign, were the headlined attraction below the Mason and Dixon line where other leading pairings were Georgia Tech and Clemson, Ken- tucky and Washington & Lee, Miss- issippi State and Vanderbilt, Alabama and Howard, North Carolina and Wake Forest, and North Carolina State and Davidson. In addition to Oregon State's de- feat Friday's program was marked by West Virginia’s triumph over Du- quesne, 7-0, and Utah's 6-0 conquest of Drake in night gam Larry Udell Kayoes Twin City Scrapper Minneapolis, Sept. 20.—()—Larry, Udell, Aberdeen, 8. D., scrapper, scored a third-round knockout over Pat Arnold, Minneapolis, in the eight- round windup of the American Legion boxing card Friday night. 4 Amnold, leading on points when a Tight to the head sent him to the can- vas, insisted he had got up before the count of 10, but Referee Labe Safro stood pat on his ruling. Udell weighed 167% and Arnold 170. In a five-round preliminary, Fred Atkinson, Detroit, Mich., 148, won the judges’ decision over Jock Moore, Du- luth, 148, KARASTAN $169.50 KARASHAH $135.00 tional games, a few jousts of tradi-) Conquest of of! firey by fog is the latest feat in the great Calt- fe nia fie! The blaze at the left, shown in successive fading stages, was quelled in eight seconds, though such fires often raged for days in the past. A special nozzle creates the fog from noth- ing more than water. Sprayed on the fire, it chokes off oxygen, absorbs the heat around the burning material, and cools it below the ignition point. Top picture, left, shows the blaze at its height; next, fog getting in its work nex! ing attack; finally, fires out. tt, crew closing in for the finish- At right is shown how the fog cmorzer, fan shaped, from the nozzle. m YOURE TELLING ME Berkeley Bell frequently plays nine holes of golf between tournament tennis matches... . Detroit automo- bile manufacturers have been offer- ing world series tickets to salesmen as bonuses, and now find that they cannot purchase them. ... Ken Stil- ley, a tackle, is the heaviest mem- ber of the Notre Dame squad at 228. ... Grandstand seats for the East- $22 a Philadelphia fans feted Leo Ch (Red) Miller, trainer of the Phillies for 14 years, starting with a party at the game and ending with & banquet. Louisiana Ready for Football Rampage Baton Rouge, La., Sept. 2) — With a well-drilled troop of flashy backs and a sturdy line, Louisiana State university is ready for a 193¢ football rampage that may carry ft AMERICAN RUGS OF ORIENTAL DESIGN BEARING THE FAMOUS “KARASTAN” NAME! To look at them you would never believe that human ingenuity could devise machinery to weave rugs so beautiful and so like the hand-woven rugs of the Orient. it seems incredible .. yet you cannot doubt the evidence under your very eyes...and we ore prepared to present that evidence by showing you Karastans side by side with reol Orientals. Why not call here and make this comparison? You'll find the Karastan Orientol Repro- ductions perfect beyond your dreams, a symphony of color harmony and flowing lines conceived by Oriental craftsmen in far off Persia. KARASTAN KARASHAH KARA SARUK to the southeastern title or into the select company of the country’s best teams. The evolutionary cycle that began when Captain “Biff” Jones too charge as Louisiana head coach in 1932 has been virtually completed. Stodgy, Power football has been replaced by the hammer-and-tongs type. Captain “Biff” is beginning his third season at State with his sys- tem building efforts bearing fruit. He has the men capable of executing his Warner wingback plays with the co- ordination he demands, Here's a thumbnail of the all-ve- teran, varsity material: Line—strong and fast, averaging 185 pounds. Ends—good, but reserves must be tested. Backs—great. Jones has four complete teams that he is teaching the fire points of of- fense switching at the right time. In the World.War, after the first gas attack of the Germans, which caught the Allies wholly unprepared, the wind joined the Allied cause. It blew to- ‘wards the German lines for months and gave the British time to make gas masks. WEBB BROS. Se AS ae, SANTA $84.50 Prices ore for the 12° size, Other sizes proportionately EXCEPTIONS MADE Farmers May Increase Wheat Plantings for 1935 Under Certain Conditions Washington, Sept. 29.—(*)—The farm administration ruled Saturday |& that corn-hog farmers might, under certain conditions, increase wheat plantings this year for harvest in 1935 oid violating their corn-hog con- The action, taken to encourage Production of crops for use on farms early in 1935, does not apply to sign- ers of wheat adjustment contracts, The original corn-hog contract lim- ited the acreage of wheat planted for harvest as grain to the which the signer planted in 1932 or 1933. The ruling authorizes an increase in this acreage up to 15 acres but any grain in excess of the producer’s base acreage must be fed to livestock or used otherwise on the farm of the Producer. These stipulations apply only in their: contracts may plant not more than two acres of wheat which must be used on their own farms. Grafton High Eleven Humbles Devils Lake Grafton, N. D., Sept. 29.—(7)—The Powerful Grafton high school foot- ball team celebrated homecoming with a 19 to 6 victory over another big Devils Lake eleven here Friday. Passes. were the deciding factor in Grafton’s scoring. Whalen tossed one to La Berge for the first counter shortly after the contest opened and another pass, Whalen to Maxwell, gave Grafton its second counter a few Plays later. The Walsh county eleven led 13-0 at the half and Fields, # reserve half- back, went 50 yards after intercept- ing a Devils Lake pass to score the other touchdown in the third period. ‘The Satans tallied in-the final can- to when Bill Burkhard tossed a long pass to Sparks who was downed on the 13-yard mark. Dennis carried the ball over two plays later. Mayville to Be Strong Conference Contender Mayville, N. D., Sept. 20.—May- ville State Teachers’ football team is expected by Head Coach Lewy Lee to be the wrench in machines of other schools in the Nortir Dakota intercollegiate conference as the gridiron season gets along. “Though the Comets will be inex- ‘Twenty-seven candidates reported for the initial practice session last Tuesday. There are eight lettermen —Joe Aasen, Hillard Alfson, half- backs; Wilfred Luckasen and Robert Torson, ends; Harlan Lipp, Bernard Rostberg, and Theodore Campagna, guards; and Reuben Enger, tackle. Six veterans who graduated are James Slattery, center; Edward Ror- Mandel Grove and Stanley Lee must develop a center, tackles, a quarterback and a fullback to replace men lost by graduation, two of whom, Captain Slattery and Rorvig, were all-conference players. The team will be lighter this year, Lee said, but should have a lot more Rolezynski, te pmadele otewe.a: the abin- ton School of Science October 6. games are October 12, Minot a theré (aight game); Octo- School of Forestry ‘Teachers vember 10, Jamestown, college it Fights Last Night | (By the Associated Press) 166%, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., out- pointed Billy Ket Hel!, 171, Mille, N. J., (10); Al ‘Trainor, 159%, out Willie Vases, 147%, Milwaukee | (3); Benny Duke, 147%, Grand Mich., outpointed Toots Edie 151%, Milwaukee, out- Rapls, Mich., (5). idee A a ‘San Francisco—Speedy Dado, 117, Manilla, outpointed Jo Tei Ken, 115%, Korea (10); Tony Marino, 117, Pittaburgh, Pa., out- pointed Raymond Mayo, 117, Phil- ‘Tex.—Wildcat Monte, tich, 135, oytpointed Augie Soliz, 132, Los’ angeles (0). —_—_+——_——_ boy, weighed seven, six and five and a half at birth, Mr. and Mars. Gotcken have three other ‘ehild- ren, Thieves Abandon Car But Take Groceries ‘The automobile belonging to James McGarvey, farmer living northeast of the city, which late Friday night was reported as stolen, was found on the highway leading to Fort Lincoln early Saturday morning. A supply of groceries, which McGarvey had Placed in the back seat, was missing when the car was discovered. Get them to their original pattern. cleaning odor to linger remodeled. Capital tion of the state arrived Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Goecken, farmers living south of here. The babies, two girls and a Eight Persons Get Citizenship Papers Bight Burleigh county residents were given their citizenship papers ‘@c ® naturalization hearing conducted by District Judge Fred | Jansoniuz and Abraham Clegg, naturalization eyaminer from St. Paul, in the dis- trict courtrooms, Saturday morning Persons whose petitioris were ac: cepted by the examiner were Richard Gerlach, Folkert Sundhein, Ruth Gishler, Joseph and Mary Litt, Bridget ON all = Bismarck and Hattie Belile, Driscoll Backer, Haakon Out Your Winter Clothes A lot of your last winter’s clothes can be used again. But, to look your best in them and to feel style-right, have them cleaned and pressed. RUGS Have your rugs cleaned the factory way! This is the only way to restore beauty of color and DRAPES... cretonne, taffeta drapes—all regain color and attractiveness when properly cleaned. There’s no tell-tale in your house. Tt is not too late to have your fur coat expertly cleaned, glazed, relined or Phone 684 for Pick-Up Laundry BISMARCK, N. DAK. 301 Front Street aS ER Sa

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