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aE ase ES ile ES Cot FULLBACK COUNTS | TWO TOUCHDOWNS, | REFF ONE IN WIN Meinhover-Coached Eleven/ Shows Big Improvement in Blocking, Tackling | FONDRICH PACES VISITORS! Heavier Mercer County Team Makes Serious Last-Period Bid for Score Led by Fullback Pete Fischer, St. Mary’s high school eleven marched to touchdowns in each of the first three periods to score an 18-0 victory over Hazen in a game played here Friday afternoon. Fischer, calling signals and doing a major share of the passing and kicking, teamed with Leroy Reff in the backfield to reel off the most con- sistent gains against the heavier Ha- zen forwards, Early in the first period after an ex- change of punts, Reff slid off tackle from Hazen’s 28-yard line to the 12 and on the next play circled end for) 12 yards and the touchdown. Art Helbling failed to convert the extra point in a plunge at the line. Fischer skirted his own right end for the second touchdown after a steady march down the field had put the ball on the Hazen two-yard line. A fumble gave the ball to Hazen but Fondrich got off a poor punt from back of his own goal, Rausch taking it on the 22 and returning it to the 10. On the next play Fischer carried it over. Pass Paves Way A pass, Fischer to Eugene Schmidt, which took the ball from St. Mary's 43 to Hazen’s 19, paved the way for the third counter. The Saints lost the ball on downs here but Rausch recovered a Hazen fumble and three plays later, Fischer raced around his own right end for another touch- down. The Hazen team rallied to put up ® determined fight in the final per- fod and threatened to score on one oecasion. Held for downs. Fondrici kicked to Rausch on the Bismarck ‘two-yard line as the game ended. Rausch and Helbling, while their gains were not as consistent or as long as those of Fischer and Reff. nevertheless turned in good games and several times it was their blocking that paved the way for the longer jaunts of their mates. In the Saint line the play of Eddie Reff and Schmidt at ends and Kenny Hes- singer at guard was outstanding. Fendrich Outstanding Fondrich, fullback for Hazen, bore the brunt of the Hazen attack. Swartz also turned in a good game for the le Saints showed bail club on both an improved offense and de-| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBRE 5, 1935 18-0 Victo | Fischer Leads Saint Attack in Embattled Bengals Need Two Mo | Defends Title ‘ TONY CANZONERI New York, Oct. 5.—(#)—The lightweight fistic crown rode jauntily though a trifle askew to- day above the brow of Tony Canzoneri. The grinning 26-year- old veteran of the ring kept his title Friday night in a slashing | encounter with sturdy Al Roth of the Bronx, but he took a sound beating in the last three rounds of a roaring climax. On the As- sociated Press score card, Canzon- eri won the first twelve rounds and Roth the last three. The de- cision was unanimous. Jimmies Trounce | Dakota Wesleyan Peterson and Schauer Count Touchdowns in 19-0 Vic- tory Friday Night ' Jamestown, N. D., Oct. 5. — () —} Driving power provelled Jamestown} college to a 19 to 0 victory over the Dakota Wesleyan football team Fri- day night. | attacks which brought the ball deep into home territory, the Jimmies swept back over the field !n second, third and fourth periods for touch- downs. i Jamestown started from its 10-yard | line for the first one, Schauer and} Thune providing the main push and Opening N.C.C Forward Pass, Recovered Fum-, ble Account for Two Scores | in Hard Tilt | \ Fargo, N. D., Oct. 5—(/)—North Da- kota's Aggies, who last week gave) Minnesota's Gophers a surprise job; opened their North Central Confer-' ence football campaign Friday night by hurdling Morningside, 14 to 0. A foreward pass and a recovered fumble accounted for the Aggies’! scores, made only after a stubborn fight with the injury-weakened in-) vaders. Morningside, while allowing} 12 Bison first downs to its own three, ; bottled up the Aggie running attack. In the second period Sam Dober- vich intercepted a Morningside pass ‘n midfield. Schranz flipped one to Sloan, who ran 26 yards for the first touchdown, Sturgeon place-kicking for the extra point. | Recovering a Morningside fumble, the Aggies marched to the visitors’ one-yard line in the fourth quarter, | Quarterback Reiners scoring. Stur- geon again added the point. ! MORIARTY Le Graves, star Morningside back,’ suffered a slight concussion in the, third quarter. He was taken to a! hospital here. Summary: ;Morningside Pos. N. Dak. State; Brandon le Westgate | Fodness It Sturgeon! McNamara Ig Newman | Engebretson c Maynard; Barrow rs Millar) Miller Tb Dobervich Anderson re Sloan Karroll qb Reiners Clark th Schranz Graves rh May Hughes fb Frickson By periods. | Morningside .. 000 00 N. D. State .. + 0 7 0 714) Scoring—North Dakota, touchdowns, ; Sloan, Reiners. , Points after touch- down, Sturgeon 2 (placements). | Referee, George Lynch, St. Cloud} Teachers; P. E. Mickelson, Morning-} tside, umpire; head linesman, Don A.' Gates, Grinnell. 'Ineligibility Claims | Alfonse, Gopher Back: Minneapolis, Oct. Alfonse, leading ball carrier on Min- nesota’s 1934 football championship Retaliating against South Dakotaiteam and considered the “sparkplug” | of the 1935 Gophers, will do no ground - gaining for the thundering herd this year. Low in his scholastic grades in one course, the Cumberland, Wis., star several days ago took a second ex- amination in the subject and Frid was informed he had failed to pa: He was considered definitely inelig- jer Kenesaw 5.—()—Julius | N.D.A.C. Defeats Morningside, 14-0, | onference Campaign. , ‘Used Vile Names’ i -— e RIOTOUS, 11-INNING ENCOUNTER WINDS UP 6-5 FOR TIGERS Tex Carleton to Oppose Gen- eral Crowder’ in Fourth Game Saturday * * * { Dispute Revolves _ Around Moriarty Landis Orders Investigation of Charges ‘Umpire Used Vile Language’ Chicago, Oct. 5. — (®) — Umpire! George Moriarty, a hard boiled Irish- | man who woudn’t budge an inch for any “dangerous Dan McGrew,” has turned the 1935 world series from a cream puff festival into a vitupera- | tive barrage that forced Commission- M. Landis to order a sweeping investigation Friday. The battle was between big George | and the bristling Chicago Cubs, when the veteran umpire from the old; school Friday chased tiree of them from the bench under a shower of words that caused the National League champions, headed by Man-| ager Charlie Grimm, to make a vig- | orous protest to Commissioner Land | Commissioner Landis planned to; ;call all principals before him Satur- day for a hearing. Started at Detroit The fight between the American) League umpire, himself a Chicago lresident and former Cub player, ; Started in the first series game at De- |troit when he warned the Cubs to i“lay off” big Hank Greenberg, Tiger first baseman. | Friday when the Cubs, enraged by | close play at second on Phil Cavar- fense. They gained consistently when | carping the er sen pe poe | Peterson crossing the goal line around forwards broke through many times! the end. Passes to Schauer and Pet- to stop the Hazen plays before they | efson netted the next two. The game by periods | Jamestown Dakota Wesleyan iniscent of the ‘34 team. First Quarter | Peterson le Buroughs! Not only was he a good ball toter— ; St. Mary's chose to receive and! Amsoen It Gawtry | he gained 8.5 yards per try last year Fondrich kicked off. In four downs Kellogg le Phillips } —but his blocking when a mate car- the Saints made the required yard- Enge c Damerow iTied the ball was par-excellence. age and Helbling got two gains of 7! Jensen rg Cooper| But now the Gophers must face the and 15 yards for another first down.| Sundahl rb Collins; remainder of their 1935 schedule Fischer made 25 yards around end to| H. Reslock re Fredricks | Without the man Coach Bernie Bier- the Hazen's 5. The Saints lost ground) R. Reslock ab A. Lehnert | man, after completion of last year's ‘ on the next three plays and Fondrich) Schauer In N. Lehnert | campaign, called the “finest halfback ; punted. Rausch carried the ball once|'Thunem rh Hahn |in the country who neither kicks nor! ; and Reff made two runs of 12 and 14| Delange re Provost | Passes.” / yards to go over for the touchdown. (Re ee ee eae | Fischer kicked off to Swartz who took] Substitutions: Jamestown — Bow- |! Football Scores | } : the ball on his 30 and returned it to|™an, Weber, Logee. Young andj, | q 1 the 40. Hazen failed to punt on the|Denms; Dakota Wesleyan—Mitchell, Augustana, 39; Aberdeen Northern got underway. fourth down and St. Mary's took the ball. They carried the ball to the Hazen’s 25 where they lost it on downs as the quarter ended. St. Mary's 6; Kazen 0. Second Quarter Hazen failed to make the required yardage and kicked on the fourth The summary: Itablein and Anderson. | Officals: Brown, Carleton, referee; ; Kimball, 8. D. U., umpire; Gussner, | Jamestown college, head linesman. Scoring: Touchdowns—Peterson 2, Schauer. Point after touchdown — Schauer (by line plunge.) = | 2, \ible for competition this year. ; In practice sessions this year, Al- fonse’s presence at right half seemed ;to provide the necessary spark to set the varsity clicking in a manner rem- Normal, ¢. North Dakota State 14; side, 0. Morning- St. Thomas, 14; Macalester. 0. ! Platteville Teachers, Point Teachers, 0. Superior Teachers, 1; ®tevens 31; St. ol’, 0; jretta, swarmed around Moriarty, who! jcalled the play, and inflamed him,| ‘Moriarty chased Manager Grimm, (Captian Elwood English and Out- | ifielder “Tucker’ Stainback from the; jbench, thus inviting even more vitu-} ‘peration. | “They started it and they can fin-, lish it,” said Moriarty. “No ball play-| jer can call me the names they did} and get away with il. I told Grimm at Detroit if I heard any more such} ; Profanity as they yelled at Greenberg | ‘that I'd che five of them off the! bench with Grimm leading the pro- cession. And it still goes.” Grimm Protests {_ Grimm protested to Landis that Moriarty had cursed Billy Herman. | “Billy told me he called him a vile {name,” said Grimm, “so I told the judge about it. Even an umpire has |no right to swear at a ball player. We don't have to stand for it.” Ford Frick, National League presi- dent, occupied a box behind the Cub dugout and said that Moriarty’s lan- guage was “very vile.” “His actions were most unbecoming & 1 erin ; x | Eau Claire Teachers, 13; Winona! to an umpire,” said Frick. “I heard pone Fee cau pavn he Fein Donald for Rausch, Cavasino for| Teachers, 0. him cuss the Cubs. No, I’m not re- put Schmidt fumbled with Krause re.{G2"%° J Fox for J. McDonald,/ Mankato Teachers, 27; Bemidji| porting it to Judge Landis, but I'll tell } area Ronacich Se a Rausch for J. Fox, Garske for Cava-| Teachers, 6. him all I heard in private if he asks Peery tick: ine ick on the 22 and sino, Patzman for L. Reff, Ressler for) | Jamestown College, 19; Dakota Wes-/me to do so, Yes, the Cubs were 3 ‘ ach. Hazen—Ganske for Chase,|lean, 0. tough, too.” ¢ returned fn to the 10. On the ext Chase for Ganske, Ganske for Swartz.| LaCrosse Teachers, 25; Stout Insti-; Down through his baseball playing r ohdoan Macher Kicked off to the| wClicials: Ben Jacobson, referee; | tute, 0. days at Chicago andDetroit and as + es erienine Sonne Krause on| Father Holleman, timekeeper; Cle-| Yankton College, 12; + Western/an_ umpire, Moriarty has been a \ I St. Mary's 30. The ball was in mid- ment Kelley, head linesman, Union, 0. stormy baseball figure, field in St. Mary's possession when ~ ——p a the half ended. St. Mary's 12; Hazen 0. ° Third Quarter | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | D Fondrich kicked off to Fischer who] g___ oe ae | = carried it to his own 35. Fischer car- b ried it to the 43 and one play later A threw a pass to Schmidt who ran the YES, YES. . ball to Hazen’s 19. Here they lost the GOSH~LOOK AT ALVIN |. NOW, THE DRATTED i all on downs. Krause, Fondrich and ! SAY . f THING Falk 1 & ~—_ Swartz pounded the line for a first HIM_GO Io oa RUN ALONG In susT COULD % on nee Se peuneners unbes eon HES A GOOD —.~AND SAY CATCH HIM IN jusch recovered. cher ant a made a first down on two plays and SUMPER , UNCLE iz NOTHING ABOLIT MY HAT BEFORE s Fischer ran 16 yards for the third AMOS |I-—SUPPOSIN THIS ATM » touchdown. Fischer's attempted drop HE WAS AS BIG AS AN MARTHA & Kick was wide. Fondrich kicked off = EXERCISING SEES THis! i to Reff and after an sxpuanne of ELEPHANT-1LL BET punts the ball rested in midfield as the quarter ended. St. Mary's 18; HE COULD SUMP CLEAR a; - Hazen 0. nies Gesces OVER TH GRAND ® a i a Fischer made a first down off tackle CANYON IN ONE = oHBYS ZEB RanERS 2 on Hazen’s 45 but three incompleted passes and Hazen blocked Fischer's punt. and recovered on St. Mary's 27. ‘The Hazen team kept the ball in St. Mary’s territory for the rest of the game but failed to get inside the 10- yard line. Fondrich kicked to Fischer on the two-yard line as the game St. Mary's 18; Hazen 0. HOP, DONT You THINK ‘O Chicago, Oct. 5—(P)—Up to their necks in verbal war and adversity— and loving it—thse embattled Tigers for another grip on Chicago's Cubs, to fp them over once more for half the margin that stands between them and baseball's world championship. The way they beat the Cubs Friday, 6 to 5 in 11 innings,.was evidence enough for those with eyes to see that this world series is headed for the same resting place that the world’s heavyweight championship will find when and {f Joe Louis ever gets into a ring with titleholder Jimmy Brad- dock, namely Detroit. Two more knockdowns and the Tigers have got While the Cubs, maybe a bit punchy, were staggering around fighting with umpires and missing their shots at the real foe, the Tigers decided that an old hand at the business of win- ning ball games, General Alvin Crowder, the painstaking right- hander, was just the man to sneak another Sunday punch over the Chi- cago youngsters who started so well, but apparently did most of their run- uing in the first few paces. Carleton Gets Call In the midst of carrying their per- sonal war with Umpire George Mor- iarty, an impetuous, hard bitten Irish- man, to Kenesaw Mountain Landis, baseball's high commissioner, the Cubs placed their waning faith in Tex Carleton, a graduate of the St. Louis Cardinal gas house gang, and if that fails, nothing the umpires say and do is going to’matter much after Sst- urday. First the Tigers were hit smack be- tween the eyes about noon-with the realization that Hank Greenberg was. out of action with a strained left wrist, not only for the day but prob- ably for the entire series. It caused @ comprehensive lineup change. Then along came Bib Bill Lee, the Cubs’ powerful sophomore right hander, to smother them with one run their underhand _ star, cuffed around, 3 to 1, Rookie Delivers But “Flea” Clifton, rookie third- baseman, turned out to be a genuine Tiger, and in the general turmoil that developed after the sixth inning, Mickey Cochrane's fighters not only came from behind and took a lead of 5 to 3 with a four run rally that fin- ished Lee in the eighth, but they was being !slapped the ears off Lon Warneke, their nemesis, to do it the hard way. Then they survived seeing their fab- ulous Lynwood “Schoolboy” Rowe, the hurler they believe in in a pinch, blow that two-run lead in the ninth, when like Warneke he came into the game before fully warmed up, Instead of curling up there, the Tigers just started to fight. Rowe pulled himself together and paced along with Larry French, the Cubs third pitcher, until Jo Jo White fin- ally hammered home the winning run{ in the 11th with a single that counted Owen. Rowe then was all the Tigers believe him to be, as he fanned Chuck Klein and pinch hitter Stephenson to end the ball game. frozen affair, hitting a new high in this series for thrills and excitement, though it failed by 5,000 to draw the capacity house expected of it. Dickinson Peds Tackle Vikings at Valley City (By the Associated Press) Valley City’s homecoming game against Dickinson State Teachers college Saturday is the only intercol- legiate conference game scheduled this week that will have any bearing on the loop championship race. Circuit play will not get under way in earnest until Oct. 19, but non- conference games slated for Saturday include Minot at Spearfish, 8. D., and Ellendale at Bottineau. In Friday's affrays Jamestown col- lege turned back the Dakota Wesle- yan 19 to 0. Two tie games are the only results in the intercollegiate conference standings.. They are Minot-Wahpe- ton.in a 7-7 deadlock and Mayville- Ellertiale, 6-6. A common opponent of two of the conference members, losing to the Vikings 21 to 0. l (By The Associated Press) New York—Tony Canzonert, 133, world lightweight champion, outpointed Al Roth, 133, New York, (15), retained title. Syracuse, N. Y.—Eddie “Babe” Risko, 163, world middleweight champion, outpointed Jackie Al- dare, 162, New York, (19), non- title. Chicago—Baby Arizmendi, 129, Mexico City, outpointed Jimmy pointed waukee, 125, Sioux City, Iowa, Claude Varner, 122, Los Angeles, (8). : . San ‘Francisco—Fred Apostoli, 157, San Francisco, outpointed Young Stubley, 159, Chicago, (10); Jimmy Thomas, 128, Pitts- burgh, outpointed Ritchie Ton- taine, 127, Missoula, Mont., (6). More than 120,789,900 books were produced in this country during 1933; book per capita | of population. ~~ from Detroit reached out Saturday! for seven innings while Elden Auker,|! The ball game was a riotous, eer Bottineau played Minot to a seoreless tie and boosted Valley City’s stock by Fights Last Night i GRAFTON DOWNS GRAND FORKS, MAGICIANS Lidgerwood Trips Hi-Liners, |. 13-0; Fessenden Trounces New Rockford (By the Associated Press) Grafton still ruled the roost Satur- day in North Dakota’s high school football family, but remained there only by a slim margin, with Minot challenging s! i. M The Grafton eleven, playing at home, staved off Grand Forks Cen- tral, 7 to 0, Friday in an even battle decided through a blocked punt, Meanwhile Minot’s Magicians be- wildered Mohall, 39 to 0, on the formers’ field; Fessenden invaded New Rockford for a 27 to 6 victory; Lidg- erwood, at home, turned back Valley City, 13 to 0, and Devils Lake tied with Lakota, 0-0, at Lakota. Protects Record Keeping the unbeaten record intact, Grafton won from Grand Forks when ‘Schranz, tackle, blocked a punt on the \Forkers’ 20-yard line, Laberge hit tackle for 17 yards, and Hagen plunged for the touchdown. La Berge kicked the point. Except for that first quarter score, the game was an even proposition, strong line play keeping away all threats. Minot won its fifth straight in over- powering Mohall’s Yellowjackets for a 20-to 0 lead at the half Friday night with Vern Runnestrand, Quarterback, the attack leader. Fessenden scored in three periods, winding up with two fourth quarter touchdowns, in trounc- ing New Rockford. Win Third In Row Winning its third game in four jstarts, Lidgerwood flashed a running attack against Valley City. Ed. Pe- trick cut off tackle for 27 yards and @ touchdown in the first period while a long march, Frank Slaby scoring, brought the other in the third quarter. Slaby tackled Allensworth on the Lidgerwood 14-yard line in the first period after the Valley City halfback had dashed 62 yards. Arky Vaughan Takes National Bat Honors New York, Oct. 5.—(?)—While the Red board won’t go up until after Christmas time, ‘Floyd (Arky) Vaughan of the Pittsburgh Pirgtes has taken the 1935 National League batting championship by so big a margin it looked like a walkover. The final semi-offictal records for the season, made public Saturday, show Vaughan at the top with an av- jerage of “385. He played in 137 of Pittsburgh's games, made 120 hits in 499 times at bat and hung around the 400 mark for most of the season be- fore slumping at the finish. The champion Cubs topped the| team batting table with a .200 aver- age, four’points ahead of New York, while the Giants edged out St. Louis for fielding. honors, 9722 to 9720. While Medwick gave about the best exhibition of all-around clouting with 224 hits, including 46 doubles. 12 triples, and 23 home runs, scored 121 runs and batted in 126 tallies, he didn’t finish first in any of those de- partments. Billy Herman had a total of 227 Another Cub, Augie Galan, led in scoring with 133 runs and in base stealing with 22 thefts. Wally Berger of the Boston Braves was “tops” in two departments with 34 home runs and 129 runs batted in, while the Cin- cinnati rookie, Ival Goodman, belted 18 triples, : On the pitching side of the ledger, Bill (General) Lee of Chicago, com- piled the best won and lost record— 20 victories and six defeats for a .769 average. Dizzy Dean again ranked as the “big” hurler of the season. He won the most games, pitched the greatest number of innings, 323, led in com- plete games with 29 and in strikeouts with 190, Z There are more strange plants and country in the world. An ancient ceremony in High Wy- combe, England, requires each mayor to be weighed before entering office. OUT OUR WAY . EL - pemeesce) TACKUNG DUMMY animals in Australia than in any other | lation WIN FIFTH IN ROW Rambler-Carnegie, Penn-Tiger Games Top Grid Schedule Fordham to Entertain Tough Customer in Boston, Beaten 3-O-Last Year New York, Oct. 5.—(?)—Football forces swung into action across the country Saturday with many & brightly burnished escutcheon due for @ daubing before the day was over. Many of the big teams opened their campaigns against smaller colleges. In a number of games, however, the power of the opposing forces was apparently balanced to a nicety. Outstanding was the Pennsylvania- Princeton game at Princeton, a re- newal of gridiron rivalry which was expected to pack Palmer stadium. ‘The game was something of a toss- up. Fordham entertained a rugged cus- tomer in Boston college. Fordham barely eked out a 3-0 victory last year. Ramblers Favored Another game that might be listed in the same category was the Notre Dame-Carnegie joust at Pittsburgh. The Irish were favored to defeat Car- le. P iNianova faced a stiff test in West- ern Maryland; Army was expected to roll over William and Mary; Harvard was given the call over Springfield; Navy was favored to sail through Mercer, and Dartmouth and Yale were favorites over Vermont and New Hampshire, respectively. In the Far West three games loomed as close contests, Oregon and Utah, St. Mary’s and California, and Washington and Santa Clara. Down South Alabama and George Washington were due to mix in a game that might do something to- ward explaining last week’s 7-7 tie Alabama played with Howard. Georgetown Humbled In games Friday night, Bucknell} downed Ursinus 20-0 as had been ex- pected but Albright humbled the once mighty Georgetown at Washington 7-0 in an upset. Loyola of New Orleans got rolling in the second period after trailing by one touchdown to register a 20-13 vic- tory over Birmingham Southern. The sensational 27-game winning streak of Kirksville Teachers was clipped off in decisive fashion by St. Louis by a score of 37-7. TEAM OUT OF ACTION Chicago, Oct. 5.—(?)—The Western Conference presented football quality Saturday, but saved the big punch—Purdue’s invasion of North- western for the opening battle of the title season-—for tonight. The Purdue-Northwestern tussle was made into a night attraction, the Big Ten’s first experience with foot- ball under the light, to avoid sharing the afternoon with the fourth game) of the world series at Wrigley Field, in safeties and swatted 57 two-baggers. | Chicago. Ohio State was slated to give a dis- play of its tricky offense with Ken- tucky as the opposition, while Mich- igan opened what Wolverine parti- sans hope will be a better season than last year, against Michigan State at Ann Arbor. Indiana’s Hoosiers faced Centre college in their opening game. Illinois entertained Washington University of St. Louis; Wisconsin had a date with Marquette at Madi- son, Iowa faced South Dakota at Iowa City, and Chicago was host to Carroll college of Waukesha, Wis. Minnesota had an open date. &o stringent are bar examinations today that only 465 out of every 1,000 aspiring lawyers ever pass them. In the past 12 years London’s popu- ae hhas decreased more than 185,- A woman attains her majority at the age of 21, under common law, un- ve paste rave 4 less a state law decrees otherwise. as, 129, we ne ‘on GOPHERS ONLY BIG TEN | Mott—Officers of the Hettinger ry Over Hazen re Wins to Clinch World Series Flag | SLOPE NEWS | ‘Wilton—Enrolled in .the schools here are 328 pupils. Kintyre—One hundred tons of hay burned on George Huber’s farm near here. Glen Ullin—The annual fair of the Sacred Heart church will be held here Sunday and Monday. Washburn—Perry Pendroy, 69, set- tler in the Dogden and Butte areas in 1883, died at Venice, Calif., recently. | Carson—E. A. Jacobs of Brisbane ‘has been appointed deputy Grant |county sheriff by Sheriff Sam Nagel. Fessenden—Miss Marion Fahey has been appointed assistant postmaster here, succeeding Miss Edna Burg- stahler. | Pettibone—Modified six-man foot~ ball is being played in the high school here. There is a total enrollment of 120 in the school. McClusky — Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Reimche, who homesteaded northeast of here in 1903, have retired and moved to Lodi, Calif. Grassy Butte—Mrs. Katie Norton is looking for the person or persons who fired 14 stacks of grain on her farm here. Her entire crop was de- stroyed. Zeeland—Plunging into threshing machine cylinder through a rotten board, Paul Salwei, 19, mangled his foot and part of his leg so badly the member was amputated. Center—Playing in his yard, Rich< ard, young son of Mr. and Mrs, Wil- am Steinacher, slipped, fell oh a piece of glass, gashed his leg. Four stitches closed the wound. Hebron—Fire on the Lee Hoff farm northwest of here destroyed the garage, an automobile, truck, house- hold goods, grain, flour and other articles, Washburn—R. O. Everson and Os- car Mellin escaped serious injuries when passing a car on a hill, they swerved too close to avoid a second car and struck the first, forcing their own car off the road. + j McClusky—Barley yields of from 25 to 53 bushels per acre were reported as being common in this vicinity. Some durum wheat ran as high as 24 bushels per acre and graded No. 1. Fort Yates—Members of the Sioux county planning board are Irving Loths and John L. Turner, Fort Yates; Ted Ferderer, Solen; J. L. Big- ham, Watauga; Anton Engel, Self- ridge. county 4-H club council are Ethan Newby, president; T. R. Thompson, vice president; Mrs. A. J. Trzynka, , and Mrs. Hazel Stuart, treasurer. Steele—New doors and flooring val- ued at $100 were stolen from the David Henry farm eight miles soutk of here. The home had been repair- ed by the Bank of North Dakota the past summer. Hazen—Directors of the newly or- ganized Hazen Co-Operative Produce company are Ray Winmill, president; Norman Fahlsing, secretary; Henry Singer, Frank Michael, 8. H. Tjaden. John H. Blohm was named business manager. Hebron—Members of the Boy Scout committee here, W. H. Itrich, A R. Bolke, A. E. Draeb, G. H. Leick, W. G. Klick, V. I. Wilson and John Reis, have approved appointment of M. B. Steig as scoutmaster succeed- ing Mr. Draeb, resigned. Steig’s as- j Sistants are John Reis and J. 1. Birke: land. Watford City—Elmo Sorenson es- ‘caped death by a shoelace _ here. | Tossed by his horse, his foot caught jin @ stirrup, dragged 100 yards, the | horse shied from a passing auto and |permitted Sorenson’s foot to slip out jof the snagged shoe, the lace coming untied. He was picked up unconscious. but cheated the hospital, his injuries being minor. Pare. * é . STP WILLAMe, bao MOTHERS GET GRAY .,ameuaninon