The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 30, 1936, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JANUARY 80, 1936 Guardians of Initia CANADIANS CHOICE TO ANNEX __ Wild Life Me OLYMPIC HOCKEY TEAM TITLE | JAPIRST BASEMEN | RBTURNING 70 OLD POSITIONS IN 1936) Jimmie Foxx Shifts Allegiance to Red Sox for Coming Flag Chase HORNSBY, GRIMM ARE out) Recruit From Newark Slated to Replace Jim Bottomley at Cincinnati ‘New York, Jan. 30.—()—Despite the obyious hazards of the job, first base seems to breed “iron men” in base- ball. For that reason, among others, com- paratively few changes will be made among the major league guardians of the No. 1 sack for the 1936 pen- nant races. Fourteen of the 16 players who hela forth as regulars last season will be back at the same stand, barring acci- dents or unexpected developments in tfaining camps. This included Jimmie Fox. the Maryland mauler, who began the 1935 feason behind the bat at Connie Mack’s request, subsequently returned to his regular job at first and who now has shifted allegiance to the Bos- ton Red Sox. M’Quinn Gets Chance incinnati Reds contemplate + change among National League first basemen. George Mc- Quinn, top fielding first sacker of the;One .300 Hitter, One Winning} International League with Newark last year but only a .288 hitter, is slated to replace veteran Jim Bottomley. ‘Two managers who started the 1935 season at first base. Charley Grimm of the Chicago Cubs and Rogers Hornsby of the St. Louis Browns, no idea of repeating the trick. Grimm yielded quickly to the brilliant young- ster, Phil Cavarretta. Hornsby will be gume as regular first sacker. Bill Terry of the Giants fas the league's top fielding first base- man leaves him no alternative un- Jess, as he fears he “breaks down.” Foxx replaces Ellsworth (Babe) Dahleren, the flashy fielder from the] Fal Lee is the batter and righthander coast league. Needing no understudy | Joh (3 and 2), Reis, late of the Brook- for Foxx, the Red Sox optioned Dahl- gren to the Syracuse Internationals. Sports Reund-Up| | By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, Jan. 30.—()—Knickers are coming back in golf dnd you bow- legged fellows may as well make up your minds to like it... . The 1936 knickers will be less baggy than the old plus fours, bui they'll be knickers just the same. For the die hards there'll be an innovation known as “Knicker slac! ... They are slacks ‘@mputated below the knee or knickers without a gathering belt or buckle to fasten them to the leg. ... You used to call them knee pants. Looks like Jimmy ITsaminzer was right when he predicted the Athletics would start the season with ene good heme plate... . They cay Nathan Mann, New Haven youngster, can't miss coing . What Raloh the Sasse’s prev to widen feotball ficld to 200 feet? King Levinsky is fish cleaning and scaling contest on e coast. ... The king may be no great shakes as a fighter, but give fhim a knife and he'll show vou what do with those “fresh fish.” . . . triotic citizens of Stratford, Ont.,; nce offered Howie Morenz, the Hockey star, $1,000 to remain amateur. . . ng to promote Hank Bath wasn't the only loser when Billy Trecst beat him the other night... . Popper Jacob _ sold two carloads of his California sheep cn the Chicago market and bet mest of the dough on Hank .... The Braves are trying to | find a spot for Rebbit Maran- | ville. a som EL SS Sa Barney Ross, paid $1,725 for licking “Lou Halper. now is only $98.275 shy of the $190,000 goal he set for him- self this year. . . . Norman Bright, California miler, fly here Sat- urday for the Millrose games. ae ‘Then fly back to resume teaching} duties Monday morning. . It hap- pened a long time ago, but movies of the Ohio State-Notre Dame game, ‘which the Irish won 18-13 by scoring 22 points in the last two minutes, still @re going strong. . . Three sets of the film are going around. .. But they can’t begin to meet the demand. Crowds of 6,000 braved a 20 be- < low blast to welcome home St. Paul’s young Jack Gibbons, .. . Whereupon, Jack tried so hard he fought his worst fight... . And got his second licking in 68 bouts. pean aia AEOR A SL US N. Y. Youth Captures | Amateur Cue Crown New York, Jan. 30.—(?)—Youth, in the person of Edward Charles Rogers of Glen Cove, N. Y., reigned over the * amateur pocket billiard world Thurs- day. Rogers, only 24 years old and competing in his first major tourna- ment, wrested the national cham- Pionship from 57-year-old J. Howard Shoemaker, the defending champion, Minot, N. D., Jan, .30.—()—The Bottineau Schoo! of Forestry basket- ball team upset Minot Teachers col- have} club with the longest name is going to put its title—the National League Baseball Club of Boston—on the | satisfied to let Irvin (Jack) Burns re-} chopping block Thursday. h talked | ever name, remain the same old tegm. loudly about retiring to the dugout) Their 1936 roster, in Thursday's but his .340 batting mark and record] proves it. cludes one .300 hitter and a single) {major league pitcher who won more ‘half, the Steele an ‘ fg ft pf Linton fg ft pt £1 0 1 Frison, f 1 0 3} | £6 1 8 Dobler, £101 4 Zeck, 1.4 1 Louinr, ¢ 0 0 2 Brown, g 0° 1 0 Volk, & 0 0 2 Hoehh 1 1 0 Schrer'r,g 0 0 1/ ‘Tollefson 0 0 © Kramer 0.0 3) Wagner oo 80 y o°0 oO} Dalenberg 0 0 0 Senger -0 0 0} Fa ee ee: aes i} Toiuls 9 7 6 ‘Totals 2 1 Stecle . 2 2 1 10— Linton \ Pipette hanes —% Colorful Guard i —% | Newest addition scoring Phantom basketball team is Joe “Crazy Boy” Satovich, for- merly star guard with Si's Chick- to the high- | en Pickers. Satovich’s spectacu- | lar play has been one of the high- | lights of the state independent champions’ recent appearances. Roster of Braves Unaltered for 36 Hurler Listed by Managers on Payroll Boston, Jan. 30.—(#)—The baseball But the erstwhile Braves, by what- fail, The roster issued by the club in- than he lost last season. Outfielder lyns, the chucker. Fargo Expects 100 Teams for Tourney Fargo, N. D., Jan. 30.—()—At least 100 teams are expected for the sec- ond annual Red River Valley Wom- en's Bowling tournament, sponsored by the Fargo Women’s Bowling as- sociation here beginning Tuesday. The tournament will be concluded on} Sunday, Feb. 9. Seventy Fargo teams already ure included among the entries. St. Cloud leads the cities from outside! Fargo, with 10 entries. St. Paul is; sending five, while Mandan, Minot and Jamestown have promised two} each and Minneapolis one. Scratch has been set at 170, with two-thirds handicap permitted cach contestant. Steele Prep Cagers | Trounce Linton, 25-5) Steele, N. D., Jan. 30.—Breaking up a great defensive battle with a bril-| liant burst of speed in the second} high school quint trounced the Linton prep cagers, 25- 5, here Tuesday. Faced by Gulde- mann, who tossed in six baskets from the floor and a gift shot, the lozals| rallied for 21 points in the final two periods after holding a narrow 4-2) edge at the half. The summary: ! Yankees, Improved Over 1932, May Upset Maple Leafs; Germany Stronger (This is the last of four articles on the Olympic Winter Games.) x OR OK Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, Jan. 30.—(NEA)—Canada, 11; U. 8. 9; Germany, 4; Poland, 0. That is the way the 1932 Olympic hockey outcome read, and it is likely to repeat itself here this year, with only slightly different figures. Canada has won every hockey competition since 1924, when the winter games became part of the regular Olympics. Even before that, when hockey was played between the United States and Canada at the 1920 Olympics in Antwerp, as an ex- hibition, the land of the Maple Leaf prevailed in the final outcome. But, this year, cohorts of Uncle Sam have assembled the greatest hockey | squad ever to represent the red, white, {and blue, and, if the tight finish of | 1932, that saw Canada winning only after a 2-2 tie with the Yanks, is any criterion, the boys from below the in- ternational border are due to give the Canadians a surprise, despite the | fact that the Dominion is the birth- place of the world’s fastest sport. Canada is’ not the only nation that will furnish the Yankees with stern opposition. Other countries on the continent have developed strong sex- tets in the four years since the last Olympics, and considerable trouble. is expected from them. Germans Out in Force An idea of the strength of hockey teams in Germany can be had when one realizes that every Bavarian town of 1,090 population has a team, and that every team has contributed to-| with Ted Campagna, county recrea- ward the class of the German squad| tional director, as instructor. that is.entered during the hockey session to be run off here between} es are Roy McCloskey, Miles Olson, ! Feb. 6 and 16. Nevertheless, the Yanks are figur-| McCloskey, Gerald Long, V. 8. Mer- ing that Canada is the outfit to beat.| cer, Miles Parke, H. O. Farish, R. W. But Uncle Sam's hopefuls will have} tang, Harold Hall and Bob Browna- to improve considerably to take the| well, Dominion’s boys, for they recently! Members of the class at Moffit are dropped three games and wound up with two ties in playing French and English teams in exhibition before the actual Olympic clashes. The United States has the cream of its amateur crop here. The array nicludes Tom Moone, goalie of the Boston Olympics, native of Ottawa and naturalized United States citizen; Frank Shaughnessy of Roanoke, Va., graduate of McGill uni- versity and defense man from Mon- treal Victorias; Frank Spain of Bos- ton, graduate of Dartmouth and cen- ter of the Boston Olympics; Paul Rowe, graduate of Boston university and wing of the Boston Olympics, and Frank Stubbs, graduate of Har- vard and defense man of the Boston) dong high school Olympics. Yanks Only Real Challengers Other wearers of the stripes and stars are Elbridge Ross, graduate of Colby and wing for the Boston Olym- pics; John C. Lax, graduate of Bos- ton university and defense man of the Boston Olympics; Phil’ La Batte, graduate of Minnesota and defense man of the Baltimore Orioles; John C. Garrison, member of the 1932 Olympic squad, graduate of Harvard and defense man of the Boston Olym- pics; Gotdon Smith, spare on the 1932 Olympic squad- and wing of the Boston Olympcis; Austin F. Kammer, graduate of Princeton, and Malcolm McAlpin, graduate of Princeton and center of St. Nicks. In the Olympic ice stadium, the Yankees will, in all probability, face the same challenge from Canada as they did in 1932, when a 2-2 tie gave the Winnipeg Club Olympic honors. No other country figures, despite the increased strength apparent {through concentration on the game by Germany, France, England, Swit- zeyland, and other countries since the last Olympics. The Yankees, too, have beeh absor- bing hockey lore along with the rest) of the nations and it is probable that, with the expert coaching they have had, they will be able to upset the dope on their Canadian cousins in the rink that has been constructed'“slow whistle” end moving goal posts 3) here, accommedating 10,000 specta-;back from the end zone to the goal | tors. CATALINA OPEN STARTS Avalon, Calif, Jan. 30.—(#)—Santa. Catalina island surrendered to an in- vading army of golfers Thursday. Drawn to the island playground by Olympic} | veting Slated in Capitol Peterson Urges North Dakotans to Attend Conference Opening Feb. 3 State Game and Fish Commissioner Arthur I. Peterson Thursday drew at- tention to the North American Wild Life conference to open Feb. 3 at Washington, urging “as many North Dakota sportsmen as possible attend the meeting.” The conference has been called by President Roosevelt and wil be held Feb. 3 to 7 inclusive. Peterson pointed out special rail rates of one and one-third the cost of a one-way ticket for a round trip have been placed in effect by rail- roads. / He said he had been informed by F, A. Silcox, chief of the U. S. For- est service, and chairman of the committee in charge of the confer- ence, that delegations from every state, Mexico and Canada have in- dicated their intention to attend the gathering. “Farm organizations, sportsmen’s clubs, conservation groups, nature leagues, eccnomic associations and other groups in North Dakota sould plan on sending delegations to this conference—one of the most import- ant moves of its kind in recent years in the interest of conservation of our wild life,” Peterson said. ’ Sterling, Moffit Boys Enter Boxing Classes Boxing classes in preparation for the proposed Burleigh county Golden Gloves tournament in the spring are being held in several county towns Sterling boys entered in the class- Beuhl Sherman, Thomas and Leo Walter Jones, Jr. Dean Argast, Charles, Jr., and Morris Thompson, Elmer Kendall, Bob Dralle, Willard Moos, Alfred and Glenn Carroll, Charles Moffit, Jr., Ray Argast, Ted Pillsburg, Lyman McCarl, Lynn Miller, Clarence Lunde and Ray Hoover. Underwood Defeats Washburn, 25 to 24 Washburn, N. D., Jan. 30.—Break- ing a 19-all tie at the end of the reg- ular game, the Underwood Comets scored a narrow 25-24 victory over thé Washburn Cardinals in a ding- basketball game here Friday. Harold Wiese, substi- tute Washburn forward, was high scorer with 13 points, followed by Gogstetter and Busch for the win- ners with eight points each. The summary: Washburn fg ft pf Underw’d fg ft pf oe, f 0 0 1 Busch, t 4 0 0 Holton, f 1 1 1 Gogste'r,£3 2 1 Wiese, c 1 0 3 Sngler, c 1 2 1 Fisher, g 2 0 3 Miller,g 1 0 1 Stevens, g 1 0 3 Englor,g 1 1 3 Wiese 5 3 0 Johnson 0 0 0 — — — Kranz 00 0 Totals 10 4 11 —-- Totals 10 56 6 Referee, Paul Klein; umpire, Ed Martinson. Coaches’ Rule Group Will Meet Saturday Pittsburgh, Jan. 30.—(#)—The rules committee of the American Football Coaches association will have subjects aplenty to talk about Saturday but the general impression remains the mentors will favor leaving standing regulations largely alone. The committee men will draft rec- ommendations to the national foot- ball rules committee, guided by a questionnaire sent out by Lou Little of Columbia, chairman of the coaches’ committee, The opinion is elimination of the line will get most attention. LEWIS BEATEN i Denver, Colo., Jan. 30.—(#)—John , Henry Lewis, Negro, lost a ten round! decision to Emilio Martinez of De ver Wednesday night but the Negro’ the Catalina $5,000 open tournament, 1150 or more players were entered in|stake. Lewis had a 181 to 176% the first round of medal competition. | weight advantage. t light heavyweight title was not at WELL,1 PUT THE HOT BOUNCE BON S.GRANVILLE Z HOOPLE ! M4 7 o> Jege in a basket shooting spree Wed- esday night, 46-45. Lif A srue\ & HOW LONG DO YOU FIGURE ON HAUNTING THIS HOUSE? YOU GOT ME WRONG. MARTHA—T AIN'T DROPPIN’ ANCHOR KERE &S A RELATIVE! TM IN TOWN ON By Ahern, % BUSINESS I~ _ DIDNT 1 TELL You IM GETTIN’ TH’ AGENCY FOR TEN STATES. ON A BIG DEAL FOR, THIRTY YEARS ALL 1 TOOK OUT OF MY POCKET WAS MARKED MAN, SAKE eS ‘UNT BUT TUL BE IN TH | i Promising Welter | Wilbetabidastale Sad Oth teen Rusty, Gramling’s rapid rise from a preliminary fighter to a main . eventer is attributed to his re- markable courage in the ring. The best boxers hold no fears for this scrappy Bismarck welter- weight and consequently he never fails to please the crowds. He will battle Jack Harding of Sioux City, Id., here next Wednesday in the six-round semi-windup. Capitol Theatre, LEGION BOXING CARD TICKETS WILL BE PUT ON SALE FRIDAY! Coaches From NW Rusty Gramling Has Made Not- able Rise to Headline ‘ Fighter in State Tickets for the fourth American Legion fight card, which will be Staged here nxt Wednesday as a feature of the annual convention of the North Dakota Farmers Grain Dealers association, were being print- ed Thursday and will be placed or sale Friday, Contracts for all headliners, includ- ing Ray Mann of Sioux City, Iowa, who fights Dick Demaray in the 16- round main event, and Jack Harding, also from Sioux City, who meets Rusty Gramling in the semi-windup have been signed and returned, ac- cording to Matchmaker Fred Thim- mesch, \ Isham Hall, manager of the Bis- marck leather pushers, returned here Wednesday from Fargo where Gram- ling lost a split verdict of referee and two judges in an exciting mix with Mel Sullivan of Winnipeg. Rusty Rises Rapidly Gramling has risen rapidly from a preliminary fighter to one of the best drawing junior welterweights in the state. Headlining the Elks card at Fargo, Gramling and Sullivan packei the house to “standing-room-only” capacity. In the past eight months the rug- ged Capital Citian has knocked out the Frisco Kid at Beach in the first round, Eddie Monyer here in the fourth, Bobby Watts at Beach in the fourth and Babe Grant at Baker, Mont., in the first. He has also out- pointed Babe Daniels at Grand Forks, Billy Olson at Glendive, Dixie Taylor at Sioux City, and Nick Bush at Aber- deen, : Rusty's biggest ambition at the present is to have all of the boxers in Hall's stable for whom he fought Preliminaries for several years fight a Klein’s Triumph Piggly-Wiggly and Capital Com-; mercial College Quints Beaten in League Capitol Theatre cagers won a nar- row 31-30 victory over the Piggly- Wiggly quint in a City League basket- ball game Wednesday night but Klein’s Toggery made easy work of the Capital Commercial College five, chalking up a 64-16 triumph. O’Ne!l and Potter paced the'Capi- tol Theatre scoring in which all but one of seven players participated. Leier for the Piggly-Wiggly quint was high scorer, however, dropping in six field goals and a brace of gift shots for 14 points. Potter collected seven points and O’Neil six. " Johnny Yeasley, Johnny Spriggs, Ed Fite and Gordie La Rue were key men in the victory for Klein's, league leaders. Yeasley was high point man with nine buckets from the floor and a free throw. Grenz with two and two was best for the losers. ‘The summaries: Klein's ‘fg ft pf Cap. Com. fg ft pf Yeasley $ 1 2 Torkelson' 0 1 5 Spriggs 8 1 3 Bailey 9 0 3 Fite 5 0 © Huber ce oe La Rue 5 4 3 Swenson 1 0 1 Engen 1 2 2 Grenz ge a Martin 0 0 0 Gram 100 Totals 28 810 ‘Totals 5 6 12 C. Theare fg ft pf Pig. Wig. fg ft pf Tolchins'y 0 0 0 Leier 622 leer 2°09 3 Moellring 1 0 0 O'Neil 3 0 3 Cummins 3 1 3 Gorman 1 1 0 Morlan 1 1 2 Korus 2 0 2 Heiser 2 0 4 Potter 3 1 1 — — — Wenaas 2 3 2 Totals 13 411 Totals 13 6 11 JAYS BEAT TRAINERS ! Jamestown, N. D., Jan. 30.—(}—! Jamestown high easily defeated Man- dan State Training school Wednes- day night in basketball, 35-13, The average human thigh bone can support a weight cf 1%2 tons without breaking. HIS “MAKIN’S” DON'T SPILL OUT OR BLOW ALL OVER CREATION . What’s your Time? Mr. Robert H. Brome is an expert cigarette roller—turns ’em out in 14 seconds—and rolls Prince Albert! No | other brand will do, either. Tointerest other smokersin joining up with Prince Albert for their roll- your-own cigarettes, wenow make this positive you-must-be-pleased offer: | Roll yourself 30 swell cigarettes from Frince Albert. If you don't find-them | rettes you ever smoked, pocket tin with the rest of the tobacco { | in it to us at any time within a month teams (hin Sel fed ve wil refund R. J. Reynolde Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. There are around 70 cigarettes in: every big 2-ounce pocket tin. Nuff sed? Begin today to enjoy P. A.! It’s good in pipes too. i (© 1980, R. J. Reynolds Tob. Co. NGE ALBERT THE: EASY-TO-ROLL JOY SMOKE | ry preliminary for him. Two Fought Prelims Already “Wild Bill” Hasselstrom and Ernie Hetherington have had bouts on cards which Rusty headlined and only Demaray of the top four re- mains to fight a preliminary for the ambitious youngster. Tickets will be placed on sale at the Sax Confectionery, the State Re- creation Parlors, the Town Talk, Riggs Place, the Prince and Patterson hotels, the American Pool Hall, the World War Memorial building, and several additional business houses, Thimmish said. a | Fights Last Night | (By the Associated Press) Calif—Jim Thompson, 236, Oakland, Calif., stopped Jim © Bogy, 192, St. Paul, (2). Denver—Emilio Martinez, 176%, Denver, outpointed John Henry Lewis, 181, Phoenix, Ariz. (1 ial Sack Are ‘Iron Men’ of Majors’ East Is Enlisting 2 ! Hi | Marshall Wells, Former Gopher ; Tackle, Will Tutor Yale | H Forward Wall | I | atimeapolis, Jan. 30. — (% — The northwest chipped in Thursday with @ definite claim to football guidance for the east. j Engagement of Marshall Wells, for- mer Minnesota star tackle, as Yale's’ jline coach was seized on by football circles here as clinching evidence, added to previous developments of that sort. Less than three years out of col- lege, with his coaching feet barely under him through line tutoring at Towa State college, Wells goes east in the footsteps of several others from Minnesota. Before this, in recent years, there| were Fritz Crisler and Earl Marti- neau, his backfield coach at Prince-| ton, Tad Wieman, at Michigan before coming to Minnesota, now the Tigers’ line coach, and Arthur (Dutch) Berg- man, at Catholic University. Then you might add Clarence! Munn, who in his first coaching job has turned in a good football record at Albright College, Ohio. Proteges of Kearns, Dempsey Sign for Go Chicago, Jan. 30—(?)—That much ballyhooed ring battle between Jack Dempsey and Jack Kearns—with Red Burman and Hank Bath doing the fighting—probably will be presented at the Chicago stadium'Feb, 14. Dempsey has signed for Burman. Kearns was expected to do likewise on behalf of his “Second Dempsey,” Bath, Thursday or Friday. Bath lost his fight to Billy Treest of Batavia, Ill, Wednesday night but looked so much like a fighter that he won as many cheers as his conquerer. Sterling Independents Defeat M’Kenzie, 31-10) Sterling’s independent basketball | team defeated McKenzie, 31-10, Sat- urday. Plans are going forward to organize an independent league inj the county with teams from Menoken, McKenzie, Sterling, Moffit, Driscoll and Wing. It is planned that each team play 12 games prior to a tourn- ament to be conducted in March, SAINTS HOLD LEAD 8t. Paul, Jan. 30—(P)—An overtime 4-3 victory over Tulsa Thursday kept St. Paul on top in the American Hockey Association: Winning their seventh straight We: night, the Saints beat the Oilers when Cully [oad took a pass from Jackie Flood for the overtime goal in a mix- up at the Tulsa net. 2 SY’ Rowling Zreyene Regulatory “Department trundlers, aided by a sizeable 124 pin handicap, set a new season’s three-game team record in the Commercial League Here Wednesday night as they swept to” three straight wins over the Bismarck Bakery five. The Regulatory bowlers upset the maples for counts of 804- 862-918—2584 to best the previous record of 2571 set by the Bismarck Bakery. In the other match, the Bis- Marck Tribune team won three straight from the Service Electric. Pete Verduin for the Bakers blasted the uprights for counts of 216-176- 191—583 for individual single and three game honors. The scores: Bismarck Bakery 216-176-191— 583 125-128-177— 140 Verduin . . 2 130-172-153— 455 Hecktner Baker Patera Faubel " 132-177-135— 444 142-162-163— 467 Totals........ 155-825-819 2399 ‘Regulatory Department + 133-169-155— 457 + 116-127-151— 454 + 101-134-173— 408 113-149-165— 427 157-159-150— 463 124-124-124— 372 804-862-918—2584 Bismarck Tribune 149-212-159— 520 Anderson Handicap Totals........ Moeller 129-145-118— 392 Ottum 197-134-127 458 McGregor ... 152-169-195— 516 Hauch ...... + 187-178-146— 511 Totals........ 814-838-745—2907 Service Electric Dummy . 124-124-124— 372 + 106-143-133— 382 + 133-179-160— 472 160-192-118— 470 125-136-145— 406 37- 37- 37— 111 685-811-717—2213 Basketball Scores Kottsick . Donaldson Toman Frazier Handicap . Totals... (By the Associated Press) Bottineau ‘Teachers 45. Montana 51; Eastern Montana Nor- mal 30. Forestry 46; Minot THOMPSON WINS Oakland, Calif., Jan. 30.—()—Jim Thompson, 236, Oakland Negro, scored a technical knockout over Jim Bogy, 192, St. Paul, in the second round of a scheduled 10-round bout here Wednesday night. Bergeson’S February Clearance Sale Your choice of our entire stock of n ew x OVERCOATS $1 9°° They sold for $25 to $35. Half belts or full belts. Regular or raglan shoulders. SUI TS A group of smart suits. February Clearance Sale Price— “No Alterations Wool Ho February Clearance Sale Prices— $1.00 Wool Hose now. ... .69¢ 75¢ Wool Hose now... . .49c 50c Wool Hose now.....39c Wool Scarfs siery SHIRTS Qne lot, values to $1.95, now— $1.35 WOOL LINED LEATHER GLOVES. 25% Discount Half Price 75e WOOL GLOVES 49c No alterations, no approvals. This merchandise at these prices will be sold Ber cash only. Men’s Shop eson’S Scores - | - be | a 74 < v rN 4 i > ' ey 5 ig ’

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