Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1936 Sa nh ma ganas cides ea aT Ne ~Mandan Flashes Offensive Power in Downing St. Mary's FIVE TOUCHDOWNS, SARETY ACCOUNT FOR 34-0 VICTORY Braves Block and Charge Well; Running Attack Is Smooth, Deceptive 12 FIRST DOWNS) MAKE Outweighed, Out-Charged St. Mary's Crew Makes Gal- lant Fight By the Downtown Quarterback Flashing an attack whose power and deception would have done credit to a late Octoher or November team the Mandan high school Braves cele brated the opening of the 1936 foot ball season by walking over St. Mary's of Bismarck, 34-0 at Hughes Field Monday night. Fake spinners, reverses, spot over the line of scrimmage and long forward passes either paved the way or accounted directly for the Braves’! five touchdowns. Coach Leonard C. MeMahon, who was overheard to remar iday that his squad's attack was so la Polish he had refused to let scrimmage at all, must have goiter in some homework with his backfield end linemen between then and Mon- | Gay. | Ball Handling Good The line charged, the interfe! | passes | Carl €, Dahibeck (left), 25, hospital of burns suffered ball players were trapped by flam stove expioded. Evansvil halfback, BURNS FATAL TO PURDUE PLAYER Linton Fan Wants of Lyndonville, Vt. died in a Lafayette, Ind, hen he and five other Purdue university foot es in their shower room after a heated annon (right) of renorted in a critical condition. Dahl. was a veteran guard. (Associated Press Photo) blocked, and when the occ: manded the ball was passed through the backfield with as much assurance @ collection plate among a brace of | ushers. ; Mandan counted 12 first downs in| the contest and scored points in each | of the four quarters. St. Mary's got} two first downs--both coming in the Ree final period. if At that, Ted Campagna’s gridders! | Penner, er, Welch on | have little to be ashamed of. Their Demon Injury List | line was not on a par with Mandan’s,| 4, L neither in weight nor in aggressive | b Penner and Bunny Welch ness. It failed to clear the way for! the parochial school backs on of-! received the only two injuries fense, and failed to-keep the holes! suffered by the Demons in their plugged on defense. encounter with Linton Fri injury was ained the Ponner’s groin gravated and Wi Backed up by a determined set of | backfield men, it did stiffen heroic-; ally at times, particularly in response j to Mandan threats in the first half | Mandan made seven first downs ir! the first half, yet scored only one touchdown. By contrast, they ma four touchdowns on five first down: in the second h 2 St. Ma be in nn Hanna throtigh an ‘Had Spirit eleven was a well- sent his The St. Mi tensive just a Grilled, fighting outfit, with the kinc skeleton de entrating of spirit at_ makes one wish botl on blocking teams couid win. Tt would be ris to single out individual names for pra But Captain Reff at righ! end and Litt at right guard played 'Brewers, Indians geod foniball. So did “Dusiy” Sch- Neider i1 the backfield, whose cool- if Pl ff Fy ] headed kicking turned back more n ome Hata} than one Braye attack. ‘Among the Mandan ball-carriers | the speedy Simpson stood out. He not | Indianapolis Hammers only lugged the ball for several sub- Saint Hurlers for Final stantial gains, but tossed most of the} nie passes the Braves compleied. Cam- 10-3 Victory pos and House, who returned one punt 30 yards for what was almost. a touchdown, also stood out in the Mandan backfield. Scores on Blocked Punt Mandan scored on the second play y in the ff Associati j 2 of the game. St. Mary's. after receiv | little world ing the kickoff, attempted to punt j | Leneue w from their own nine-yard line, Pat-; © d the p terson, Braves’ left tackle. broke/ Ne E10 so Fels Monae though and Schneider's kick bounced! -, s a ay jnight over St. Paul, the fourth in of his chest and back into the end! fiveceamics | t zone, where if was ruled a safety. The Braves’ second score came just | Petre the half ended, as the climax! to a drive that took them almost the | entire length of the field. The at-| tack was showing sicns of bogging pions had ente: ing four straigi Playing before gained their vic’ of Lou Fette, Sa tion hurler, “ | showers ato Ie 25 abe crthe third, He was foll Uhiman in the | | ney, and Spencer jeaped into they nate ue inched nting to spoil the| eehth when five hil t into Uhl-|@ sacrifice scored five run: ae nal Indians Win Feurth good, | indianapolis—The Indians su | playoff series from St. Paul, 10-3 fired a flat pass at end zone. A St. Mary's bi air and in atter play, knocked the ball 1 man’s outstretched nar buck for the extra point was Goes Over From 7 Barly in the third quarter House | St. Paul ee no 200 ol 3 : went over from the seyen-vard-line | T-dlanapols ~ F Rigney, Cox. Spencer ¢ throv 20 2 ies aul Jhrough the center Page and Riddle ef tt + ees “ pe. before es Saeaciec, | ended There were only four motor t tackle ibe n Seen Nee ee cat ling idectepping | icles in the United States in 1895, | Fenner; Four Thee sth-| | the first contest. geries to pick mn outburs ved by Rig- won the SECOND ALL-CITY TEAM TAKES SERIES FROM FIRST SQUAD, 2- 1 el Alle Star Baseball “Crew Drops Second Game 9-28, Wins Third 9-8 The second all- junior league baseball team made it two out of three jover the fir: -city team in the double-header Saturday that ended ;the junior league season in Bismarck. | Going into the twin bill with a | Thursday victory to their credit, the second team dropped the opener 9-28, jtlen came back to nose out the firs team 9-8 in the deciding contest. 1 Get 29 Hits In the first game the first team tscored in every inning except the 1. They fell on three pitchers for 129 hit ‘first seven innings. Leading them at the plate was An- i who collseted two home runs, triple. and two singles in eight trics, ollowed by McCabe who got a tripie, a double, and a pair of singles. | Wenzel, Andrews, and Patzman. sheared the mound duties for the win- ners. Ss! Rally Falls Short In the final contest, a two-run rally jby the first team in the eighth inning | tent just short of tying up the game. | Three moundsmen granted the first m 11 scattered hits among them, vhile the second squad was getting nine off the same pitchers who won | Schmidt pitched the most effective ‘ball for eliher team, fanning seven, valking none, and giving up only two hits during his three innings on the it ill, He also led his teem at bat with Pi tsburgh—Oscar Rankins, 159'o, Los Angeles, knocked. out Al Quaill, 160%;, Pittsburgh (4). a} Newark—Tony Galento, 219, N. J., outpointed lazy terson, N. J. (10). Nick Camarata, 130, and Petcy Sarron, m, drew (10), 1) V7 Eric, Pa.—Wildeat O'Cownor. 144, Scranton, Pa2., outpointed | Chuck Weods, 147, Detroit (10). | Des Moines—Max Baer, 217, ye-| Wivermoro. €: outpointed Bcareat Wright, 230 Omaha (6). including 16 off Geiger in the | Team Given Credit ‘Interested Spectator’ Tells Downtown Quarterback of Prejudices Linton, according to a letter receiv- ed by. The Tribune's “Downtown Quarterback” from an “interested spectator” of that city who attended the football game here last Friday night, feels that its football team is deserving of real recognition for hold- ing Bismarck’s Demons to a scoreless | tie, Says the spectator: “I see that you believe the Demons ‘had the better of the ball game.’ You mention prac- tically all of the Demon penalties and ; yhard-luck fumbles, apparently giving | jthem as the reason for Bismarck’s | failure to score. It seems to this read- ler that these are errors and should be counted against the team that makes ithem, Your story gives in detail all of the Demon drives, while the Lions’ gains were hardly mentioned. “Granting that Bismarck has a green team, should not a squad repre- senting a school whose graduates out- number by far the total Linton High School registration be quite superior to the smaller school’s players? “I am sure that your failure to state the story giving due credit to the Lin- ; ton Lions and their coach is a mere oversight. Aside from this criticism I jenjoyed the report as a vivid and ac- curate account of the game.” The Downtown Quarterback is glad to get this-evidence of Linton spirit. | Linton’s light team more than justi- fies it, It made a grand fight and had it come up here with the deter- mination to win rather than the hope jof holding the score down it might have achieved a victory. But the scrappy Linton team did win a moral victory and that fact was mention. Its showing here was ample evidence that Linton will make plenty of trouble for the other teams {| on its schedule. By EDDIE BRIETZ Sports Round Up New York, Sept. 15.—(?)—Is Jimmy Wilson, manager of the Phillies, com- ling to the Giants next season?. . . If so, in what capacity?... They say Carl Snavely is singing the Cornell Blues just as loud as old Gil Dobie ever did. Another meeting between Granville and Discovery is scheduicd tor the Belmont Park meeting, ope! jing Thursday. . . Jack Renault, ti jold heavyweight, has joined the Pin- kertons. . . Here's your No. 1 fan: Ernie Jarvis, business man of Hud- son Bay Junction, Sask., is coming 5,000 miles to see the world series. He'd better reserve himself a ticket. Broadway will bet vou that if the ieee and Giants meet in the series, the Yanks will win in six games. . . | Figuring, of course, that Carl Hubbeil will work twice... Pat Knebelkamp, jthe Kentucky sportsman, seems iv have a successor to King Saxon in his racer, Emileo, Don Gutteridge, Cardinal rookie third sacker from Columbus, should burn up the league next season... He went like a house afire against Brook- iyn and the Giants. . . Omencio Cec- carclli, Italian lightweight, now in this country, was the only one of the Mus- solini boximg brigade to see active service in the Ethiopian fracas. . . Max and Buddy Baer are still touring the sticks... so what? ...From the way they are folding up, the bookies at @ Aqueduct just can’t take it... If history repeats itself, the Giants are just as good as in... The Giants, Cards and Cubs have been following cach other into the big series since 1930. . . The Cards won in 1931, the Cubs in 1932 and the Giants in 1933... Then the Cards repeated in 1934 and the Cubs in 1935... Which makes the Giants about due. Fritz Pollard Returns | To N.D. Grid Practice Grand Forks, Sept. 15.—(P)—Fritz Pollard, Jr., North Dakota's Olympic high hurdler, returned to Grand Forks and reported to Coach C. A. West for football. The squad was completed Monday with appearance of Ken jJohnson, regular guard. his last tackler. The try for point was “Our Boarding House With | Major Hoopie no_good. Two 25-yard runs by Simpson set | the stage for the fourth | touchdown in the GF a across on the same through center Penalty Leads to Touchdown Mandan’s last touchdown came Jate in the quarter when a bad pas: from St. Mary's center was recovered | by the Braves on St. Mary's 16-yard-) line. A 15-yard penalty for holding | put the ball on the one-yard line, | from where Campos plunged for the | | last points of the game. Mandan kicked to St. Mary’ and Reff provided the customers a thrill! Just as the game ended by snaring a! pass on the 20-yard line and gallop- ing to his own 48 stripe. The sturd end was almost away for a touch down, but the safety man overhauled him. OF SPIRAL RIBS | | i i i i The lineup St. Mary's Mandan E. Schmidt te Schweigert Garske It Patterson Hessinger ig Youngbladt | Ressler c Toman (c) Litt re Boehm Cavisino rt Knoll Reff_ (c) re Uhiman | lh Broderick Jundt th Smith | Joe Schneider qb House ae conekter fb Campos ; — Opie 8. Rindahl; head j Uinesean-sayeoo Anderson. | SNOW FALLS IN HELENA Helena, Mont., Sept. 15.—(?)—Snow pene for the first time. this fates Hn the tat last 16 years , the United States motoring More than $5,300,000,000. OF SKIN TO BE DRAFTED ON IT—~ (SO HOST ANCHORS WELL, ADMIRAL, NOULL HAVE TO FIND %Z{OMPH PHM PHWET—~) ANOTHER ANCHORAGE / THAT OVER- STUFFED ROCKING BOAT OF YOLIRS Is A GOING INTO DEY-DOCK, TO HAVE ITs ff | KEEL STRAIGHTENED/ IT'S STOOP- SHOULDERED FROM CARRYING YOUR, CVERLAPPING WASTLINE IN (TS HOLD~ TVE ARRANGED FOR A FRESH SET Z Yp Ze Zann AND ANEW COAT J % i im sey, SPUTT-T-T-— = EGAD, MADAM! WHAT STUFF AND NONSENSE iS THIS 2 MY WORD! IT IS THE INCUBATOR OF NN INGENIOUS INVENTIONS——HARe-R~ J RUMPH~WTHE SCIENTIFIC 7 WORLD WILL DEMAND ITS PRESERVATION AS A Ss BAN Z J ) HUBBELL GOES IN AS RELIEF PITCHER TO WIN BALL CANE! New York Needs 9 Victories or 9 Card Defeats for Pennant (By the Associated Press) Out of three teams staggering along | which resulted in the death of one 5 Giants Nose Out St. Louis 7-5 in F n Final Encounter of ‘Crucial’ Series PURDUECOACH PROHIBITS USE _|Zuppke May Have OF ALL INFLAMMIBLE LIQUIDS} Sophomore Stars Victims of Locker ae Catastrophe Are Recovering Lafayette, Ind, Sept. 15—(P}— Prohibiting all future use of inflam- mable fluids in the Purdue university athletic department, Noble Kizer, di- rector and head football coach, ex- pressed belief Tuesday that a “com- bination of circumstances” had caused an explosion Saturday afternoon in an exciting, if not especially bril- | football player and the painful burn- lant, rivalry for the National League | ing of five others. pennant, it begins to look as if the The blast occurred at the univer- sity’s civil engineering camp efter the one that managed to stay the closest | players had used gasoline to remove to a direct course will win the cham- pionship. Right now that means the Giants. They took the lead at the end of a 15-game winning streak late last month, and since then they have barely managed to outdo the Card- inals and Cubs, mostly because of Carl Hubbell's pitching. Since the last victory of that string, Aug. 28, Bill Terry’s men have played even .500 ball for 20 games. The Cards have lost ten out of 19 while the Cubs have recorded only seven victories in 20 starts and are now hop- ing to protect a three-game margin over the surging Pittsburgh Pirates. MONDAY’S STARS Paul Derringer, Reds—Blanked Bees with five hits. Babe Phelps, Dodgers—Drove in the two runs that beat Cubs 2-1. Carl Hubbell, Giants—Pitched effective relief ball for five innings against Cardinals. Clint Brown and Vernon Ken- nedy, White Sox—Former pitched effective relief ball and drove in winning run against Senators in first game; Kennedy pitched five- hit ball in nightcap for 21st victory of year. Tommy Bridges, Tigers—Hurled five-hit ball to win pitching duel with Jack Wilson of Red Sox. Hubbell Starring Another remarkable similarity is seen in the “one-man” mound staffs of the Giants and Cards. Of New York’s ten victories, Carl Hubbell has accounted for five, pitching four of the seven complete games turned in by Giant pitchers and topping it off with a brilliant victory in a relief role as the Giants whipped St. Louis 7-5 in their final encounter yesterday. Dizzy Dean has been working just as hard, though not quite so effec- tively, for Manager Frankie Frisch. He also has hurled four complete games, winning two, and has been on the mound the last three days in suc- cession. Hubbell’s elbowing yesterday enabl- ed the Giants to stretch their margin to 412 games. They need only nine more victories in their remaining 13 games, or a corresponding number of defeats for St. Louis, to win the flag. Cubs Drop Back Meantime, the Cubs dropped furth- er into the ruck as Van Mungo, hurl- ing five-hit ball, and Babe Phelps, driving in both runs, handed Brook- lyn a 2-1 victory. Pittsburgh climbed closer to third place with a double victory over the Phillies, 11-4 and 6-5. Paul Waner set the clouting pace for the Bucs with five hits in the two games, passing the 200 hit mark for the seventh season to equal the Na- tional League record made by Rogers Hornsby. Ty Cobb established the major league mark by hitting 200 times in each of nine campaigns. Chicago's White Sox improved their position in the American League's three-way second place battle by trimming the Washington Senators twice, 5-4 and 11-3 while Detroit mov- ed into a tie with Washington by downing the Red Sox, 1-0 in a mound duel between Tommy Bridges and Jack Wilson. The remaining major league game saw Paul Derringer of the Reds white- wash the Bees with five hits to win, 6-0, Four American League clubs were idle. NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants Win New York—The Giants defeated the Cardinals, 7-5. RHE St. Louis .....- 200 201 000—5 13 0 New York + 006 001 OOx—7 8 0 Walker, Winford, McGee, Heusser, 4. Dean and Davis, Ogrodowski; Gab- ler, Coffman, Hubbell and Man- cuso. Cincinnati Beats Boston Boston—Cincinnati shut out Boston 6-0. Cincinnati . 000 003 012-6 12 0 Boston ... + 000 000 000-0 5 3 Derringer and Lombardi; Chaplin and Lee. Cubs Lose to Dodgers Brooklyn—The Dodgers nosed out Chicago 2-1. RHE Chicago . ++. 100 000 000-1 5 0 Brooklyn + 000 000 011-2 10 1 Henshaw, Warneke, French and Hartnett; Mungo and Phelps, Berres. Pittsburgh Wins Pair Philadelphia—Pittsburgh won two games from Philadelphia 1!-4 and 6-5. First game— RHE Pittsburgh .... 000 510 104—11 14 1 Philadelphia .. 000 004 000-4 7 3 Swift and Todd; Benge, Kelleher RHE 020 000 102 1-6 11 3 039 002 000 0-5 10 2 Pittsburgh .. Philadelphia .. (0 innings). Lucas and Padden, hardt, Johnson, Bowman and Wil- son. Todd; Burk- AMERICAN LEAGUE Tigers Win Detroit—The Tigers won a close Wilson and Berg, Dickey; Bridges and Hayworth. White Sox Win Pair Chicago—The White Sox won & and 11-3. adhesive tape. A heater stove in the camp shower room apparently ignited gasoline on the floor. Drain Had Clogged Kizer pointed out a drain pipe had clogged up, allowing water to raise on the floor. He explained the explosion could not have occurred in Memorial gymnasium, where the drains are in good shape and where there is no heater stove. and athletes have used gasoline or benzine “for years” to remove ad- hesive tape, but emphasized that no chances with inflammable fluids will be taken hereafter at Purdue. A gloom still pervaded the campus as school officials left for Lyndonville, Vt., with the body of Carl E, Dahl- beck, regular guard who died of burns received in the blast. Others Improving Tom McGannon of Evansville, Ind., most seriously burned of the surviv- ors, appeared in improved condition today, physicians reported. John Drake of Chicago; Lowell Decker of Reading, Mich.; Pat Malaska of Crawfordsville, Ind., and James Ma- loney of Oak Park, Ill, apparently were out of danger. Kizer did not indicate when foot- ball practice would be resumed. Workouts were suspended indefinitely after the explosion, Physicians said Tuesday McGannon and Decker might be able to play late in the season, and that the others might be in shape within a few weeks. 25 Survivors Left in National D-Ball Meet Chicago, Sept. 15.—(#)—Twenty-five survivors of 15 hours of play Monday turned out early Tuesday to resume competition for the 1936 national men’s and women’s softball championships. The men’s division competitors had cago and Cleveland, two favorites, paired in the first quarter finals game. Tuesday’s third round schedule was Milwaukee vs. St. Joseph, Mich.; At- Janta, Ga., vs. Waterloo, Ia.; Seminole, Okla., vs. Imperial Valley, Calif.; Rochester, N. Y., vs. Westport, Conn.; Memphis, Tenn., vs. Toronto, Ont., and Phoenix, Ariz., vs. Lancaster, Pa. women’s team headed 11 survivors in their division, defeating Racine, Wis., 4 to 2, in their first rounder. Winnipeg Takes First Game From Jimmies S&t. Paul, Sept. 15—(#)—The semi- final playoffs in the Northern base- ball league were to continue at two northwest cities Tuesday, with Win- nipeg seeking to make it two straight over Jamestown as a result of its 19- 8 victory yesterday. The seven game series between the second place Eau Claire team and fourth place Wausau club will start at Eau Claire Tuesday. In the opening of the series be- tween Jamestown, which wound up in first place at completion of the regular schedule, and Winnipeg, third place holder, the two clubs punched out a total of 36 hits as the contest was played in almost freezing weather. Included among Winnipeg's 22 safe blows were seven doubles and 8 triple. Jamestown had 1¢ hits, © RHE o 2 First game— Washington .. 100 012 000 0—4 11 Chicago ...... 020 000 020 1—5 10 (10 innings). Appleton and Hogan, Milles; Lyons, Brown and Sewell. Second game— RHE Washington ... 000 300 000-3 5 0 Chicago ....... 111 210 14x—11 18 1 Cascarella, Phebus, Weaver and Hogan; Kennedy and Sewell. He said many physicians, trainers! <+. been reduced to 14 teams, with Chi- and The defending champion Cleveland |® doubleheader from Washington, 5-4 The Standings (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL ere pew York . Washington Detroit . 68 521 72.500 St. Lou! 88 36! Philadelphia . 98 345 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Playoft (Sem!-Finals) Milwaukee and Indianap finals, Milwaukee . manianapols . pie 535 Kansas City . INTERNATIONAL LEAGUB Playoff (Semi-Finals) wiu Buffalo 4 1 Baltimor. 3 2 Newark . 1 4 Rocheste 2 3 British Champion Threat in Amateur: Scottish Golfer Impressive in Opening Victory; Goodman Meets Guilford Garden City, N. Y., Sept. 15.—(#)— As the second and last detachment of big guns wheeled into action in the second round of the U. 8. amateur golf championship Tuesday the topic on all tongues was the definitely danger- ous threat of Scotland’s Hector Thom- son, By nightfall the original field of 230 will be reduced to 64. ‘The British amateur champion, who bears a striking resemblance to Oma- ba’s Johnny Goodman, made a deep impression as he carved out @ ma- chine-like 7 and 6 victory over John Roberts of Columbus, O., yesterday. Goodman, Albert (Scotty) Campbell of Seattle and Reynolds Smith of Dallas, the American favorites, all survived the opening test. Campbell Smith were scheduled for “breathers” today, but Goodman was matched against the erstwhile siege- gun and former titleholder, Jesse Guilford of Boston. cig Major League if | Leaders (By the Associated Press) NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—P. Phelps, Dodgers, 367. | Runs—J, Martin, Cardinals, 115; Ott, Giants, 113. Hits—Medwick, Cardinals, 206; P. Waner, Pirates, 204. Home Runs—Ott, Giants, 32; Camilli, Phillies, 26. Pitching—Hubbell, Giants, 24-6; Lu- cas, Pirates, 13-4, AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Appling. White ead 384; Averill, Indians, 377. eyeraad hy ankees, 195, Gehring- er, Tigers, 132, Hits—Averill, indians, 215; Gehring- er, Tigers, 200. Home Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 48; Foxx, Red Sox, and Trosky, Indians, 38. Pitching—Hadley, Kennedy, White Sox, Pearson, Yankees, 18-6. Superior, N. League Team, Beats Millers Superior, Wis. Sept. 15.—(#)—The Superior Blues of the Northern League handed the Minneapolis American Association nine a surprise Monday by slugging out a 11 to 9 win in an exhibition game. The Blues touched Walter Tauscher for 11 hits, | including four extra base blows. An ideal polishing cloth for silver, shoes and furniture can be made of an old piece of velvet. Yankees. 21-' 13-4; and Grid Practice In One Big Ten Camp, Purdue, Still Suspended Chicago, Sept. 15.—()—“Wily Bob” Zuppke, who has pulled many a sur- prise in his 23 years of coaching at Ilinols, may come up with a few “sophomore shocks” for ents in 0. oppon Lege fall’s western conference football While ® broiling sun curtailed prac- tice in some Big Ten camps Monday, Zuppke put his Tlini through a stiff scrimmage which saw Deane Frary, six-foot sophomore, rip the reserve {| line to Coach Bernie Bierman heard the good news that Vic Spadaccini, out- {|standing Minnesota fullback candi- date, cleared eligibility hurdles. Bier- 7 }man drilled his Northmen in passing, hopeful of using an aerial attack in downing Wi at Seattle Sept. 26. At Northwestern, the heat sowed the Wildcats down to signal Bill Gillberlain, husky end and only 1936 letter-winning flankman at Chi- cago, reported for drill after an- nouncing he would not enter school this fall. The Ohio State gridders, undaunted by the sun, worked on offense, with a backfield consisting of Tippy Dye at quarter, Jim McDonald calling signals at full, and Williams, Kabealo, Better- ridge and Antenucci working at the halves. Coach Ossie Solem concentrated on his guards and tackles. Coach Bo McMillin of Indiana worked on of- fense, The heat caused Coach Elmer Lay- den of Notre Dame to curtail a scrim- mage session. There was no practice at Purdue, where the entire campus was saddened by the shower room ex- plosion which brought death to one member of the Boilermaker squad and injury to five others, Ducking in Missouri Holds Up Canoe Trip Williston, N. D., Sept. 15.—(?)—Re- covering from a 10-day illness, A. L, Troelstrup, Arizona college youth, who suffered a fever attack after his flimsy canvas “kayak” turned over in the Missouri river, Monday is pre- paring to continue his 3,000-mile | journey down the “Big Muddy.” Suffering exposure and fever Troel- strup found shelter at the John Kjor- stad farm 15 miles east of here after he had rescued his homemade canoe and equipment from swirling river waters, d ‘When the choicest malt an hops are blended by experts who kaow exactly how to bring out their finest favor, the result is » completely satisfying beer : - - Gluek's! ENJOY ,) t::io handy cap-sealed cons Distributed by Nash-Finch Company Bismarck, N. D Gets peace and pleasure from this prime tobacco