The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1936, Page 6

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her Will Try to R evive PRINCE HAL WIL [Grid Wars Succeed Baseball FACE RURFING IN _ FIRTH SERIES TILT “World’s Greatest Pitching’ Doesn’t Bother Yankee- Murderors Row SET ATTENDANCE RECORD Sunday’s Game Was Last in Which Players Share in Cut on Receipts New York, Oct 5.—(4)—What started out as New York's baseball civil war for world championship stakes looked very much like a rout Monday, with the Yankees’ ball-kill- crs galloping roughshod over the finest pitching defense the Giants have had to offer, and needing only one more victory to clinch the win- ners’ share of a record-breaking . Player pool. Unless the National League cham- pions rally their sagging spirits Mon- day afternoon at Yankee Stadium, behind the “sinker” ball hurling of Hal Schumacher, it may be all over but the shouting. The Giants can take inspiration from the fact that the Pittsburgh Pirates of 1925 came from behind in a similar spot, to take the last three games of a seven-game series from Washington, but baseball men do not expect that “miracle” to be repeated. ‘On the heels of Lou Gehrig's game wrecking homer, which started the great Carl Hubbell on the way to de- Defeated by the Giants in a mound | duel with Carl Hubbell in the opening | game of the world series last Wed- | nesday, Big Charley “The Red” Rutf- | He'll Try Again Monday Pam Barton’s Win Also, Second to Achieve Distinction that distinction in 27 years. try club links at Summit, N. J. By EDDIE BRIETZ Means World Title English Miss, British Champion New York, Oct. 5.—(#)—Pam Bar- ton, 19-year old freckle-faced Lon- don lass, is the world women's golf- champion—the first player to gain! | Winning of the British champion- ship last May after finishing second the previous two years, Pam scored the first “double” since 1909 when she beat Maureen Orcutt Crews, 28-year4 old American veteran, 4 and 3, Sat- urday over the Cance Brook coun-; Sports Round-Up | BG TEANS STAKE TITLES ON CANES COMING SATURDAY Ohio State-Pittsburgh, Minne- sota-Nebraska Tilts Head National Card New York, Oct. 5.—(?)—National championship aspirations of a half dozen pooh-bahs of college football go on the block this week as the grid- fron pastime gains undisputed con- \ trol of the sports pages. Topped by a collision of apparent titans, Ohio State and Pittsburgh, at Columbus, the program lines up like this: Midwest—Ohio State, whose pony backs ran wild at New York univer- sity’s expense, 60-0, before a record opening day crowd of more than 72,000 last week, will get a thorough series sector... One says narlie Dressen’s status at Cincinnati is un- may as well.take out a new lease on eighth place) .. . Brooklyn's price on is spending a lot of time ‘with Bill McKechnie. whose dogs bark 24 hours a day, may ;move into the front office as genera! manager of the Giants and put Mc- Kechnie in charge of the field. Another rumor factory product has Arky Vaughan shifting from ithe Pirates to the Polo Grounds in return for Hank Leiber, Clydell Castelinan fing will be on the mound for the Yankees again Monday to try to avenge his previous defeat and give the Giants the one victory they need to win the series, feat Sunday after a 17-game winning streak, there secms little roum for argument against the brand of first- degree murder the Yanks pack in their big bats, regardless of the “ex- ceptional” pitching of which Bill Terry and the Giants boast. Teo Much Pressure The fine hurling, on the strength of which Terry picked his Giants in the series, unquestionably has been forthcoming for the National Leag- uers from the great Hubbell and his fat pitching mate, Freddy Fitzsim- mons. However, the pressure of mur- derers’ row appears to have been as, impossible for them to bear as it was for the entire American League pitch- ing fraternity during the recent sea- 50n. The Yanks nominated their burly right-hander, Charley (the Red) Ruffing to oppose Schumacher Mon- day in the fifth game. Both were beaten in their first starts, Rufiing lost the opencr to Hubbell and the rain. Schumacher was the first vic- tim of the Yanks’ record-smashing assault in the second encounter. With the curtain apparently ready to be drawn on baseball's biggest show, the faithful thousands again stormed Yankee Stadium. Yesterday, a record high of 66,669 packed the F ootball Scores (By the Associated Press) Wahpeton Szience 26; Boitineay) Forestry 0. Minot 13; Mayville 6. Macalester 0; St, Olaf 33. Marquette 12; Wisconsin 6. Mankato Teachers 14; Hamline 13.) Ironwood, Mich., Junior 7; Virginia Junior 6. Ripon 0; Carleton 6. i St. Mary's 0; St. Johns University 26. Hibbing Junior 6; Eveleth Junior 0. \ Montana State 0; Brigham Young 9. Parsons 7; South Dakota Univer- | sity 7. Tie. | Stevens Point Teachers 12; White- water Teachers 2, Valley City Teachers 6; Dickinson Teachers 0. Spearfish Teachers 13; Regis 0. South Dakota State 0; Morningside big Bronx ballyard and paid a record} 13 high of $240,591 to see the homl-} “qqi1y ea ial . e cide squad, paced by Gebrig on the) p_Auwaukee Teachers 0; Oshkosh | attack and Monte Pearson's seven-|~ pruron Collers 8: a hit pitching, hand Hubbell a 5-2 set-! , f24go" Collese 8: Sioux Falls Colx | back, eet ; % eel No More Sharing ; al Monday's game is the first from |World Series Leaders! which the players do not get a “cut”|#— pr ~~ (By the Associated Press) in the gat ipts. Th our- ent recep hela as Batting (regulars)—Powell, Yankees, | 462, ganic melon was completed with Sun- day’s contest, giving them and the other first division clubs in both Jeagues the largest financial share on record, $424,737.18. Of this, $297,315.94 will be split between the series con- tenders, 60 per cent to the winner and 40 to the Icser. In addition, they also share in the $100,000 receipts from the sale of radio rights. i In supplying the answer, at least for} this year, to the argument as to whether good pitching can stop heavy , - hitting, or vice versa, the Yanks! Powell, If cracked down on both Hubbell and | Lazzeri, 2b . ~R OTT Fitz, as well as Schumacher, beating! Ruffing, p . Rk 0-1 all three. z Umnpires: Pfirman (NL) plate; Gei- Everyone Hits ,sel (AL) first; Magerkurth (NL) sec- | The biggest factor in their mannerjond; Summers (AL) third. of settlement of the controversy was; Starting time: 1:30 p,m. (EST). the surprising way in which every; , man in the batting order was a po-| The official box score: Runs—Crosetti, Yankees. 5. |Runs batted in—Gehrig, Yankees, 6. Hits—Crosetti, Yankees, 7. Doubles—Crosetti ard DiMaggio, Yan- | 2. 8 Lome runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 2. Stolen bases—Powell, Yankees, 1 Pitching—Gomey, Pearson and Had- ley, Yankees, 1-0. +R 462 tential game-wrecker. The result has; New York (NL) ABRHO A; been a pressure apparently too great Moore. If -3 01 2 0; -for any pliching opponent, forcing | Ba ‘ll. -4123 4 him to bear down inning a‘ter inn-| Terry. 1b -3 0 010 1 4ng, whether it’s the heac of the | Ott rf -4 00 0 0} order or the weak cnd coming up. | Ripple. ef .. +402 3 The ball Gehrig hit for a homer; Mancuso. ¢ +400 3 0; fn the third appeared from ‘he press| Wntehesd. 2b. -30025 box to be a sheulder high curve.| S0°mis, xxx -10100 Gehrig called it his “copyrighted 40) 10, 8} suckers pitch, the sweetest hook that} 2001 0, ever slid across the plate. And who! -1 010 0; ‘ that Hubbell the greatest | Se ah | pitcher?” Hubbell’s battery mate. AAD OO 7e! . Gus Mancuso, differed with tne Yan THM eeeale 332 728 kee “iron horse,” . brand of pitch. A High One however, on the|.._patted for Hubbell in 8th. xx—Ran for Leslie in 8th. xxx—Batted for Whitehead in 9th. “It was a high one, right around|~ Now Yor «Gehrig's cars,”“he insisted. “I evel Goin ae ; AL) AB R H ro) thought he'd go for anything like| Rolfe, cb ........ a >that.” But whether it was bad or good, . Colurpbia Lou laid into it so well that . the game might just as well have ended right there. As it wus, Hub- ell retired in favor of a’ pinch hitter in the seventh. _ Meantime, Monte Pearson, only otwo days out of a sick bed into which @ lame back forced him in the last Week of the season, breezd along |New York (NL) . #0 well that his battery-mate, Bill|New York (AL) ...... 013 000 O1x—5 Dickey, frankly told him later he| Errors—Jackson, Selkirk. Runs ‘ought to have a back-ache like that | batted in—Selkirk, Rolfe, Gehrig 2, he day.” Ripple, Terry. Powell. Two base hito DiMaggio. cf . Gehrig, 1b. Dickey, Powell, If Lazzeri, 2b . Selkirk, rf . weoeoncone > ++ 000 100 010—2 ing records: » 2; N.Y. Bats Avge.{on bases—N. Y. (NL) 6; N. Y. (AL) 7 Att | Babes op balls—Pearson 2 (Moore, 357 | Terry); Hubbell 1 (Rolfe); Gabler 1 313 | (Selkirk), Strikeouts — Pearson 7 1 4 runs, Paver crsae GOPHERS, BUCKEYES BATTLE WITH INTERSECTIONAL FOES | Oregon 28 to 0, invades Champaign to} | horse” before the 2 (Dickey. | . and dough ... the idea seems to be for Vaughan to succeed Travis Jack- son at third base—the Giants wan: to put a farm in Jersey City ana if the plan goes through, Jackson will be sent over as manager. Monday will be comeback day for Charlit Ruffing and Hal Schumacker. ... Autograph hounds drove Col. Jake Ruppert, owner of the Yanks, into the clubhouse for the last two innings of Sunday's tilt... the cun- nel personally served beer to the vie- torious Yanks... Bill Manley, for years secretary of the International League, is being boomed as president. Well, old man law-of-averages fi- nally caught up with Carl Hubbell. . +» Looks like Tom Yawkey of the Red Sox will weaken on his decision not to spend any dough this winter Big Ten Season Gets Under Way With Several Confer- ence Tilts Saturday Chicago, Oct. 5.—(#)—Minnesota and Ohio State, the winter “book”! favorites for the 1936 western confer- ence championship rgce, Monday face what shapes up as sfiff intersectional tests on next Saturday's midwest- ern football program. Minnesota, winner of 18 straight games and unbeaten since 1932, will go against the perennially tough Nebraska Cornhuskers, who whipped Iowa State Saturday, 34 to 0. The Gophers, apparently as good or bet- ter than in 1935, had an open date Saturday and were favored to keep in their winning stride. Coach Francis Schmidt's powerful Ohio State “Scarlet Scourge,” which lashed New York university Saturday 60 to 0, oppcsed the strong Pitts- burgh Panthers, which defeated West Virginia 34 to 0, and for the past week there's been a feeling at Ohio State that the Buckes will have to be good to down the easterners. Co-Favorites Minnesota and Ohio State shared the Big Ten title last season and gen- erally have been rated co-favorites in this season’s campaign. They do not meet each other. ‘ i Southern, California, which defeated | Columbus catcher, $100,000 price tag . . . Detroit offered $75,000, but Branch Rickey gave Co- tions: Sam Leslie will play first base for the Giants Monday. The American who did a bang-up job of umpiring spot at Montreal, . . clinched the pennant, Dick Coffman {sent Rogers Hornsby a wire thanking the Rajah for putting him in the ser- jics ... after Friday's rout, Hornsoy wired back: “Yéah, I put you in and Lazzeri put you out.” Not much room for football, but: chased the alumni off the ben Just too bad Minnesota and hio State don't lock horns this year. . Army will be marching on the douole kick by the time it hits Notre Dame and Navy. Johnson Says Opera battle Illinois, winner over Washing- ton University of St. Louis, Satur day, 13 to 7. It was doubtful that the Illini, even with the first-year men at a peak, can stop the Trojans. Indiana, victor over Centre Col- lege 38 to 0, is favored to take Michi- gan into camp. Indiana's veterans looked’ gocd in winning Saturday, while the Wolverines lost to Michigan State 21-7. Badgers Test Purdue Another strictly conference affair |™ involves Wisconsin's Badgers and Purdue. Coach Harry Stunldreher appeared to have the making of a club which may cause trouble later in the season, although Purdue, idle last Saturday, will have an eage. Towa, beaten by Northwestern Sat- urday 18 to 7, takes on South Dakota, while North Dakota State opposes the Wildcats, Northwestern, a “dark season, demon- strated it will have to be reckoned with in the Big Ten scramble. Butler invades the Midway to bat- New York, Oct. 5.—(#)—Jack Jqhn- json, the only Negro ever to win the world heavyweight boxing champion- ship, holds the opinion that opera and prize fighting have something in com- on, “It’s the same crowd and the same lights,” he said last night after his debut on the opera stage: eighteen minutes of sullen silent glowering as an Ethiopian slave in Giuseppe Verdi's “Aida.” But Johnson, now 58, weight 235 pounds, and bald, conceded that opera n’t fighting. sity of St. Louis. New York, Oct. 5.—(#)—Runfors are thicker than flies along the world’s! decided ... (if they, let him go they; Van Mungo is too high. . . Bill Terry One story says Terry, long enough to buy Frank Owen, who carries a chrane the horse laugh. . . fellow must \be good. .. Predictions for first edi-; League is eyeing Eddie Rommell, old Athletic pitcher, | in the New York-Penn loop last sea-} son... Rabbit Maranville has the in-| side track for that vacant managing | When the Giants | Penn hopes have revived since they | Is Like Prize Ring} tle Chicago's Marocns, which bowed to a fast, powerful Vanderbilt ma- chine 37 to 0. At Notre Dame the Irish take on Washington Univer- testing from Pitt’s Panthers, another powerhouse combination. | A second major intersectional duel sends Southern California’s Trojans, easy victors over Oregon State and Oregon in their initial tests, against Illinois which has had trouble with both DePaul and Washington uul- versity. Minnesota Favorite Sharing the midwestern spotlight with these two games will be @ pair of Big Ten conference battles ond Minnesota's joust with Nebraska. Minnesota, idle last week after bea:- ing the University of Washington at Seattle, will rate the favorite’s oosi- tion over the Big Six champions wao tumbled Iowa State 34-0 last week. Purdue's powerful Boilermakers, idle last week, start their Big Ten drive against Wisconsin, victim of Marquette, 12-6, as Indiana, con- queror of Centre, 38-0, tackles Mich- igan, beaten by Michigan State fur the third successive year, 21-7. Irish Meet Illini Notre Dame, impressive in a 21-7 conquest of Carnegie Tech, meets Washington university which held Il- linois to a 13-7 count. East: Michigan State battles Car- negie at Pittsburgh and Southern Methodist tackles Fordham’s bone- crushing Rams at New York. Yale’s “Bulldogs, victorious over Cornell's sophomores, 23-0, face Penn, easy victors over Lafayette, 35-0. Army, led to a. smashing 28-0 triumph over Washington & Lee by elusive Monk Meyer, will test Columbia’s re- ported power at New York, Harvard, which won 38-6 over Am- herst, faces Brown. Princeton, after trampling Williams, 22-7, should find Rutgers no problem. Navy to See Action Navy, hard-pressed to whip Dayid- son's scrappy Wildcats, 19-6, takes on another Southern conference rival, Virginia. South: Louisiana State, shocked by its failure to get better than a 6-6 draw. with Texas, meets Georgia Georgia Tech and Kentucky clash al Atlanta as Alabama takes on Mis- sissippi State and Tennessee, ‘beaten by North Carolina, 14-6, plays host to Auburn, tied, 0-0, by Tulane'’s sur- prising Green Wave. Centenary’s Gentlemen who upset Baylor, 10-0. Vanderbilt, which swamped Chicago, 37-0, will meet Southwestern of Tennessee. Southwest: Texas’ Longhorns fac | Biff Jones’ Oklahoma Sooners who stopped Colorado university, 8-0. Ar- kansas, beaten by Texas Christian, | 18-14, meets Baylor while Rice, halt= ed. 14-0, by Duquesne, seeks to over~ turn Texas A. & M., narrow 3-0 victor over Hardin-Simmons. Washington Has Game _ Far West: Washington and U. C. L, A. are rivals in the featured game Each won last week, the Huskies stop- ping Idaho, 22-0, while. U. C. L. A. j Was, romping over Montana, 30-0, California, trimmed by 8t. Mary's Gaels, 10-0, will try to recover at Ore- gon State's expense. Stanford, nosed out by Washington State, 14-13, may |find the winning combination against | Oregon, spilled 26-0, by Southern Cait- | fornia. Tulane’s opponent this week will be day. Sagging Giant Spirits in Nation’s Sports Spotlight’ This Week DODGERS RELEASE STENGEL; WHOLE CLUB MAY BE SOLD [DATES OF OCTOBER | COC ENROLLMENTS LISTED FOR STATE ulation Governing Reseléc- tion Is Waived for Present Enlistment Pamel Barton, above, became the first woman in 27 years to win the world’s championship when she de- feated Mrs, Maureen Orcutt Crews in the finals of the women’s national golf tournament at Sumit, N. J., Sat- urday. Last spring Miss Barton won the British Women’s crown, TOM LAWLESS WINS CITY GOLF TOURNEY Defeats Elmer Olson 4 to 3 to Become City’s First Left- Handed Champion Tom Lawless, veteran Bismarck golfer, became the first left-handed wielder of the irons to win the city championship Sunday when he de- feated Elmer Olson, 4 to 3, in the finals of the tourney. Lawless defeated James Slattery in the semi-finals of the championship flight to gain the final round. In the first flight, Ira Rush won over E, Elness by. default, and in the second flight Lester Diehl defeated C. Larsen, one up. Forks; lelson, Chisox Win Four in Row for City Crown Chicago, Oct. 5.—(?)—Most of the money and all of the glory accruing from Chicago's civil baseball war was in possession of the White Sox Mon- presel fm Ceri barnes, erence t it ms eight members, sad rpecad __eEe ss + The White Sox won the city cham- pionship before 33,396 fans: Sunday by taking a fourth straight game from the Chicago Cubs, 8 to 2, on six-hit pitching by Bill Dietrich and a 17-hit assault on five Cub pitchers. It was the second straight time the Sox have won the title in four straight games, the last time being in’ 1933. The winner's receipts totaled $27,525, giving each White Sox $1,058 for the four days’ work, while the Cubs split $18,343 for an average return of $705. The Sox won the first three games, 5-1, 11-3 and 4-2. Record Crowd Sees Chicago Bears Win Chicago, Oct. 5—The powerful Chi- cago Bears’ brand of wide open, color- ful football is doing more than just winning games this fall—it’s pulling Gossip Names Burleigh Grimes Next Manager of Brook- New York, Oct.-5.—(#)—There was}. ter, not much in Brooklyn Monday. The mighty Casey has been let out. sold. ‘ I Enrollment of 1,894 recruits in the The sudden release of Charles|civilian conservation corps of North seasons manager of the outfit known | Friday, will continue at Fargo, Grand far and wide as the “Daffy Dodgers,”| Forks, Devils Lake, Minot, Dickinson be the forerunner of negotiations for |@nd a half, according to John Wil- ee disposal of the ‘Brooklyn ‘Na-| ams, state recruiting officer. ‘A syndicate for which the veteran Seen eee aeeetent ;] Owner of the New York Yankees, is a t 4 states “that an honorably discharged Toresmative, 1s understood | to be iunior is ineligible for re-selection for the club, whose affairs have caused date of his.discharge. He then be- many a headache since the death of eligible to apply for re-selection Stengel’s release came suddenly ” Sunday night,-in the midst of the| ss than four months: te walv- straight world series victory. . He was told later pisces four eee shown toe pepriiey eniied Pay off the contract under which he had one more season. paler Sacie snncias ot pectyend lated were (1) that Burleigh Grimes, former Dodger spitballer and last peoergr ca oi eal ular Louisville club in the American As- sociation, would get a call to pilot Weep 1—Devils Lake; 165; Benson, would land a job with the “chain 8 store” organization of the Yankees, Bee Went ond binge” Be ae were teleased along with} Henry, Mountrail and Renville. ngel, Oct. 10—Bismarck} 145; Grant, Mc: ; Adams, Cash for Play: ers Bowman, Golden Valley, Hettinger SY , |Oliver, Sioux, Kidder and Sheridan. Series Contenders, First Divi-| Oct. 15—Bismarck—135; Burleigh, $424,737 New Prep Conference New York, Oct. 5—(?)}—The Yan- Planned at Bykeston. ‘Yeams which trailed them in the first] tive high schools met at 8: jykeston last divisions in the American and Na- ize a Consolidated some $5,000 more than any world/ferénce. series contenders ever have split be-| A. W. Larson, superintendent of The players’ pool, 60 per cent of|dent of the newly organized circuit, the receipts of the first*fqur games|Robert Moffitt, superintendent of by two record “gates” to the all-time |and Elmer Rosscup, Cathay, secretary- high of $424,797.18. The previous mark’ treasurer. = Pe pees! for the coming season the Yankees beat the Cardinals, In (or addition a big slice of the $100,000 re-/ference championships in six-man football, basketball and track. be added to the pool, so it’s quite likely each of the winners will get|sates from Goodrich, Tigers received last year. Seventy per. cent of the pool, basis, goes to the clubs in the series. ‘The rest is divided among the clubs fourth in each league—the Cubs and Cardinals, tied for second, and Pitts- Chicago and Washington the American. lyn Organization no joy in Mudville, and for that mat- And the whole ball club may | Dillon (Casey) Stengel, for three| Dakota, which began at Jamestown was believed by smart baseball mem to|and Bismarck during the next week Williams pointed out that for the Col. T. L. Huston, former half eligibility. for re-selection which dickering for a controlling interest in a period of one year following the Charles H. Ebbets, provided his former service was not ‘Yankees’ celebration of their third ing of the rule there would be:no pre- directors had agreed to let him goand| grtstment dates at the six state Among the reports qlickly circu-| Oct, 5—Fargo; 155; Cass, Ransom, season pilot of the seventh-place|Grand Forks, Pembina and the Brooklyns and (2) that Stengel Eddy, Ramsey, Rolette and Towner. Coaches Otto Miller and Zack} Oct. 9—Minot; 150; Bottineau, Mc: Record Share of see 14—Bismarck; 171; Morton, sion Clubs Will Split | =7mon® Metntosh and Wells kees and the Giants, and the three} gykeston, N. D.—Representatives of tional leagues this year, will divide Centeat ‘North Dakota Athletic con-" fore. schools at Sykeston, was elected presi- of the series, was boosted this year|schools at Goodrich, vice president, of $419,736.60 was set in 1928 when were drawn up and plans laid for con- ceived to broadcast the games will Present at the meeting were dele- more than the $6,544.76 which the between winners and losers on a cA which finished second, third and burgh in the National and aoe | aU EEE EEEREErEEEE | Spite > Hoorel! 21st Season! OHICAGO, although not in the World Series, holds », “private” series of its own .. .! Cubs and White Sox are fighting it out for the city championship, according te custom! (By the Associated Press) . Johnny Merrow, Texas A. and M— His field goal in last 20 seconds beat -0, and directed Yale's deceptive attack to finger! Cornell, 23-0. 90 Su Rocky Mountain: Conference com- petition begins in earnest as Denver is matched with Colorado State, Greeley Teachers with Brigham Young, Friday, and Utah with West~ ern State, Montana State with Color- ado college, and Wyoming with Utah OUT OUR WAY SAY, WORRY WART, GET BACK HERE! HOW GAN I ENJOY. TH' BEAUTIFUL GOLDS AN BROWNS OF AUTUMN, WITH A POULTICE LIKE YOU \N FRONT OF ME? my lg 2 Me _|State, Saturday. eat By Williams IT SHOULD MAKE IT TO ME, OVER, DISH OF A DISH SPINACH. ~, fans through the turnstiles. Before 28,777 spectators, largest crowd ever to see a National Pro- fessional league game.in Pittsburgh, the Bears trimmed the Pittsburgh Pirates Sunday, 27-9. Tuffy Leemans sprinted 29 yards for a touchdown that gave the New York Giants a 7-0 win over the Bos- ton Red Skins. Green Bay's Packers went two up on thé Chicago Cardinals for the season, winning, 24-0, and virtually eliminating the Cards from the cham- pionship, Brooklyn's Dodgers downed Phila- delphia 18-0. , : ———_——_ The University of South Carolina is of nicknames receiving pass and threw two passes for second score that beat Stanford, to other two. score and leading yy RONEN CLOTHIERS *FURNIFSHERY BISMARCK NOD Frederick Ziegel, Flint, Mich. is trying for his ninth varsity letter at Michigan State college this fall. ‘Zie- gel has won three each in and swimming and two in football. Promoted to Labor ~Board Membership “A COMPLETE HISTORY. OF SPECIAL OFFER |! THE UMITED STATES Fon MADE TO You |t ONALD. W. SMITH, nephew of Composer 98c Charles , Wake-., field’ Cadman, (Plus 3c Sales Tax) . “has been ap-- pointed: to the National Labor Relations Board. Smith has long expe- rience in “labor. law” from prac- fice in concilia- and immi- Present er mail this coupon with $1.00 to this paper and receive this beautiful 640-page volume of Clement Wood's MAIL ORDERS If by mail, include 13¢ postage

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