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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1936 Barker Likes Huskies, Cadets, Trojans to Win This Week — PIGKS WASHINGTON OVER STATE RIVAL, ARMY ABOVE NAVY Fordham Favored to Beat New York U, Southern Cal to Conquer U. C. L. A. BALLOT GOES TO ALABAMA Louisiana Nominated to Whip Tulane; Texas Christian to Triumph By HERBERT BARKER New York, Nov. 25.—\?)\—Making a final stand against the combined ec- centricities of college football teams that win when they are supposed to lose and lose when they are “certain- ties” to win, this corner hazards a few guesses on this week’s program and then heaves a tremendous sigh of relief: THURSDAY Washington = Washington State. Life will be just a bowl of roses for the winner. Washington, undefeated within the Pacific Coast Conference and nominee-apparent for Pasadena’s Rose Bowl game New Year's Day, is the selection here, but the Huskies will have to be at their best. Southern California-U. C. L. A.: ‘Not much to choose between twe er- Tatic arrays. Spinning the coin, Southern California. Pittsburgh-Carnegic: t's skating on thin ice to guess a winner when these city rivals get together but Pitt gets the call. Takes Penn With Reservations Penn-Cornell: This department would like to string along with the big red if there were any guarantee the Ithacans would make no mis- takes, In the absence of any such assurance, Penn. Texas-Texas A, & M.: Texas is the season’s No. 1 disappointment. ‘Texas A. & M. Fordham-New York U.: That Geor- gia thing last week probably will make the Fordhams just a trifle peeved. Fordham. Alabama-Vanderbilt: Tradition may make this close but Alabama's the choice. ‘Tennessee-Kentucky: Kentucky teams have been giving Tennessee trouble for so many years it has be- tome a football legend, but this year tht nod goes to Tennessee. Brown-Colgate: Colgate with plen- ty to spare. Duke to Win Title Duke-North Carolina State: It looks like Duke should gain clear title to the Southern Conference cham- pionship in this one. Virgina-North Carolina: Carolina. Virginia Military - Virginia Tech: Out of the hat, the Soldiers. North Missouri-Kansas: Missouri looks good. Temple -Bucknell: Temple must have been thinking about something eise in the Iowa disaster last week. On the theory that the Owls will re- turn to their knitting, Temple. George Washington-West Virginia: George Washington. Detroit-Creighton: Detroit. Washington & Lee-Meryland: By the good old coin method, W. & L. Davidson-Wake Forest: Davidson. Purman-Clemson: Clemson. ‘Tulsa-Arkansas: Arkansas. Centenary-Oklahoma A. & M.: Centenary. Denver-Colorado U.: Colorado. Utah-Colorado State: Utah. SATURDAY Army-Navy: It seems here the Ca- ets have better scoring weapons than Navy, and this ballot in thelr fa- vor is predicated on tie belief that Army will be quicker to take advan- tage of its scoring opportunities. Columbia-Stanford: Stanford. Boston College-Holy Cross: Holy ‘Cross. Oregon State-Nebraska: It’s a long trip for the Huskers — nevertheless, Nebraska. - Picks Georgia Tech Georgia-Georgia Tech: Another of those traditional affairs. Georgia ‘Tech, Louisiana State-Tulane: Louisiana looks too powerful. Auburn-Florida: Auburn. Southern Methodist-Texas Chris- tian: Texas Christian. Rice-Baylor: Baylor. Colorado College-Brigham Young: Brigham Young. Ray King Is Chosen °37 Gopher Captain Minneapolis, Nov. 25. — (7) — Ray King, star end on the University of Minnesota football team the last two years, was named captain for 1937 at the annual football convocation, with Andy Uram, brillant halfback, named alternate leader. Forty-one players received the cov- eted “M” and were given the thun- derous applause of 5,000 students and fae ‘who jammed Northrop auditor- um. King received the flaming torch symbolic of Gopher leadershpi trom retiring co-captain Ed Widseth, with Uram also taking part in the cere- mony. Co-captain Julius Alfonse was et to attend because of an attack Pennsylvania is the only school to hold an edge over Michigan in a long- time football series. Penn has won 8, Jost 5, and tied 2 of the Wolverine- Quaker battles. Olson 203-163-144 510 Totals ......... 845-735-718—2299 Capitol Cafe Davis . . 151-156-169— 476| Verduin . 159-188-206— 553 Winistorfer . 157-139-202— 498} Lee ..... 158-176-157— 491} {Brown ............ 171-155-173— 499! Totals . 7386- -B14-207-g517 Karlsbrau Beer Cleveland .. ++ 141-141-155— 437 Fetch ... 129-184-210— 523 Larson . 192-160-179— 531 Degen .. 158-186-155— 499 Cervinski . 183-205-158— 546 *| Handicap 64- 64- 64— 194 ° a . ° | Fights Last Night | hh By the Associated Press) New York — Phil Furr, 146%, Washington, outpointed Wildcat O'Connor, 14214, Carbondale, oy (10); Joey Fernando, 138%, Jer- sey City, N. Y., outpointed Lew Feldman, , New York, (8). | Los Angeles — Andre Lenglet, - 211, France, knocked out Hank Hankinson, 224, Lancaster, 0., (6). — Johnnie Dias, topped Roy Ock- (9). Fresno, Calif. 151, Pittsburgh, ley, 149, Portland, On Stuhldreher Wins Badgers’ Support consin Athletics Despite Six Defeats 5.—(}—Wisconsin, loser of six out of eight football games this fall, nevertheless hailed Coach Harry Stuhidreher as its athletic savior Wednesday. Wisconsin students, faculty mem~- bers and alumni credtied Stuhl- dreher, in his first year al the helm, with literal; at the univers The onetime ‘quarterback of Notre Dame's famous “Four Horsemen” be- came Wisconsin's athletic director and head grid coach last spring. From a small, mediocre squad he molded an eleven which showed more enthus- jasm and fight than any Badger team of recent years—a team which went down scrapping in every defeat and which scored on all oppanents except Notre Dame and Minnesota. Stuhldreher is Wisconsin's sixth head football coach in 14 years, His predecessors were John Richards, whose career as Badger coach ended in 1922, John Ryan, George Little, Glen Thistlethwaite and Dr. Clarence Spears, dismissed in an athletic up- heaval last spring. rebuilding school spirit Stuhldreher toured the state and midwest, making thousands of friends. Alumni loyalty to coaches of oft- defeated teams was marked feature of the past western conference sea- son. Michigan won only one game in eight, but no “wolves” trailed Coach Harry Kipke. Ohio State suffered unexpected reverses but Coach Francis A. Schmidt won a new three- year engagement. Coach Clarke Shaughnessy’s Chi- cago job was unshaken; he ranks as @ full-fledged professor at the mid- way institution. Only at Iowa was there any sustained “howlin, Coach Ossie Solem's Hawkeyes how- ever, ended their season with a smashing victory over Temple. Karlsbrau Beer, Comans Triumph Service Electric and Capitol Cafe Drop City League Bowling Matches Paced by Slonicker and Cervinski, the Comans Tourist Court and Karls- brau Beer trundlers chalked up vic- tories over the Service Electric and Capital Cafe teams, respectively, in City League matches rolled Tuesday. Cervinski tumbled the maples for counts of 183, 205 and 158 for a 546 three-game total as the Karlsbrau Beer team won all three games from the Capitol Cafe. Pete Verduin of the cafe five rolled the evening's best three-game total, 553, while Fetch of the Karlsbrau team had 210 in the third game for high single game hon- ors, Sloicker had a 516 total count to lead Comans to wins in two out of three games with the Service Electric. The scores: i Comans Coman ...... seeee 143-172-173— 483 Wisenberger 141-151-148— 440 Dummy . 140-140-140— 420 Wald ... eres 149-146-157— 451 Slonicker ......... 155-166-195— 516 Handicap 18- 20- 11— 49] Totals «_ 746-795-824—2354 Service Eiectri |Magnuson ........ 169-173-140— Benson ..... 180-127-136— 443 Kottsick 164-132-158— 454 | Dummy 140-140-140— 420 Coach Hailed as Savior of Wis-j‘ THREE CLASS B PREP ELEVENS VIE WITH UNBEATEN HI-LINERS Underwood Won Six Straight; Engler, Kremer Among State’s High Scorers (By the Associated Press) The Valley City Hi-Liners, fighting major league eleven which handed the Minot Magicians their first lick- ing in two seasons to annéx the mythical state prep school gridiron title, Wednesday are sharing unde- feated honors with at least three other North Dakota football clubs. Perched on the state football pine nacle with the unofficial champions are Oakes, Underwood and Hillsboro, thrée sturdy class B clubs which marched through their 1936 schedules, undefeated and untied, a survey by the Associated Press showed Wednes- ley City heads the list with nine ssive victories of which their mph this season upset Glen Jarrett’s Minoters, mythical 1936 high school champs. Winners in eight starts, the Magicians dropped the deciding game to the Hi-Liners, 13 to 6. Compile Perfect Records The three class B clubs, sharing undefeated honors, won six straight games to close the season with per- fect records. Riding the Minot were mount, St Mot upper bracket with Hazen, Crosby, Faire James of Grand Forks and all suffering only one defeat ason. ‘ There were several high scoring backs who raced on gridirons this fail, not only in the major league of nine class A teams but in the class B division as well. Bekken, a Jamestown halfback scored 81 points, while Ken Willey, Valley City fullback, tallied 80 to tie with Marshall Dyke, speedy Fair- mount fullback, Murray King of the Walsh County Aggies rolled up 63 points for the Park River team and Kremer, Linton fullback who was un- der fire on several occasions against, class A teams counted a 62, Chat- field of Minot Model scored 60 and James of Grand Forks, 54. Other high scorers reported by high school coaches include: Erick- son, Valley City, 37; Engler, Under- wood, 40; Keller, Hillsboro, 33; Ger- skzewske, St. James of Grand Forks, 32; Smedshammer, Crosby, 30;' Scott, Valley City, 30; Sloan, Lakota, 31 and Heffelfinger, Larimore, 36. Scored 433 Points The Minot Magicians hold top team scoring honors with 433 points in nine games. The Magicians were unscored upon until the final game when Valley City grabbed 13 points. Valley City was second with 264 points against 12 tallied by their opponents. The standings: Team x-Valley City . Crosby Fairmount St, James, Forks M . te x-Jamestow Hettinger . Linton Larimore . Rugby. x-Fargo x-Devils SHOONSHOSHHHHOSS0904 X-Williston . Walsh Aggies Dickinson LaMoure . Watford city’. Lakota . Beach . a Bismare ngton Lidgerwood Bowbells ... esvoHoonosouHe: o ates class “A” team Savages Shes Schedule 15 Cage Contests December Foray Into S. D. and Nebraska to Inaugurate Dickinson Season Dickinson, N. D., Noy. 25.—A foray into South Dakota and Nebraska for three games in mid-December will in- j@ugurate the 1936-37 schedule of the Dickinson State Teachers college Sav- ages, Coach Harry J. Wienbergen will send his charges against Spearfish, 8. D.. Normal on Dec. 12, Chadron, Neb., |on Dec. 14 and the South Dakota School of Mines at Rapid City Dec. 16, according to the schedule adopted at the meeting of the North Dakota College conference coaches recently. The rest of the season's 15-game schedule follows: dan. 8—Bottineau, here. n, 16—Minot, here. 21—Wahpeton, there. 22—Eliendale, there . 283—Mayville, here. b, 4—Ellendale, here. 11—Valley City, here. eb. 12—Jamestown, there. . 19—Minot, there. . 20—Bottineau, there. . 26—Valley City, here. March 5—Jamestown, here. In the 1915 and 1917 Army-Notre Dame games, the Irish used only 11 SCHNEIDER BAGS 3 POINTS IN2 GAMES, LEADS IN SCORING Kelley Uses Entire Squad of 16 Players in Chalking Up First Victories Coach Clement Kelley’s Saints got off to a fast start in the current bas- ketball season when they romped to one-sided victories over Denhoff and Solen in a doubleheader played at the Bismarck high school gymnasium Tuesday night. Kelley used his entire squad of 16 men in ‘piling up a 43-11 triumph over Denhoff in the opening game and then running up a 50-15 count against the Solen quint in the second contest of the twin bill. Playing only about half of each game, the St. Mary’s first team, with Nicky Schneider and Johnny En- tringer at forwards, Maynard En- tringer at center and Eddie Reff, An- ton Schneider or Nick Becker at guards, showed good form, both in their passing and shooting games. Pile Up Big Lead Starting in the Denhoff contest they piled up a comfortable margin before they were replaced by a sec- ond string lineup and were chiefly re- sponsible for the 39-2 edge the par- ochial quint held at the half. Again in the Solen game, they started and had built up a conclusive lead before being taken out. At the outset it looked as if the Solen quint Saints Snow Denhoff Under 43-11 Count; Then Smother Solen, 50-15 | BISMARCK, WILTON BOXERS TO OPPOSE MANDAN VETS FRIDAY Benefit Card to Be Staged Un- der Auspices of American Legion Post Amateur leather-pushers from Bis- marck and Wilton will furnish the op- position for the veteran Mandan box- ing team in a benefit card to be staged Friday night at the Mandan high school gymnasium under the auspices of the Gilbert 8. Furness post of the American Legion in cooperation with other Mandan civic organizations. Proceeds of the card will be used in the development of the WPA and NYA recreational program, the money going toward the purchase of mater- ials for recreational projects. The curtain raiser will start at 9p. m., Bismarck time. Tony Brooker, Mandan’s district and state amateur middleweight’ champion, will tackle Mitchell Kan- ska of Wilton in a three-round bout, figured to be one of the high points of the evening’s program. Both will weigh in at 155 pounds. Mulloy to Battle Reis In another three-rounder Jack Mulloy of Bismarck, winner of the) district welterweight crown, will bat- tle Bennie Reis, state champion in the same division. Reis tips the scales at 145 and Malloy will Scale about | to, 147, Lowell Elofson of Bismarck will tangle with Vern Franklin of Wilton in the lightweight division. Both will weigh close to 135 pounds. Other bouts on the card include: Douglas Campos, of Mandan against Leonard Lange of Wilton in the heayyweight Icass; Bernie Gordon of might give the Saints plenty of trouble but the parochial cagers settled down and were 30-6 ahead at the half. E. Engel, forward and R. Hieb, cen- ter, were the outstanding perform- ers for Denhoff while for Solen, Seidl, forward, E. Seidl, center, and R. Hin- man, guard, turned in the best per- formances. Schneider Leads Scoring Nicky Schneider diminutive scor- ing ace of last year's quint, started out again to pace the Saints in the tally column. In the first game he dropped in six field goals and in the second added nine more and a free throw for a total of 31 points in the two games. Maynard and Johnny Entringer fol- lowed in the scoring with 18 and 12 points, respectively. Anton Schnel- der, Eddie Reff, Becker and Steve Brown, the latter one of the best ball- handlers on the team, showed up best among the guards. Melvin McLaughlin, a transfer stu- dent from the Haskell Institute, did not play in either game. Kelley it awaiting the receipt of McLaughlin's birth certificate before taking a chance on using the smooth per- former, who has Ge up so well in Practice sessions. e summaries: pentose aA ft Pf St. Marys fg ft pf Gross, f NSchn'rf6 0 0 E. Engel f 3 4 3 JEntrirf2 0 0 Wacker,c 0 9 0 MEntr’'rc6 0 0 Hieb, & 1 1 2 E. Reff,g1.0 0 W Engel g® 2 1 Becker, g 1 01 1 Zimble'an 0 © 0 ASchn’rg2 1 0 Gramm 0 0 0 J Schn’rf1 0 1 Poelke 0 0 0 Weisge'rf1 0 9 — - - Bobb, f 00 0 Totals 4 3 6 Heiser, fg 0 0 0 Brown, g 0 0 0 G, Garske 0 0 0 Griffin oo 0 B. Garske 0 0 0 Ressler 000 Downey 1070 Totals 21 1 2 Score at halftime: St. Mary's 39; Denhoff 3. eteree: Milo Priske: umpire: H. Solen tg ft pf St. Marys fg ft pf Seidl, £ 3.0.1 NSchn’'r £9 1 0 Gerhardt f0 0 0 J Entrirf4 0 1 E Seidlec 2 0 OM Entr'r cs 0 0 Heintz, S80: 4: ey ee a Hinman g 2 1 3 fe ae Wee Far Braxm'r f 0 0 0 pe ee Long, = oo 0 £2086: Fleck, e. 0; 0° 0: fo00 —--e 300.0 Totals fee Me 000 ta, Bee | 00 0 00 0 ee eae b eg0 0 0 geooo Totals 24 2 5 Be core at halftime: St. Mary's 30; alee Referee: Priske; umpire: Allen, Werner Five to Play 14-Game Cage Slate Werner, N. D., Nov. 25. — Werner's high school cage squad continued! drills this week in preparation for the | second game of the season which will | pit them against the Dodge five at Dodge Dec. 4. The local quint played Gladstone in the season’s opener here Friday. A slate of 14 games has been ar- ranged by Coach Huffman, which does not include two games with Dunn Center and one with the Dick- en Model high still to be sched- Halliday will be host to the girls’ and lightweights’ tournaments on Feb. 12-13 and the boys’ team will journey to Dunn Center Feb. 20 for their tournament. The schedule follows: Nov, 20—Gladstone, here. Dec. 4—Dodge, there. Dec. 11—Killdeer, there. Dec. 16—Halliday, here. Jan, 5—Beulah, here. Jan. 15—Golden Valley, here. Mandan versus Martell Newman off Wilton in the featherweight division; Young Knoll of Mandan against Al- bert Wagoner of Wilton in the ban- tamweight division and Joe Schmidt, district. flyweight titlist of Mandan, versus Tom .Welch of Wilton. | ‘Battle Royal’ Slated Eddie Kautzman and Claude Leh- man, both 7-pounders of Mandan, will battle in the curtain raiser and a big entertainment feature of the card will be a “battle royal’ in which six blindfolded youngsters will stage a “fight to the finish” with the one remaining in the ring the longest! being declared the winner. Tickets for the bouts are available at The Ring, the Blackstone Club and may also be purchased from Harry Rosenthal, commander of the Lloyd Spetz post of the American Le- gion in Bismarck. Wichita Team Spoils Millers’ Home Debut St. Paul, Nov. 25—(7)—The Wichita Skyhawks spoiled the home debut o! the new Minneapolis sextet by scoring a 3 to 1 victory in an American Hockey Association contest. The Skyhawks scored twice in the second period and again in the third before the Millers could bat the puck past Goalie Goodman. Kansas City, which has failed to bfeak into the victory column in five starts, played a 1-1 draw with Tulsa, | the game going two overtime periods. ‘OU can be sure it won't take much “Zerone” to keep your car from freezing in the coldest weather you'll ever meet. Tests prove “Zerone” can keep water from freezing even at 215° below zero! “Zerone” is so effective you need less, and the rate of evapora- tion is low. “Zerone” in a clean’ cooling system also prevents rust and ac- tually improves engine perform- ance all year round. If you want to save money on anti-freeze this winter, look for the blue and yellow “Zerone” banner that marks the dealer in your neighborhood. Let him give you complete vadiator protection with this dx Pont product that costs only $1 4 gallon, 25c 2 quart. 0 11's MABE “pv purent 2ERONE Jimmie Prospects Rated ‘Only Fair’ Cassell Has Five Lettermen Returning as Nucleus of Defending Champions Jamestown, N. D., Nov. 25—()— Coach E. J. Cassell forecast “only fair” prospects for his Jamestown College quint this season as he pushed the Jimmies, defending champions of the North Dakota Intercollegiate Conference, through daily drills prior to the basketball opener here against Corcordia Dec. 3. Although five lettermen are on deck, the Jimmies will miss the serv- ices of three key men from last year’s team. Al Schauer and Ken Thunem, stellar guards for the past three years, have graduated and Leroy Holen of Aneta, regular center, failed to return, Heading the list of veteraus aye Erik Peterson, Jamestown, and Eddie Agre, Bismarck, co-captains. Sup- | porting. Peterson and Agre are Ernie Manney and Gus Schlickenmeyer, Bismarck, and Bud Westby, James- wn, The schedule: Dec. 3—Concordia at Jamestown. Dec. 10 — Dakota Wesleyan at Jamestown. Dec. 12 — Jamestown at Grand Forks, Dec, 16—A. C, Bison at Jamestown. Jan, 5—Jamestown at Moorhead. Jan 8—Minot at Jamestown. Jan. Jan, 12—Jamestown at Ellendale. 19— Jamestown at Aberdeen, —Valley City at Jamestown. ‘Wahpeton at Jamestown. Feb, 5—Jamestown at Mayville. Feb. 8—UND at Jainestown. Feb. 12—Dickinson at Jamestown. Feb. 13—Jamestown at A. C., Fargo. Feb, 16—Jamestown at Wahpeton. Feb. 23—Moorhead at Jamestown. Fab. 26—Mayville at Jamestown, Mar. 2—Jamestown at Valley City. Mar, 5—Jamestown,at Dickinson. Over 100,000 to See Trojan-Bruin Battle Los Angeles, Nov. 25.—(#)—The na- tions’ biggest 1936 football crowd, more than 100,000, was indicated Wednesday for the battle Thursday between Southern California's Tro- jans and the Bruins of U. C. L. A. McKenney on Bridge SAFETY PLAY WINS GAMES Finesse for Possible Loss By WM. E. MCKENNEY (Secretary, American Bridge League) Bridge players have learned, by the slow process of trial and error, that certain combinations of cards call for plays differing slightly from the stereotyped handling of a suit. For instance, it is almost auto- matic for a player holding ace-queen and a rumber of small cards in a suit to lead the suit from the opposite hand and finesse the queen, if the king has not been played. This play sometimes gains a trick, but there are many times when it will lose. Thus, with a combination like A-Q-9-8-6 in one hand and 5-4-3 in the Other, one trick in the suit Today’s Contract Problem North’s contract is four spades, doubled. Every bit of his combined strength must be utilized if he is to make game. Therefore, entries from one hand to the other are impor- tant. Can he take 10 tricks? None @J342 P4 AQI9876 None vul. Opener—¥ K. Solution in next issue. 25 must be lost, regardless of how the five cards are held in the opposing hands, because the king, jack, and ten are missing. If there are enough entries in the hand with the small cards, the best play is not to finesse, but to lay down the ace, then enter dummy and lead @ card toward the queen, deciding on the subsequent play by the card played second hand. 1 bP K-J-10 of Trump Out Against Him, Declarer Refuses to It was knowledge of the added element of safety through the play of the ace first that enabled East to make his contract on today’s hand. North’s bid of two diamonds was made merely to show his part- ner that he had some strength. His pubsequent double was highly specu- jative. SOLUTION OF PREVIOUS CONTRACT PROBLEM | | | | | ‘Duplicate—N. & S. vul. South West Pass 3a Pass | Pass | Opening lead—& 10. North 49 4a Double Pass East won the opening club lead in his own hand. It was a marked singleton, and showed that South had lat least two trumps; otherwise, he would not attempt to get a ruff with one of them. East then laid down the ace of spades, and led a diamond to dum- my. This was won with the ace, and a new spade was returned. North played the ten. East played the eight, and South won with the king. Thereafter, North and South won two diamond tricks, and East made his contract as a result of his trump safety play, Even if South had a singleton trump, whether it was the king or not, the play could not lose; but with the singleton or doubleton king, the safety play gains a trick. (Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.) PROMOTER ABE TURNS WRESTLER AGAIN, WINS 8t. Paul, Nov. 25.—()—The show must go on, s0 Promoter Abe Kashey again became wrestler Abe Kashey in the auditorium Tuesday night when one of his performers failed to ap- Officials of the cross-town schools, | Pear. with an advance sale of better than 80,000 tickets already marked up, were confident Memorial Coliseum f,| would be filled to its seating capacity of nearly 103,000. That would mean a gate of around $250,000 drawn by two teams com- pletely out of the Coast Conference Tace. Do Ye KNOW ®=BRANDY 2@ Do you know how excel- lent a estly fine brandy can be? Do you know how eco: nomicalareally fine brandy can be? Old Monastery can give you the answers to both these questions: Try it §) BRANDY § GEORGE BENZ SONS.INC SAINT PAUL MINN (Liquor Sete te wo N. D. eerie lesa) giving NOVEMBER 26TH ADMISSION EXTRA LADIES FREE Subbing for Irish Jack Kennedy of Dallas, Kashey defeated George Rube Harben of Chamblee, Ga, after ten minutes in the sem{-final. In the main event, Chief Little Beaver won from Finkelstein of New York, in 21 minutes. Caifson Johnson of Minneapolis won from Cliff White, Roseau, in seven min- utes. N ONE DOLLAR PER COUPLE Relishes: Hot Tea Rolls We will appreciate your THIS 18 THE SPECIAL OFFER MADE TO YOU ae The ck ismar Tribune ight Fruit Cocktail or Tomato Juice Celery, Olives Baked Turkey and Dressing Mashed Potatoes with Pan Gravy Candied Sweet Potatoes Pumpkin Pie with Whipped Cream $1. COMAN COURT SERVING 3 TO 8 P. M. Thanksgiving Dinner Cranberry Sauce Coffee Tea ~ Milk t 00 reservation—Phone 1193-3 ENTITLING YOU 10 “A COMPLETE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES” FoR