grand forks herald (grand forks, n.d.). 1917-12-01 [p ]. · grand forks herald (grand forks, n.d.)....

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J&s ^ "S. .;3%" O' GRA^D V .P»JP8«B'V : M£§S &«*<* ' 0 t : ;\, . •' MRfc'-- PACT ,l fe ALI lWJUW#*Wtt«irm IWIHIIHHIH HIIIIII SOLDIER-GOLFER " . MONEY-GETTER FOR WAR FUNDS! .• •*; .: v-v- . .•*. •» . .-. •: -v ••• . * tapa 'X gt:. •• .*••-" />*•- as©BasketbaH Games W. *Wrt£:. %m- lax : V'j _;•• »vr!,ri'< ',4 -tW. •'' I. •• •••\v ; rv; N >v?4v 7 . £r ^r*5l Thil Forksl for thl £•; lttst i;J ':•: featedl ' *28,tof '• BOt< :N' and tijl rf; better] v gafche . this sd tionair. iseveral U <rf the s work Goldb? ,7<-' -.ii MMM-m |f' *' ••A:'.-- itneuj Zlpoy |j nd I points? Qolti floor ao po] Vang points Lystac] the all the fl he s! times " Thi folio Dang' and "the ward and S At schW high some team bein Junto' while gueri schoolMeam, Thl on Bast Grand rk's.Flopr. of." the Bast GT<and ChdBl proved too slow klrS-Of' the school again Bn the latter team de- timers to the tube "yf •: I ' ^ did some 1 good work jkl showed - a great deal an they'did ita/the first between the two teams ~ie\ regulars did exeep- passing' the ' ball and jtworked- it to theirend >r a basket, .[The ' best regulars Wm done by .Dangerfield, while jUivan <wbn moat of the V alumni. t jot.bastei&ta from the thfdwi»>whi:ph brought the 4fe|ral*rs/: while -:Bpaln each made four mide - eight points, Ivan 6, and R^nd 4 tor im. Sullivan's work on ^exceptionally fast and isKtifiCA' great-jpany f fof the^ teims was 'as wgttlam-^-GOldberg and forwwdssi Wbufc Center, W Bs;dal,, guards., For ^lpojpand Sulilv^n, for- center, i and /Murphy tuwdit.^.--'^-' / .,. .. the high Bajn" : iptsyei : the-Junior. Srls' team, .'acpd both did . work. Thei Jhigh school- ^a big margin, the- soore Every score for the tiAa^e by Dora Blkey, tey. ma4e'20 and Mar- "Te~sa^Ior the liigh i P' (: uto* Qla^. gfufa t '-'j/ - ^•Wi 'ineujgjfor; the... girls' 1 te^.m fol- lows: Higlft- seKbpi—Kyth Jar^ls, center He 1 Palyfe ,g*. cf,j.C.Ora Elkey, 1; &&gufcrlte Olson, forward; jiesW^guitrd; Dorothy Masse, Juniors—Myrtle Peterson, center HeleBS-Plipat, gi center ^.Gladys Morlai ty, fdiwajrd; Dora Elkey, for- ward; Lena ':U.' Afifiiri \ - 1 -vV rf?' . ' V •h VrlO'-fS 'jZt >ms. Josep&lne Eohanner, orllnSguard. guard; ANWHER FIGHT IS OCTUBED FOR f R ED V J FUtrON BY COLUNS eapol will Colui annt managfer of ttle ii The b; } " nsrulc t.,.'' ,<fcut iui '.ton g pected |5''- y >.» .heavy' , '«. 3 sror. fr r.suHJb tleW ' 'VV U? - ti/rV^ Salloiwitl^; in St. ]Paul> ^Hinn., 'Dec. i.—Fred Ox ;Porky Flynn of Bos- bus; Ohio, December 10, moid l)yy -Mike" Cq4iin% the heavy we igKt, today. Jteh^duled for 1,2 rounds, gtpg ffionjl the bad beating Ful- ra FlSpn ait their IcCat meeting In I, the^Boston battler Is not' ex- to slfiy the limit with., the elght^chSnrpionflWp^hairen.- "tfiiifgets 33 1-3 per cent of Ve<WPts and itwo rouna trip ffroih^inmgLpplis Xpr hib share froih%inn€gLppli9 Xpr hib t l^purpi®' Tf \T A Malffiie, aitbfher battle: battler On / stafCrWill box Goats Doig at e, HE' December 6, in a 'Id p; (^llins and Fulton' plan to eMtont against Ben iieonarij t{ •• nySz~ /•I--.Mr:• '... •\Aiti--i .) i'*-*'? 'a.'. •• v . •Sic ?& S< }•;•)- T lifr lOf- ecember &>,' then go to Malohe December'6, and ;y will proceed to Co- ton'^ battle Decem- Jiv't ; v; : . •' b, ,. m : »(>»^ * 1 Sfe./U ^,, tsen. •WIS 4 Camp Mills District Sees. Maity ; v Farewells—Men F^ted/Be^ore Embarking ^ ts'-: Fund Raised by Game Will Diiiidec' Gnlnt -and , . ••? v /... , 3Xv;• Dee: lThousands of se- leeted- men land officers from ~ Custer Chlcag •game betw< cam ' CusteTv Ofiirtp Camp, arwt flocked' to todHy to wltneHb the ^football SUtgg; Field - thts .a^ftornodh V«levenjs representing .{ne two tents. > Untts t WA*^ Camp £rant, Roekford, paraded through- the lie&rt of^ChicAgo-'this 'morning^ P'idr to gpinir^o t|)c football field: Camp Custer, Battle'- .Creek, entered v the gam^ a slight , favorite because it hM played together liTnce the flrst^>f Oc- tober. and : has evolved bettA- team play.» In tbe number of former col- legiate stars the two squads" were evenly matched. The net proceeds of the game''will be divided equally v be- tween the t,w,4 «4mps, to be applied vto the athlefcld; equipment and recreation i funds. Th«'linkup; : < y-. 4 damp Mills, Hempstead, L. I., Dec. 1.—In -jthe darkest hour which pre- cede tbe dawrlf thousands of soldiers of the < rainbow division marched a way fr6m their camp here en route to Franc0,' while the townsfolk cheered and showered -. them with gifts, petails of the rainbow's secret departure caft-now be told, following the anhouncenient that this unit had safely arrlyed "over'^here." About X: a. m.. October IB the rain- bow division' engineers /marched stway. Last farewells had been said several days previously, when ' every man was giyen kn exti» long leave. Many married dmiig tnkt furlough.'' AB the jftngitie^frs tramped through the dark to their entraining point, the townspeople tif wUlagAs scattered around this part Long Jslanfl - dressed hastily and came to their doors in tlie chill of early niorning to bid the departing Hoys, godspeed.. - This was the' beginning of an ^exo- dus that lasted- more than a week. In :that time 27,000 men. fully equip- ••'.ti'y > Tf •;£? Iwidr Schimal* - 1144 P QmM I Poors later 9V- f * V Wf* / , r A daylight ride through l Kentucky Blue Gras* region, % the pictuiesque Blue fudged Th« Scenic dM,Mi * ,«•» V -^., - "i-0 tram via Cbi- : ;• ^S1 ill : tl»i r ( _ pea fo,r fighting, .^rith all their "bag- _ _ and paraphernalia, marched out of Camp Mills- qn thei "-way to France. Position. R. E.. \Camp Grant— v Norgren. Chicago S: Funk, Princeton ...... I,... 1 ,v ;.»C, , Mc^fCbe; joli'lns ftopklns.. '. i.*.. !». g Uathrop, Nptrp Dame Rasmuesen^ ^{ebraijka. Eddy, Prtnceton..:. WoM, Karisais.... Shiverick, Cornell ... ^Chobingor, Illinois... L. T. . ... .L. E •V.... ^1, B.;...: h. b.. ; ...... In H. B,, . ...X .F. B "U" TEAMS ARE •• —Camp Custer. ... TMmpson,, XAWrence.. . .ward, Georgetown. « . Simpson, Wisconsin > .Vi . 8war<W Princeton,. . .'-i K^rwiti,, Georgetown. . . Mbriarity, Georgetown. .;.°-JBardinir, Carlisle. . Coslfcllb, Georgetown. . Pe Prates,- Michigan Aggie. . Miller; .Michigan Aggie. . Tunghof, Wisconsin. •' - - to the andL&N.R R. Sotlth Drawing Room Sleeping Can M * ' / a»yl Qdttcbec.CUcafloI d Jaefaaeo> Tifle. lUMmmmd Car Sc ^ Romni Trtp TUbti * - # - - m i , X tlNES>^>- // L»mt ifchi Ami llir •'-tv..-." Francis Oulmet a|iS Jofen /l^ulersoii. : x, Francis Oulmet, former open^ gQlf champion., has found two ways to show his patriotism. >•' ' - ' ^ y N,,. Ouimet i«La;private at. Camp. Devine, Mass., \ having given up hiss sporting goods business In Boston to ana'wer the -Orat <Jxaft and has found time between learning how to be a soldier to earn $12,000 for various war funds byfhis-'gblt playi-.'• : ... His last- match wan at* thei Englewood, N. J„ links, where he played a foursome,;.with; Jesse x . GuiU-ord, ^Oswald,.Kirkby and John Anderson. His latest photo shdVrs liim in uniform, 'as he appeared at Englewood with Anderson- . \ - - *;.• , •%/ •...-..1 .-. .i. ,v Vj-. iv -. . V-.„, -x'v- .. m . - . 1 All Stdf Teams ^Tivo\Cqmps Playing Oma-Ha, Neb.* Dec. All-Star' foiStftair teams, picksd from college _§levens of last xear, representing the soldiera .in training at Camps Pun- Ston and Dodgo, met on CreightoA "flMd today 'In what' is expecfed'to be the greatest game ever wKnessed in Omaha" and before the largest crowd gathered .for a gridiron b&ttl^ here. . v. The p^oceefe are to b%, divided between,,fh« athletic funds 4>f-„th^' two c & m p s . v T l j f e t e n t a t i v e l i n e u p f f e j l o w s r ' - . ; . ) . Position. L. I?T>, Camp -Dod{ ' ' « »yL. T . .VivL. 'rt J r-y. C - f '- .... R; G. ....: R»T.. . ' \ .. .f.QVB. /-?•?•. .<• ..^.KHB. V 'dgp— . Carberry, Ames . . . . .Mayer, Minnesota Malianah .. . Cook, vytscon8in . Allunsoh Robertson, Dartmouth . . Allison, Carletbn^ .' .:" Derr, PennsylvtiHla .. .-•.. ' Jones; Wisconsin . Moss. Ames Camp -iFunstori—• Be^ry, - Washington ... Rowley, West .Point. ., Withtngton, Harvard V'.. Hammond, Kansas' .. .. Schwelger, Colorado U ..Carlisle ;... ..,..... •. Fletcher . ..'I 4 ,...... j. Fast {..: V.. .tv . .;.. Beck,-' Nebraska . _ Clapk. Illinoisx«. ;((<.•'»• n. ..... " Prince, Hastings ......... ,-t. .'.. .F, B...... \ . McCormicto, South Dakota Mayer, who is playing legf'tackle on the Cs.mp Dodge eleven, is . Frank Mayer, son of Theodore Mayer of East Grand. "Forks. This man ^as one of the"-stars on- the Minnesota.-team of ja-it yeur and it iB expected that he^will show some of his good work t|J>W afternoon. J GOODWIN, COMING * I Goodwin ^joined - the P club last July. VftflNr PITrUPD H " He was purchased fronv'the Milwau- 1 UVflU r41UIuA^ la , i koe elkb of the ^merics^n assocfatlon > r v IN SIGNAL CORPS ^for 115,000 in bash /and playe^. '-'.s ' '' i)TiiR GAME FOR : EAST GRAND FORKS 1 Hundreds of resLdenrt were in on the great secret; buj^hat secret was kept; I While the nation slept, thousands of j rainbows embarked on their trans- ports. £'•! •' v 4 Toward Vhe^(aiter part of that I week--the entraining-time was chang- , ed to a daylight Jiour, and tbe khaki ' clad hosts marched quite openly. "Who are you?" the crowd would I shout as a ' new ^ body of stalwart ' | young Americarigtswung in sight, and ., ,-V\ pback weuld come the answer: m m i f - \ - j ; ' j r , j " I O - W A Y , " o r " N e w Y o r k , " o r t h i s Class Teams*Organized juid is the old «»th." , - v •v "«• T?„„ JTT r__ , Farewell balls, parties and dinners . Keaay tor oeason S I by the- hundred were staged at (Hempstead, Miheola and. nearby vil- '.-•7 '• W«mes. . . t». , ; ; lages for the departing fighting men. •\ . I ., >-i 'Three hour leaves were granted \ ' " ' | many sh«tly before time to hike. Jtli prictfce ^ill be jSS . -rnopn at the university ; after I lfw— ' wJ?. . j K the u'elay caused by the gymnasium being c.osed. Thls afternoon the candidates for the university team will report.to:. Co^ich -Oill.—{ - j j.. •This is. the:, first^formal call, issued by i Coach CFill.' an dp- all- men who ape candidates >tor th£ uhiversity team wyi be 'pi;esent.,;- Saturday lis the day allotted' for general .practice for| 9.U men .regardless - t^eir class, r and many men are' expected ..out. ISym In Shape. - . The •gjm/wiil .be. Iff sjiape„ today,. however,, and, practice will be resumed once more.' ! Only- a'short time re- -njains in whiclv the class teams? will .be -able ioV gut into sh^pp before the beginning .'of- the 'sferi'es. Th6 games ftart on the evening of December 8. This leaves- cmly a week in which to practice. "- Beginning with, today, the : comiiig.. 5»eek will see the hardest work" oi the season thus far, as every inlmite. is essential to the men lor they.-are not in the* best of ,condition, I. R. CORPS Ba .<®ll practice ifrill be riisume<i! this ftiternopn at the university afttr! ftweieShote Sll" nt the uelay caused bv the evmnasium inflow'b^rcau"^ tmt^ce "sound! ed the signal for ending mosMof the balls as they command .was. pawed for the units to fall'in and get-ready to' start. •' t There were stirring scenes, at the entraining: : points when cheering crowds thronged about the men, toBsfyig '• theni cigarets and ' other presents, shouting and laughing, with some women quietly weeping. Troop train after troqpVtrain rattled away for $be embarking point, with soldiers waving from tlfis windows. Some of Best Sons Become -(^fficers in Uncle Sam's' ^ Vast Army. LANCASHIRE COTTON INDUSTRY AGAIN IS KNO^PGPROSPERITY Manchester, England, Dec. 1.—The I>ancashire;J (Cotton 'industry again - is 0wlig to Ui'e last .s^xt and' the delay waT^i^dmcu®^ T^p Cobtorf Co^ causeij the closing of . the gymna- 1 ».«i —j ^ . siumw The classes have" ! be&n Tally organ- ized and everyone knoys the ex;act ijondition'of things, so the ,inen will be working on' a. inor^ definite basis trot , Board, ~pa.yd- the" Manchester .Guardian, seems to 1 have steered the industry safely ^through.^Tcrisie unpre- cedented in its l*Wkry.v Three month's ago the. eo.tton millsl of Lftncashire »e worKing on a. more aennite oasis whinh " , i and J 1 er Its^'W01 be'- jtCcomplisti^- Anierioan Sottiottj^w th. ed. All 01 the classes seem to have .. ; 8t. 'E.ouis, MO;;- ' Dec. > 1.—MarvinS Goodwin, the brilliant young rigltt j hand pitcher of thto - St. Iiouis Na- a "health pf inaterial apd it would be ^difflbult to' predict Whi<*' aggregation Would -place tha fastest-'team in the field. ' The; juniors ' and-' seniors are a little ;shy" on thd number of candt- dates out, but all .the" men trying for the places on the teams are exper- ienced. havipg playad in t^e Campus tidnals. ha».( Joined2the^^ ^atlon^ ^ tion^of the tJnited States isighal corpsjk ^ *- ' .. - a3c : One more ganje has been added to e peason's Schedule for the IW American cottoa! saw the stocks of cotton dwindling,; on til at last the sup- ply, was estimated'to be sufficient only ti> keep tihe mills xtctive for a few weeks. The regulations of the Control Board* materially have improved the •situation and it is asserted that if the 'existing stock could be maintained there would be'no ifeed^pf anxiety for t'he future of the industry. Fort Shelling, Dec. 1.—-The north- west has made another splendid con- tribution to the officering machine of the nation's army. f , Nine hundred and' seventy-one •<>f i£s finest manhood, high in spirits-and parting with the enthusiastic predic- tion that they would soon meet again in France, graduated from the Fort Snelling second 'reserve officers' train- ing camp Tuesday. More than 1,500 flow are in actual service. '' These northwest men . have-gone forth, how to p)ace all the^ power that three: months'. military training has -given, them behind the nations' w&r machine to crush kaiserism speedily and permanently. For them the sham battle is past. No longfer improvised Ohe day they were dlsgtng trenebea. another/ they -were making maps aad another , learning the Bngliah and ' French manuals of the bayonet. All < of this work was interspersed with the regular infantry and artillery drill and work-In the school of the soldier." Captain Paul Cheffaud, a regular French army officer, who has cone over the top in the face of Are from German guns was on the Job during the three month#, of training teaching the students that the 'loss of a second in this vital phase of present day war- fare might mean disaster. Problems in defense 'and attack were solyed to the northwest men by him. Huddled against the cold clay, of the trenches \under a harvest moon, the 971 officers spent three nights in the trenches dpringythe Jast week of training, preparing for the nights won to come when the Boches would *en- deavor to storm their sectors in the darkness along the western front One of the innovations of the sec-"" ond camp and one - which attracted mucn Interest both among the stu- dents and the general public of the twin cities was the physical and bay. onet drills under the instruction of r ~". '' £ of its men from the first training camtN Major Hermann F. Koehler of West M MJk nAWVriAA * A f Q ARA ' A# ^ A 1. _ Point and one of the three men who ti&mptled the manual of physical training for fhe. United states army. Major A. M. Ferguson, senior in- structor, and Captain Ira Longaneck- er. camp adjutant, are confident thkt the men who left the Fort, SnelUffir r camp are capable of carrying out the will they charge out of ] tasks which remain before them, trenches and across "No | Garbed in their leather puttees and g-J Man's Land" in the face of camou-, commissioned officers' -insignia the " " *^ u ~" "• *• ^ """ '971 men were sworn into -duty Tues- day. After receiving their pay checks and travel orders they made a rush for the railway stations to spend a few days at home before departing to the cantonments and regular army camps to which they were assigned. The age .limits of the men in the secogjl, camp were higher than in the first: Although many of the men lost flage fire. They may teach recruits in those arts but for the officers onfy the real charges- across European battle- flelds in the face of enemy gun fire remain. . The men who made their way across a snow-coated reservation at tKe close of the cimp Tuesday were happ^v They had-won commissions. Three months ago they came from off the wind swept prairie of the Da- kotas the hills of Minnesota and "the I ° U * du ^ ir, , s intervals at the camp, it Kouis,. ine niiis. oi Minnesota ana the i WM not |jecause of a la/,k o{ , But the conoA potion does not re- .'iU freshmen ' I ? aln 8taW «- Cotton shipments during - The '• sqphomoretgsv«^t treanmep Daet two mtfntha hftvhPBn make up. in 'numberav . they. lac|c in* collegiate experjence, thg freshmen in' par'ttcular ha,Vlnt lai*es etiuadi out. >A1F of thfie^me-h -hat«o*iad pre- East' vious hign school experience and are ',;-5fc®5 SfJB-i "" " mm. I: "f V-Mi I «eKritr..-Fo'rkS; high; scho'bl' basketball adapting; themselves readily to the teani. \.'Ar- gamo has been. ,ari«.nged iopllwRlate style ~pf«play. From^all re- w4tM .the , model high school "team of ; the team wilUm eq^^y TOatcl)-' the university, and Will be-.played onied'and sonie royal battles .may M (the^Tast Grand Forks floor December) pfected wheft the tea^ns tak% the fl.o^r 8. A»great deal of', rivalry exists be-I on December 8. , ' tween the.,two teamg a.nd the content promises'to be^One Of tile best on the sc'tefc'dule for the East slders-.— '/ ll , _ SoldierStofy; ,w®- #1 ; years o#tHe Wel^ lUghthehorrors of ^Ypres, i^backfto tell Fl)DI£BAlX CLAIMS TWELVE VICTIMS; DURING ^.C^lr-^" .wqiw h% oti '%> nn . 11 vAf < ' warf ^ He w^a >; PB AT;/ IBIWI'LUB! ^HOL^COMPAFIY^ syiiix>Uti(iexl b^.|3[6rmans and;e ^ %Pric*fl& w OOOBS-MCRRltL mm ••iwoe saK: * ^ •ANY, f->' ..... •ft Vf" •" ^Chicago* Dec-.l^^ritbalC^ihe rotfgheSt 'Of Amieffoan outdoor s^«<lrts, exacted-n•"••jJi of twelve yictlmS dur- ing the seaaton, which ehded with Thanksgiving 8tfy gan)es,taccording to reports to .the Associated Prttes today. The, nun\t#er was six less- tnan t>l6 an^foiXr lesti. than two years ag%. In 1114-there w«ir« fifteen.< -?S; 5 --!• -J- DETROIT FANS SEE " , QpOB GAME TODAY . t 'v Detroit Mich., Dec. 1.—Thi fullUniversity of Detroit football teaifi Ite power- Natidnal MjicAr- aft- ected mp Uu re ttyf lis expe andi ^the' eleven' from the Guard cantonment at' : thiftv Waco, Tex . met , ernoon*4n a contest that to develop some brimant. ^ work. v Thi, teams are regarded as aboujt Sveniy matched in»evefy re- SpecL The' soldiery eleven, compos- ed chiefly > of formed MliJliigan and Wisconsin college; playrrs, has now been defeated* searibn. The sol- th* the past two months have been fairlv satisfactory ,but. each we«k,shows k decrease -ln ^he amount of tonnage and this 1* Upund to be reflected in the amount <^'"cotton reaching Liter- pool. S^or^these reasons the prospect of-a serious set. back is considered by •no m^ftjtis remote. Therefore the. trade cannot jook forward to freedom from gov^rfijnent contTol at the end of the WWnt i pnonth., , This was the period fixed by, the Control Board for the ex- piration of the.'plan to restrict the.out- pu.t In-order to"^Conserve the supply. BRrfisH WORKMEN - > NOT TO LET U. S. ^V' : . MEFT DIRECT THEM •> J . .pr djers' shafe of-the receipts go to dunp athletio?. fund. y '• , . r*>ndon,.®ec. 1.'—"Brftish workman *?e n^fgcjng to submit to scientific «ridirofi' 'mans^ement impqrted from America * - + or elsewhere,".^declartd the Arch- bishqp Of : ' TEflf**,. in *a democratic spMch on-th$ ..labor question- he *de- Uper^-the other; day in the House of Cords., "They'regard-it ;as 'Prussian-- Izingyindustry ^a.. they win resist it." said the> AfChbishoP; lie deClare^ th^t.it.was surprising M1NNES05AN, WITH CANADIANS, KlLLE# lip*?••"IN*' "ttle unrest among ®Holh w#kip^n, v ^n4 declared that their higher w^|res had been more or *i-. ...... y Tehchow, China, D«. ^l.—Cjhjni's .qranS^Qanal. ne^iejfted and allotfrM'-to! •ut up f JMargely respbn«ible,ior t^e prolonged fioo4 which has wrought so much ruin in/North China. : it now stands, the north section of the Grand Canal is merely-a-«atch- basin for thi floodwaters oft practical, ly all of ChitHi: Proyince^ aid delivers tmi.irswf into the Tientsin S area, when the Pelvrive^ is too small to carTy th4 juries to-the Aea. ^fe^WrtomoMdcnt of>The 4M atad ^reea, who «o.mplet«d' C\0ur ,of p norther^ sectlb^ of ,ih» Qnuid: CiiiNil ^ brokenkjni plintiMi.; . bdth shores.' •The' thonsahda Of 4«rMi of lnundatedctfun^ try between Teh?how and .. TiejiMlh «onstltute a awries of lakes'jrhlcii are ^BUn^. iMiifc tiM th«]ower ritachm otthe oahal.Moth ArO~'vlrtually all. gone. Thr bUI in But MMt otth» ftw sa«ii|i:»>ty. .. y1 ; 5 ' ; -,.J V V^^AW»«lea'hM voted-ih^ salocma Y»Ut .btrtf!^i&h»»ft hotels ,aitd :r«^u> :i>anU t«n«M*#-l i *ht wine»v and to diner*. It remains to-M'iWji. tips fii^uce v^lunif «lrv ii)i4r*. Je& ,neut which fh« pjtohtec led . . .,.. . . . higher prices . beli^ed^ to be due toj had- been har- Ottaw*& Ont.. Dec. 1.4^Phi?follow-/*'*J "•*'^''**•*4. he said, byHhe coiK! 'Kilted In action: J. Lurier:Brooki; MkiiiL..-: * •' -V'' •• ' V- Mlhb: 'V - •5:'.^ STTJITKIOSE. HIEPIM aminatlon orders and'by the suspen sion> of tMtde union regulations. Yet . ; "Vast numbers «r r theia from over- crowded .houees?4n,' slums had cotne Jbrwtrd %jth. the .-greatest readiness W the jielpj of the-cotintry. rolling prairies of Iowa and Nebraska to put forth all the ability they pos- sessed to become proficient enough to be recommended for a commission in Uncle Sam's reserve corps. From the opening urftil the closiiv of the camp, - speed was the keynote of ajl the work. Lots to learn and only an alloted time to do it. Af times, dur- ing the training the acceleration be- came so great that many of the most intelligent men In the camp were forcied to throw iip the sponge and ad- mitt that they were too advanced in yearA to stay with "it." j) gence but-of the abilitv to assimilate so much work "in the short period of three months. OOMMAXDEEKEI) TEX RJEXiEASED Washington,. Dec. 1.—Releas® of a I great amount of commandeered tin in' New York warehouses was promised today by the navy deparlpient on rep- resentations of the department of commerce' that private industries would ..be handicapped, seriously by lack. of.'.the metal, particularly food canning factories, 'V : .O' •pje Sriix 1 KEEPING SOLDIERS STRONG Early in the world-war cod liver oil was selected to fortify the 'he&lth of soktten against the rigors and ex- posure of camp life and. to help build up enduring strength. IS THE ONE that Actually guarantees the pure quality of Norwegian Cod Liver Oil which is refined in our own American laboratories. It is skilfully emulsified to promote prompt assimUa- tio^i which is always difficult with die raw oil Scotfj JEmulsion is jamout for putting power in^ the blood to thwart colds, grippe, pneumonia and lung trouble. It is alcohol or opiates. ! SeottftBowacxUoMD^eld,N.J. 17^' 1 .K< •'•ip ..V> 5 « if*" t Remembek*! tws {• - THE LAST DAY U. & Aid ' k Toklov - D«:.' 1.—Kflto Chinese press to force the j that the United States parti the Chinese Cummfe loan y|1thWpmi«i point* out that .£a|lte' idftft fUMd its Infi^nee to, pbtain'gmtjfca's participation In thixloan. ^^Iie "times also asserts "that invaMcatlona so far made by the lm- of ttie ncVuaioh patfpn in intend ne»" in winter .-5. f; » % 5^ v«cl no ground Ante fro TWp*!* m# 'iom irovemm HMi^n. ,.Wv t®MesV »i6rt0M & fi ^ - it&t i* ti4. --A .1'

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J&s ^ "S. .;3%" O' GRA^D

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' • 0t:;\, . •' MRfc'-- PACT

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lWJUW#*Wtt«irm IWIHIIHHIH

HIIIIII •

SOLDIER-GOLFER " . MONEY-GETTER FOR WAR FUNDS!

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gt:. •• .*••-" />*•- • as©BasketbaH Games

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Thil Forksl for thl £•; lttst i;J ':•: featedl ' * 2 8 , t o f

'• BOt< :N' and tijl rf; better] v gafche . this sd • tionair. iseveral U <rf the s • work Goldb?

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Zlpoy |j nd I points? Qolti floor ao po] Vang points Lystac] the all the fl he s! times " Thi folio Dang' and "the ward and S At schW high some team bein Junto' while gueri schoolMeam, Thl

on Bast Grand rk's.Flopr.

of." the • Bast GT<and ChdBl proved too slow klrS-Of' the school again Bn • the latter team • de-timers to the tube "yf •: I ' ^ did some 1 good work jkl showed - a great deal an they'did ita/the first between the two teams ~ie\ regulars did exeep-passing' the ' ball and jtworked- it to theirend >r a basket, .[The ' best regulars Wm done by .Dangerfield, • while jUivan <wbn moat of the V alumni. t jot.bastei&ta from the thfdwi»>whi:ph brought the 4fe|ral*rs/: while -:Bpaln each made four mide - eight points, Ivan 6, and R^nd 4 tor im. Sullivan's work on ^exceptionally fast and isKtifiCA' great-jpany

f fof the^ teims was 'as wgttlam-^-GOldberg and forwwdssi Wbufc Center, W Bs;dal,, guards., For ^lpojpand Sulilv^n, for-center, i and /Murphy tuwdit.^.--'^-' / .,. • .. the high Bajn":iptsyei:the-Junior. Srls' team, .'acpd both did . work. Thei Jhigh school-^a big margin, the- soore Every score for the tiAa^e by Dora Blkey, tey. ma4e'20 and Mar-"Te~sa^Ior the liigh

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'ineujgjfor; the... girls'1 te^.m fol­lows: Higlft- seKbpi—Kyth Jar^ls, center He 1 Palyfe ,g*. cf,j.C.Ora Elkey,

1; &&gufcrlte Olson, forward; jiesW^guitrd; Dorothy Masse,

Juniors—Myrtle Peterson, center HeleBS-Plipat, gi center .Gladys Morlai ty, fdiwajrd; Dora Elkey, for­ward; Lena

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Josep&lne Eohanner, orllnSguard.

guard;

ANWHER FIGHT IS OCTUBED FOR fRED

V J FUtrON BY COLUNS eapol will Colui annt

managfer of ttle ii The b;

}" nsrulc t.,.'' ,<fcut iui '.ton g • pected |5''- y >.» .heavy'

, '«.3 sror. fr r.suHJb tleW ' 'VV U? -

ti/rV^ Salloiwitl^; in St. ]Paul>

^Hinn., 'Dec. i.—Fred Ox ;Porky Flynn of Bos-bus; Ohio, December 10, moid l)yy -Mike" Cq4iin% the • heavy we igKt, today.

Jteh^duled for 1,2 rounds, gtpg ffionjl the bad beating Ful-ra FlSpn ait their IcCat meeting In I, the^Boston battler Is not' ex-to slfiy the limit with., the elght^chSnrpionflWp^hairen.-

"tfiiifgets 33 1-3 per cent of Ve<WPts and itwo rouna trip

ffroih^inmgLpplis Xpr hib share froih%inn€gLppli9 Xpr hib t l^purpi®' Tf \T A

Malffiie, aitbfher battle: battler On / stafCrWill box Goats Doig at e , H E ' D e c e m b e r 6 , i n a ' I d p; (^llins and Fulton' plan to

eMtont against Ben iieonarij

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•\Aiti--i . ) i'*-*'? 'a.'. ••

v. •Sic ?& • S< }•;•)-

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ecember &>,' then go to Malohe December'6, and ;y will proceed to Co-

ton'^ battle Decem-

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4 Camp Mills District Sees. Maity;

v Farewells—Men F ted/Be^ore Embarking

^

ts'-: Fund Raised by Game Will b§ Diiiidec'

Gnlnt -and , . ••?v/...,3Xv;•

Dee: lThousands of se-leeted- men land officers from ~ Custer Chlcag •game betw< cam

' CusteTv

Ofiirtp Camp, arwt flocked' to todHy to wltneHb the football SUtgg; Field - thts .a^ftornodh V«levenjs representing .{ne two tents. > Untts t WA*^ Camp £rant, Roekford, paraded through- the lie&rt of^ChicAgo-'this 'morning^ P'idr to gpinir^o t|)c football field: Camp Custer, Battle'- .Creek, enteredv the gam^ a slight , favorite because it hM played together liTnce the flrst^>f Oc­tober. and : has evolved bettA- team play.» In tbe number of former col-legiate stars the two squads" were evenly matched. The net proceeds of the game''will be divided equallyvbe-tween the t,w,4 «4mps,to be applied vto the athlefcld; equipment and recreation i funds. Th«'linkup; : < y-. 4

damp Mills, Hempstead, L. I., Dec. 1.—In -jthe darkest hour which pre­cede tbe dawrlf thousands of soldiers of the < rainbow division marched a way fr6m their camp here en route to Franc0,' while the townsfolk cheered and showered -. them with gifts, petails of the rainbow's secret departure caft-now be told, following the anhouncenient that this unit had safely arrlyed "over'^here." About X: a. m.. October IB the rain­bow division' engineers /marched stway. Last farewells had been said several days previously, when ' every man was giyen kn exti» long leave. Many married dmiig tnkt furlough.'' AB the jftngitie^frs tramped through the dark to their entraining point, the townspeople tif wUlagAs scattered around this part Long Jslanfl-dressed hastily and came to their doors in tlie chill of early niorning to bid the departing Hoys, godspeed.. - This was the' beginning of an ^exo­dus that lasted- more than a week. In :that time 27,000 men. fully equip-

••'.ti'y > Tf • •;£?

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I Poors later

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, r A daylight ride through l Kentucky Blue Gras* region, % the pictuiesque Blue fudged

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V-^., - "i-0 tram via Cbi-: ;•

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pea fo,r fighting, .^rith all their "bag-_ _ and paraphernalia, marched out of Camp Mills- qn thei "-way to France.

Position. R. E..

\Camp Grant— v Norgren. Chicago

S: Funk, Princeton ...... I,... 1 ,v ;.»C, , Mc^fCbe; joli'lns ftopklns.. '. i.*.. !». g Uathrop, Nptrp Dame Rasmuesen^ ^{ebraijka. Eddy, Prtnceton..:. WoM, Karisais.... Shiverick, Cornell ... ^Chobingor, Illinois...

• L. T. . ... .L. E •V.... ^1, B.;...:

h. b.. ; . . . . . . I n H . B , , . ...X .F. B

"U" TEAMS ARE

•• —Camp Custer. ... TMmpson,, XAWrence.. . • .ward, Georgetown. • • « • . Simpson, Wisconsin > .Vi . 8war<W Princeton,. . • .'-i K^rwiti,, Georgetown. . . Mbriarity, Georgetown. .;.°-JBardinir, Carlisle.

. Coslfcllb, Georgetown.

. Pe Prates,- Michigan Aggie. . Miller; .Michigan Aggie.

. Tunghof, Wisconsin. • ' - -

to the andL&N.R R. Sotlth Drawing Room Sleeping Can

M* ' / a»ylQdttcbec.CUcafloIdJaefaaeo> Tifle. lUMmmmd Car Sc

^ Romni Trtp TUbti

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L»mt ifchi Ami llir

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Francis Oulmet a|iS Jofen /l^ulersoii. :x,

Francis Oulmet, former open^ gQlf champion., has found two ways to show his patriotism. >•' ' - ' y N,,. Ouimet i«La;private at. Camp. Devine, Mass., \ having given up hiss

sporting goods business In Boston to ana'wer the -Orat <Jxaft and has found time between learning how to be a soldier to earn $12,000 for various war funds byfhis-'gblt playi-.'•: ...

His last- match wan at* thei Englewood, N. J„ links, where he played a foursome,;.with; Jessex. GuiU-ord, ^Oswald,.Kirkby and John Anderson.

His latest photo shdVrs liim in uniform, 'as he appeared at Englewood with Anderson- . \ - - *;.• , •%/ • •...-..1 .-. .i. ,v Vj-. iv -. . V-.„, -x'v- .. m . - . 1

All Stdf Teams Tivo\Cqmps Playing

Oma-Ha, Neb.* Dec. All-Star' foiStftair teams, picksd from college _§levens of last xear, representing the soldiera .in training at Camps Pun-Ston and Dodgo, met on CreightoA "flMd today 'In what' is expecfed'to be the greatest game ever wKnessed in Omaha" and before the largest crowd gathered .for a gridiron b&ttl^ here. .

v. The p^oceefe are to b%, divided between,,fh« athletic funds 4>f-„th^' two c & m p s . v T l j f e t e n t a t i v e l i n e u p f f e j l o w s r ' - . ; . ) .

Position. • L. I?T>,

Camp -Dod{

• ' ' « »yL. T . .VivL. 'rt J r-y. C -f'-

.... R; G. ....: R » T . . . ' \

.. .f.QVB. /-?•?•. .<• ..^.KHB.

V 'dgp—

. Carberry, Ames . . . . .Mayer, Minnesota • Malianah

.. . Cook, vytscon8in . Allunsoh Robertson, Dartmouth

. . Allison, Carletbn^ .' .:" Derr, PennsylvtiHla .. .-•.. ' Jones; Wisconsin

. Moss. Ames

Camp -iFunstori—• Be^ry, - Washington ... Rowley, West .Point. ., Withtngton, Harvard V'.. Hammond, Kansas' .. .. Schwelger, Colorado U

..Carlisle ;... ..,..... •. Fletcher . ..'I4,...... j. Fast {..: V.. .tv . .;.. Beck,-' Nebraska .

_ Clapk. Illinoisx«. ;((<.•'»• n. ..... " Prince, Hastings ......... ,-t. .'.. .F, B...... \ . McCormicto, South Dakota

Mayer, who is playing legf'tackle on the Cs.mp Dodge eleven, is . Frank Mayer, son of Theodore Mayer of East Grand. "Forks. This man ^as one of the"-stars on- the Minnesota.-team of ja-it yeur and it iB expected that he^will show some of his good work t|J>W afternoon. J

GOODWIN, COMING * I Goodwin ^joined - the Pclub last July. VftflNr PITrUPD H " He was purchased fronv'the Milwau-1 UVflU r41UIuA^ la , i koe elkb of the ^merics^n assocfatlon

> r v IN SIGNAL CORPS ^for 115,000 in bash /and playe^. '-'.s '

'' i)TiiR GAME FOR : EAST GRAND FORKS

1 Hundreds of resLdenrt were in on the great secret; buj^hat secret was kept;

I While the nation slept, thousands of j rainbows embarked on their trans­ports. £'•! •' v4

Toward Vhe^(aiter part of that I week--the entraining-time was chang-, ed to a daylight Jiour, and tbe khaki ' clad hosts marched quite openly.

"Who are you?" the crowd would I shout as a ' new body of stalwart

' | young Americarigtswung in sight, and • . , , - V \ pback weuld come the answer:

m m i f - \ • - j ; ' j r , j " I O - W A Y , " o r " N e w Y o r k , " o r t h i s Class Teams*Organized juid is the old «»th." , - v

•v "«• T?„„ JTT r__ • , Farewell balls, parties and dinners . Keaay tor oeason S I by the- hundred were staged at (Hempstead, Miheola and. nearby vil-

'.-•7 • '• W«mes. . . t». , ; ; lages for the departing fighting men. •\ . I ., >-i 'Three hour leaves were granted

• \ ' " ' | many sh«tly before time to hike. Jtli prictfce ^ill be jSS

. -rnopn at the university; after I lfw— ' wJ?. . j K

the u'elay caused by the gymnasium being c.osed. Thls afternoon the candidates for the university team will report.to:. Co^ich -Oill.—{ - j j..

•This is. the:, first^formal call, issued by i Coach CFill.' an dp- all- men who ape candidates >tor th£ uhiversity team wyi be 'pi;esent.,;- Saturday lis the day allotted' for general .practice for| 9.U men .regardless - t^eir class, r and many men are' expected ..out.

ISym In Shape. -. The •gjm/wiil .be. Iff sjiape„ today,. however,, and, practice will be resumed once more.' ! Only- a'short time re-

-njains in whiclv the class teams? will .be -able ioV gut into sh^pp before the beginning .'of- the 'sferi'es. Th6 games ftart on the evening of December 8. This leaves- cmly a week in which to practice. "- Beginning with, today, the :comiiig.. 5»eek will see the hardest work" oi the season thus far, as every inlmite. is essential to the men lor they.-are not in the* best of ,condition,

I. R. CORPS

Ba .<®ll practice ifrill be riisume<i! this ftiternopn at the university afttr! ftweieShote Sll" nt the uelay caused bv the evmnasium inflow'b^rcau"^ tmt^ce "sound!

ed the signal for ending mosMof the balls as they command .was. pawed for the units to fall'in and get-ready to' start. •'t There were stirring scenes, at the entraining:: points when cheering crowds thronged about the men, toBsfyig '• theni cigarets and ' other presents, shouting and laughing, with some women quietly weeping. Troop train after troqpVtrain rattled away for $be embarking point, with soldiers waving from tlfis windows.

Some of Best Sons Become -(^fficers in Uncle Sam's'

Vast Army.

LANCASHIRE COTTON INDUSTRY AGAIN IS KNO^PGPROSPERITY

Manchester, England, Dec. 1.—The I>ancashire;J (Cotton 'industry again - is

0wlig to Ui'e last .s^xt and' the delay waT^i^dmcu®^ T^p Cobtorf Co^ causeij the closing of . the gymna- 1 ».«i —j ^ . siumw

The classes have"!be&n Tally organ­ized and everyone knoys the ex;act ijondition'of things, so the ,inen will be working on' a. inor^ definite basis

trot , Board, ~pa.yd- the" Manchester .Guardian, seems to 1 have steered the industry safely through.^Tcrisie unpre­cedented in its l*Wkry.v Three month's ago the. eo.tton millsl of Lftncashire »e worKing on a. more aennite oasis whinh " , i

and J1 er Its^'W01 be'- jtCcomplisti^- Anierioan Sottiottj^w th. ed. All 01 the classes seem to have

. . ; 8t. 'E.ouis, MO;;- ' Dec. > 1.—MarvinS

Goodwin, the brilliant young rigltt j hand pitcher of thto - St. Iiouis Na-

a "health pf inaterial apd it would be ^difflbult to' predict Whi<*' aggregation Would -place tha fastest-'team in the field. ' The; juniors ' and-' seniors are a little ;shy" on thd number of candt-dates out, but all .the" men trying for the places on the teams are exper­ienced. havipg playad in t^e Campus

tidnals. ha».( Joined2the^^ ^atlon^ ^ tion^of the tJnited States isighal corpsjk ^ *- ' ..

• - a3c : One more ganje has been added to e peason's Schedule for the

IW

American cottoa! saw the stocks of cotton dwindling,; on til at last the sup­ply, was estimated'to be sufficient only ti> keep tihe mills xtctive for a few weeks. The regulations of the Control Board* materially have improved the

•situation and it is asserted that if the 'existing stock could be maintained there would be'no ifeed^pf anxiety for t'he future of the industry.

Fort Shelling, Dec. 1.—-The north­west has made another splendid con­tribution to the officering machine of the nation's army. f ,

Nine hundred and' seventy-one •<>f i£s finest manhood, high in spirits-and parting with the enthusiastic predic­tion that they would soon meet again in France, graduated from the Fort Snelling second 'reserve officers' train­ing camp Tuesday. More than 1,500

flow are in actual service. '' These northwest men . have-gone forth, how to p)ace all the^ power that three: months'. military training has -given, them behind the nations' w&r machine to crush kaiserism speedily and permanently.

For them the sham battle is past. No longfer improvised

Ohe day they were dlsgtng trenebea. another/ they -were making maps aad another , learning the Bngliah and ' French manuals of the bayonet. All < of this work was interspersed with the regular infantry and artillery drill and work-In the school of the soldier."

Captain Paul Cheffaud, a regular French army officer, who has cone over the top in the face of Are from German guns was on the Job during the three month#, of training teaching the students that the 'loss of a second in this vital phase of present day war­fare might mean disaster.

Problems in defense 'and attack were solyed to the northwest men by him.

Huddled against the cold clay, of the trenches \under a harvest moon, the 971 officers spent three nights in the trenches dpringythe Jast week of training, preparing for the nights won to come when the Boches would *en-deavor to storm their sectors in the darkness along the western front

One of the innovations of the sec-"" ond camp and one - which attracted mucn Interest both among the stu­dents and the general public of the twin cities was the physical and bay. onet drills under the instruction of

r~". '' £

of its men from the first training camtN Major Hermann F. Koehler of West M MJk nAWVriAA * A f Q ARA ' A# ^ A 1. _ Point and one of the three men who ti&mptled the manual of physical training for fhe. United states army. -»

Major A. M. Ferguson, senior in­structor, and Captain Ira Longaneck-er. camp adjutant, are confident thkt the men who left the Fort, SnelUffir

— r camp are capable of carrying out the will they charge out of ] tasks which remain before them, trenches and across "No | Garbed in their leather puttees and

g-J

Man's Land" in the face of camou-, commissioned officers' -insignia the " " *^u~" "• *• ^ """ '971 men were sworn into -duty Tues­

day. After receiving their pay checks and travel orders they made a rush for the railway stations to spend a few days at home before departing to the cantonments and regular army camps to which they were assigned.

The age .limits of the men in the secogjl, camp were higher than in the first: Although many of the men lost

flage fire. They may teach recruits in those arts but for the officers onfy the real charges- across European battle-flelds in the face of enemy gun fire remain. •

. The men who made their way across a snow-coated reservation at tKe close of the cimp Tuesday were happ^v They had-won commissions.

Three months ago they came from off the wind swept prairie of the Da-kotas the hills of Minnesota and "the I °U* du^ir,,s intervals at the camp, it Kouis,. ine niiis. oi Minnesota ana the i WM not |jecause of a la/,k o{

, But the conoA potion does not re-.'iU freshmen 'I?aln 8taW«- Cotton shipments during - The '• sqphomoretgsv«^t treanmep Daet two mtfntha hftv„ hPBn

make up. in 'numberav . they. lac|c in* collegiate experjence, thg freshmen in' par'ttcular ha,Vlnt lai*es etiuadi out. >A1F of thfie^me-h -hat«o*iad pre-

East' vious hign school experience and are

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I: "f V-Mi

I «eKritr..-Fo'rkS; high; scho'bl' basketball adapting; themselves readily to the teani. \.'Ar- gamo has been. ,ari«.nged iopllwRlate style ~pf«play. From^all re-w4tM .the , model high school "team of ; the team wilUm eq^^y TOatcl)-' the university, and Will be-.played onied'and sonie royal battles .may M

(the^Tast Grand Forks floor December) pfected wheft the tea^ns tak% the fl.o^r 8. A»great deal of', rivalry exists be-I on December 8. , ' tween the.,two teamg a.nd the content promises'to be^One Of tile best on the sc'tefc'dule for the East slders-.— '/

ll ,

_ SoldierStofy;

,w®- #1 ;

years o#tHe Wel^ lUghthehorrors of ^Ypres, i^backfto tell

Fl)DI£BAlX CLAIMS TWELVE VICTIMS;

DURING

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^Chicago* Dec-.l^^ritbalC^ihe rotfgheSt 'Of Amieffoan outdoor s^«<lrts, exacted-n•"••jJi of twelve yictlmS dur­ing the seaaton, which ehded with Thanksgiving 8tfy gan)es,taccording to reports to .the Associated Prttes today. The, nun\t#er was six less- tnan t>l6 an^foiXr lesti. than two years ag%. In 1114-there w«ir« fifteen.<

• -?S; 5 --!• -J-

DETROIT FANS SEE " , QpOB GAME TODAY .

t 'v Detroit Mich., Dec. 1.—Thi fullUniversity of Detroit football teaifi

Ite power-

Natidnal MjicAr-

aft-ected

mp Uu re ttyf lis expe

andi ^the' eleven' from the Guard cantonment at': thiftv Waco, Tex . met , ernoon*4n a contest that to develop some brimant. ^ work. v Thi, teams are regarded as aboujt Sveniy matched in»evefy re-SpecL The' soldiery eleven, compos­ed chiefly > of formed MliJliigan and Wisconsin college; playrrs, has now been defeated* searibn. The sol-

th*

the past two months have been fairlv satisfactory ,but. each we«k,shows k decrease -ln ^he amount of tonnage and this 1* Upund to be reflected in the amount <^'"cotton reaching Liter-pool. S^or^these reasons the prospect of-a serious set. back is considered by •no m^ftjtis remote. Therefore the. trade cannot jook forward to freedom from gov^rfijnent contTol at the end of the WWnt i pnonth., , This was the period fixed by, the Control Board for the ex­piration of the.'plan to restrict the.out-pu.t In-order to"^Conserve the supply.

BRrfisH WORKMEN -> NOT TO LET U. S.

^V':. MEFT DIRECT THEM •> J . .pr

djers' shafe of-the receipts go to dunp athletio?. fund. y • '•

, . r*>ndon,.®ec. 1.'—"Brftish workman *?e n^fgcjng to submit to scientific «ridirofi' 'mans^ement impqrted from America * - + or elsewhere,".^declartd the Arch-bishqp Of : ' TEflf**,. in • *a democratic spMch on-th$ ..labor question- he *de-Uper^-the other; day in the House of Cords., "They'regard-it ;as 'Prussian--Izingyindustry a.. they win resist it." said the> AfChbishoP; lie deClare^ th^t.it.was surprising

M1NNES05AN, WITH CANADIANS, KlLLE#

lip*?••"IN*' "ttle unrest among ®Holh w#kip^n,v^n4 declared that their higher w |res had been more or

*i-. ...... y Tehchow, China, D«. ^l.—Cjhjni's .qranS^Qanal. ne^iejfted and allotfrM'-to! •ut upf JMargely respbn«ible,ior t^e prolonged fioo4 which has wrought so much ruin in/North China. A»: it now stands, the north section of the Grand Canal is merely-a-«atch-basin for thi floodwaters oft practical, ly all of ChitHi: Proyince^ aid delivers tmi.irswf into the Tientsin S area, when the Pelvrive^ is too small to carTy th4 juries to-the Aea. fe^WrtomoMdcnt of>The 4M

atad ^reea, who «o.mplet«d' C\0ur ,of p norther sectlb of ,ih» Qnuid: CiiiNil brokenkjni

plintiMi.; . bdth shores.' •The' thonsahda Of 4«rMi of lnundatedctfun try between Teh?how and .. TiejiMlh «onstltute a awries of lakes'jrhlcii are ^BUn^. iMiifc tiM

th«]ower ritachm otthe oahal.Moth

ArO~'vlrtually all. gone. Thr bUI inBut MMt otth»

f t w s a « i i | i : » >ty. .. y1 ; 5'; -,.J V

V^^AW»«lea'hM voted-ih salocma Y»Ut .btrtf! i&h»»ft hotels ,aitd :r«^u> :i>anU t«n«M*#-l i*ht wine»v and to d i n e r * . I t r e m a i n s t o - M ' i W j i . tips fii^uce v^lunif «lrv ii)i4r*.

Je& ,neut which fh« pjtohtec led

. . .,.. . . . higher prices . beli^ed^ to be due toj had- been har-Ottaw*& Ont.. Dec. 1.4^Phi?follow-/*'*J "•*'^''**•*4. he said, byHhe coiK!

'Kilted In action: J. Lurier:Brooki; MkiiiL..-: * •' • -V'' •• ' V-Mlhb: 'V

- •5:'.^

STTJITKIOSE. HIEPIM

aminatlon orders and'by the suspen sion> of tMtde union regulations. Yet . ;"Vast numbers «rr theia from over-crowded .houees?4n,' slums had cotne Jbrwtrd %jth. the .-greatest readiness W the jielpj of the-cotintry.

rolling prairies of Iowa and Nebraska to put forth all the ability they pos­sessed to become proficient enough to be recommended for a commission in Uncle Sam's reserve corps.

From the opening urftil the closiiv of the camp, - speed was the keynote of ajl the work. Lots to learn and only an alloted time to do it. Af times, dur­ing the training the acceleration be­came so great that many of the most intelligent men In the camp were forcied to throw iip the sponge and ad-mitt that they were too advanced in yearA to stay with "it." j)

gence but-of the abilitv to assimilate so much work "in the short period of three months.

OOMMAXDEEKEI) TEX RJEXiEASED

Washington,. Dec. 1.—Releas® of a I great amount of commandeered tin in' New York warehouses was promised today by the navy deparlpient on rep­resentations of the department of commerce' that private industries would ..be handicapped, seriously by lack. of.'.the metal, particularly food canning factories,

'V

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Sriix 1

KEEPING SOLDIERS STRONG Early in the world-war cod liver oil was selected

to fortify the 'he&lth of soktten against the rigors and ex­posure of camp life and. to help build up enduring strength.

IS THE ONE

that Actually guarantees the pure quality of Norwegian Cod Liver Oil which is refined in our own American laboratories.

It is skilfully emulsified to promote prompt assimUa-tio i which is always difficult with die raw oil

Scotfj JEmulsion is jamout for putting power in the blood to thwart colds, grippe, pneumonia and lung trouble. It is alcohol or opiates. ! SeottftBowacxUoMD^eld,N.J. 17^'

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Remembek*! tws {• -

THE LAST DAY U. & Aid

'k Toklov - D«:.' 1.—Kflto Chinese press to force the j that the United States parti the Chinese Cummfe loan

y|1thWpmi«i point* out that .£a|lte' idftft fUMd its Infi nee

to, pbtain'gmtjfca's participation In thixloan. ^^Iie "times also asserts "that invaMcatlona so far made by the lm-

of ttie ncVuaioh

patfpn in intend

ne»" in

winter

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» % 5^ v«cl no ground Ante

fro

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