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mmm lB H - THE OGPEN STANDARD-EXAMINER MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 20, 1922 1 I UTAH SPORTSMEN GOING ON RABBIT DRIVE NEXT SUNDAY L I FINAL HUNT OF I YEAR WILL BE I WEST OF ROZELj mml Special Train Arranged to Wm Leave Early in Morning Sportsmen of Ogden nnd Salt Iake will hold their third rabbit drive ot th present year near Rozel next Sun .lav. according to an announcement made today by Ernie Ford, chairman H, in charge of arrangements for the mm Weber County Fish and Game Fro- tectlve association. On the two driven held during the month of January, more lhan 20.000 rabbits were bagged and distributed to tho poor of Salt Lake and Ogden. Special rates will be obtained from the railroads for tho round trip and a crowd estimated at 2 30 from tho two cities will make the trip K.fforts wlil be made to secure a H price on shells from the sporting goodrf houses. The hunt was oriKln ally scheduled for the coming Wcd nesday but won changed to Sunday on ! the request of hundreds of sports-, C. H Christensen of Promontory j is completing the arratiRoments In i fl hat vicinity. In a communication to Mr. Ford, Mr. Chrtstensen says In J I "I have located counties?; thousands of rabbits In easy range for a hunt so please tell the sportsmen to conv well fortified with shells "We will meet tho train two ami j one-half miles west of Rozol with, plenty of bobs and horsemen. Th hunt will take place on the north od of Black mountain. "If I were to try to estimate the! number of rabbits in the colony I lo- ' c&ted I would place It at between I 30,000 and 40,000. Ix?t's hope that , there will be hunters enough to han dle them." The train which has been obtained for tho third hunt wil leave Salt Lake at 7 a. m. and will leave Ogden at I S a. m. Tho return trip will btln;;j the sportsmen back to Ogden in the early evening. All of the bunnies obtained by tho 'gdon hunters will be distributed lo the poor of the city on the return of the train. Bportsmn who intend to make the trip are urged lo get in immediate touch with Ernie Ford, or President j Arthur Larson of the Weber County) Fish and Gam.- Protective association. -(. . STRIKES I .and SPARES Bowlers of the Salt Lake Commer cial league osily defeati i a n i ... ,) team of ogden Bowlers on the alley."; of the Wasatch Athletic club Sui la the score being 2665 to 2 -ISO. The caores follow: salt lake 1 i 3 Total1 Evans 190 172 170 64 1 Ruseell 162 144 lf.3 460 1 AVax ...1 77 170 214 661 1 Salbv 150 160 171 490 Danley 191 293 200 604 TOTALS 8S8 840 018 2655 OGDEN 12 3 Tcjtal Parry ITS 149 157 481 Ikin 151 169 - 203 628 Hess 166 101 164 61" raven 136 200 165 501 Sarver 189 140 146 47G TOTALS 816 SASf 825 2490 I- no DENVER l !. IISTS. LOS ANGELES, Calif., Feb. 20. The low goal polo team of the Den-1 er Country club defeated the Mid week Country club team Sunday ten, to five, on the hatter's field at South1 Pasadena, near here. oo , ! H BIG NINE PROPOSED AS NEW CONFERENCE BROOKIXGS, S. D.. Feb. 17. For matlon of a new athletic Intercolkg j late conference In the middle west. H to be known as the "Big JTine," has been proposed by C. A. West, direc- tur of athletics at South Dakota State j college here. In letters to nine Institutions. Mr. j Hj West proposed a meeting to be held j In St. Paul, Minnesota, probably Keb- 1 B ruary 20 or 21. for the purpose m dji- H eu3sing u constitution for the confer- The schools invited to send reprc- ' '.?ntati. s I icii i.-.;:. Thomas of St. Paul, Creighton of Omaha. Marquette of Milwaukee. South Dakota State. South Dakota tin B iver.sity. North Dakota university, H North Dakota State and Mornlngalde Sioux City. ' Sevural of these Institutions have expressed a desire for a new confer ence." Mr. West said today. 1 Mans H of them have games scheduled with Ppi each other for the next football sea- PpB -on and have had many contests with HHB each other In tho past." In bis letter to the several schools. 1 Mr. West aks If each will uend a rcp- rosentatiee to the proposed meeting In mmm St. Paul. "I feel sure that if we can once get 1 'ogother that we can agree on details of the organization. It will facilitate :ho making of schedules and Increase the lnteroHt In athletics among atu dents and alumni. In short, it will do ft for us what tho Big Ten baa done for its member " H REGAIN HIS TITLE CADDOCK FAILS TO LmM Earl Caddock failed in his effort to come back. Wrestling fans the country over H, Oth whom Caddock la a great favor - ite. were disappointed at his failure to iaXe the title from Zbyezko. Caddock, tho former champion, af tr s year of Intenslre training and outdoor ILfe, r. .. all set to win the championship. ZbysskOi the old man of the wrestling game, proved too much for him. The rolling fall, only recently plae d la the wrestling code ot New York state, proved fatal to Caddock's B chsno BBl Zbysako won .the first and third BB' 'alls. Each irae & rolling fall The BBl sfteond fall was won by '"a'tdork B 'when be pinned the shoulders ot the champion to the mat with an arm B look and chancery. OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AKERN SO-TUtfT MATT !i hAfvDE. OfI TX NU W '-THEV-mPPEPVoU BEAVER SKIM, ErABOS? HTArAPS XMOW ?OUT f$iZFoR kTCUUCrLE i MEVER WEVJ BEAMESS I a5 ? TWS UELMET I GOT A BETTER ONJE CAVORTED CM BACK PEACES N 5Tv4' AWAMCE A6EKST TUAJ4 THAT AMD A MEAL AT MGUT- I'LL BETT4' r"UR B W EARLV EPRlKiG M BESIDES 50 -I OKI TUAT CAKlOPY VilLL STXKiD 4 STYLES IKA SKULL MtMATTqP 16 GOMMA V OVi EMP EVERY TltAE VvJALKfl VAOODS ! S yBE A TREAT PORTM' pVjp LISTER BUV5 ( KiEVJ " OOUTS I0MIGKT Les Davis Meets Kid Dutch in Main Event at Salt Lake I SLT LAKE. Feb. 2u. Lcs Davis of Ogden will meet Kiu Dtitcn of Salt lakc in the six-round main event at the Manhattan club here tonight. Davi.-; has been coming to the front fast dur ing the uast few months and has won all of his fights but one via the knock out route Ho Is regarded as one of the best middleweight in the west. Kid Dutch has battled tho best of them in this section Tommy farter of El Paso will meet Frankie Darren of Salt Lake in the SlX-round seml-mindup. Darren has been peine pre;it guns of late and Is the holder of the state welterweight I tltlo. Carter comes to Salt Iake with I a strinc of victories The third six-rounder will see Har ry Casey and Frankie Smithers in ac tion. In the principal four-round prellm I inary Sam Dattlmer will meet Joe Pearson of Richfield. These men are heavies. oo 1 4. MYERS WILL BOX DE SAYSO IN HEADLINER Ai'llTOX. Idaho, Feb. 20. Spug Myers. s nsatlonal Pocatello light weight boxer. Will met Dick De Sayso of Garfield, utalf, in the main OVent here Wednesday night The boxing curd has been arrang- ej 1 1'ionioter C E. Stoneclpher of Pocatello and will L' featured aft-r the close of the dog races i Meyers has comnletoly recovered from th f Jul recsfvod In his battle with Muff Bronson last week. Four speedy preliminaries are also included on the card. ! : oo GrOLFE$S TO HEAR BEajVIONS ey radio CHICAGO, Feb. 20. Siecial faclli-l ties to care for the spiritual welfare1 of church members who arc addict-1 i to playing coif Sunday mornings win be Installed by ilis Dlxmobr Golfi club, it was announf-ed. A wireless receiving station will be STected as soon as the links are open-' ed in the spring, it was said, so that member might be able to listen to their favorite pastor on Sunday morn-l Ings while enjoying a cigaret on the veranda. "Pastors are complaining that mem bers of their congregations prefer golf to church" said C . CJpham, presi dent of tho club. "We can't take the golfers to church, but we can. and will, take the church to golfers." oo CUBS LIMBERING ON CATALINA GROUNDS CHICAGO. Feb- 20. The Chicago Nationals, first National league club to reach tho training camp, will get Into action today on Catallna Island, according to dispatches published here. The Cubs arrived late Sunday and i found Grover Alexander, stur heaver, : In fine condition from hl winter I training. The first practice session fot I the pitrhcrs and catchers forming tho idvance squad will consist of only easy I overhand lobbing to get wlnterbounil muscles loosened. oo STAN ZBYSZKO TO 1 GIVE WLADEK TITLE j NEW YORK. Feb. 20 SUtmsbv-i I Zbyssko, world heavyweijcht wrestling champion, plans to retire undefeated In May and to place his title In the care j of his young brother. Wladek. The younger of the grappling Zbysrlco in to engago Joe Stecher, former champion, in a bout In Madison Stjuaro Garden tomorrow nlcht. If Wladek wins, his older brother will make immediate 1 plans for a rettreniont JACKSON MATCHED TO BATTLE WHITE I NEW YORK Fob. 20. Charlie White Chicago lightweight, and Willie Jackson, will meet In Milwaukee In a 15-round bout undr American lesion direction. Jackson am' the left-hooking Chlca goan aspire to the lightweight titlo held bv Benny Leonard Benny is un der contract to meet the winner in a 'championship bout. I Wblti floored Leonard during a bout In Benton Harbor, Mich, in 19"0 but Benny, tired of being teased with Charlie's left, camo back and sent ('harles away for the count in the : ninth round. JONES WILL MEET EASTERN MAT STAR PROVO, Feb. 20. Henry Jones of Provo will meet Bobby Roscoe of Kansas City in the best two In three fall wrestling match tonight for the 'welterweight championship of tho FOUR BURIED I BY SNOWSLiE DENVER. Colo.. Feb. 20 Four em- ployes of the ticnvcr and Salt Lake railroad wore killed when a snowslido struck an engine belonging to that road near Loop. Colo., early Sunday niornln;?. The men were swept down a canyon 700 feet deep Their bodies have not yet been recovered Those killed were Paul Paulson of Denver, assistant roadmaster of the railroad. William Mongarvis. a section laborer and George Karnabas, a sec tion laborer. A. S. Cane and Thomas Conway, en pinker '.nd fireman respectively of thf engine, escaped without serious injur ies and were taken to their homes in Tabernash. Attending physicians said they would recover. The entfiri"- had helped an castbound train over the continental divide and had just started bafk to Tabernash. Kirht miles west of Corona. Colo., tho station on the continental divide, the engine ran out of water as u result of the hard work of bucking snow that had been Piled on the tracks by prev ious slides. The engine waa stopped and tW four men who later were kill ed ot but to shovel snow Into the tank ; Tho engineer and fireman got Inside j the tank to distribute the snow and it was to this that railroad officials at tribute their escape. The slidr swept tho engine from the tracks and into the canyon Tho en 1 ginc turned over twice on the way i down, hut tlm men inside were protect ed by the walla of the tank- Officials here said that it was prob 1 able neither the bodies nor the en gine could be recovered before spring The road is commonly called the Mof-, I fat. oo DONNER SURVIVOR SUCCUMBS ON COAST ; LOS ANGELES. Feb. 20. Mrs. I Eliza P. Donncr Houghton, one of. j the last survivors of tho Donner par- j ty, many of whose members starved i to death while on the way acrons th ' j plains to California 75 years ago, died at -her homo here Sunday, aged 7 years. Mrs. Houghton was the daughter of Captain George Donner. oo INEBRIATES' HOME STILL WELL FILLED BOSTON. Mass.. Feb 20 The opin ion that iff time "prohibition will bo an accomplished fact" in expressed by Dr. Hugh B. Gray, superintendent of tho Washlngtonian Home for In ebriates In his annual report made I public Sunday. In 1921. however, the report say, the number of admissions to the homo, one of the oldest of Its kind In the country, was 694 as agiilnst 410 In 1920, 663 lu 1319 and 73S In 1918. oo CONGRESS OPKNS CHICAGO. H"eb. 20. Delegates from I many fraternal organizations were hero today for the annual convention of the National Fraternal Congress of Ameri ca. Thr oonvor.tloo will end Wln--day. west." In a recent match between these two men Jones was injured and was unable to return to the mat, Ros coe winning tho match. Jones has been training faithfully of late under the direction of Gcorge Bariies, middleweight wrestler, and states that he is in the best of con dition oo WESTEN LEAGUE IN SPRING MEETING ST. JOSEPH, Mo.. Feb. 20 Adop tion of a Dlavinc schedule for 1922. was the prlnclDal business to come be fore a meeting of representatives of the baseball clubs of the Western lea gue here today. Magnates said before the meeting, however, that several other questions. Including the draft and the possible transfer of the Joplin (franchise to some other city, were to be discussed. Seven clubs had representatives here in a formal preliminary discussion. It was decided to olav lfix games at the meeting held In Chicago last December. BLIND READ BY RAYS OF LIGHT NEW YORK. Feb. 2 0 Rays of light converted Into harmonious musical sounds were demonstrated Sunday to be a medium by which totally blind persons may read newspapers, mag azines and books. Describing the test, which took placo in Jersey City, the New York World declared that Margaret Hogan, a blind girl, read tho front page of a New York newspaper by means of "opto- phone. :' th. Invention of Prof. E. B. Fournier DAlba former instructor of physics at the University of Birming ham, England. Ten years have elapsed since Prof. j D Albo first sought his optophonotic i idea before the Loudon optical convention- It was announced today that Miss Hogan had proved tho practic ability of his machine. The opportunity to phone projects light by means of a tiny photographic Irnr, through flvo rows of oblong per forations In a revolving disc and re flects It back to bo transformed Into sound by selenium colls. These raye of light, to the unlechnlcal observer, appear as tho five parallel bars of a mu.slcal staff. Producing as they play I over each letter, five notes of tho mujd cal scale si, sol. do. re. mi. and soil again on a higher key. So dellcato Is tho registration made that even the smallest of type can bo read. Explaining h" impressions of the, optophone. Miss Hogan said that whn shi- first listened to the sounds she thought them beautiful but could not interpret them and became discourag ed. Finally she said, she realized she was distinguishing the sound charac-. terizing thu letter "a" every time she, heard It. Then" she continued, "I began to! distinguish other sounds and soon tried to read a paragraph. I wrote on my Braille typewriter as I listened and learned when some one compared with mo that I had made several mistakes, but had recorded the full sense of the sentence. "Soon I could take fifteen words a minute. "I believe that any one could be taught to use the optophone. It is a God send for the sightless." 1 oo 'THE DEMI VIRGIN' TO BE UNMOLESTED NEW YORK, Feb. 20 An InJuncUor e;,ti-ainlnr License Commissioner Gil christ from interfering with the per formances of "The Deml-Vlrgln" at a local theatre was granted today by the i ipplate division of the supreme court to Al Woods, producer. Tho decision reversod one bv tho special term of I the suDreme court. u no I 83,000,000 CONCERN OF ST. LOUIS FAILS ST. LOUTS. Mo. Feb. SO. An In voluntary petition in bankruptcy to day was filed In federal court against the Best Clymer Manufacturing com ipany. a $3,000,000 corporation and n hubsidlary of the Tsmplsr Corn and (Fruit Products company, a recelTST I for which was appointed Saturday. YANK ATHLETES LEADING WORLD U. S. Holds Most Track and Field Records; Great Britain Second NEW YORK, F-b. 20. (By the As sociated Press.) Athletes for tho L'nitod state" hVd th world as hold ers of track and field records. An analysis of tbe latest list of world's records, accepted by the International Aniatonr Athletic federations, shows that out of some 00 odd standard events, tho best time or distance hai been made by American athetcs in 3 7 contests. This number, a trifle more than one-third of the entiro list of accepted records, Is also greater than the combined total of any two other nations. LAI R WALKING I I INT6 America's nearest competitor to the honor of leading the world in tho matter of record holder, is Great Britain, whose athletes have marked ehs best time or distance in 2S events. Denmark and Finland arc third with seven records each. No other na tion approaches the Versatility of tllfl American athlete for the United States performers have established In nix out of seven groups of competi tion Into which world's records events naturally divide themselves This country is without a record holder in the walking events. In which Great Britain and Finland hold all the records America is tied with Great Britain In the running records, each nation haing 13 to Its credit. The 1'nitod States holders ar cr.n tlnedMo the sprints and shorter dis tance runs. (Jreat Britain's stars hold a majority of the long distance records. UPPEAR IN AJ.M Those records as published in the Official Athletic Almanac, wore adopted at the conference of the L A. A. C. last May. Since that meet ing several American and foreign j athletes have bettered records now . listed but these cannot be officially considered world's records until ac I ceptcd by the I. A. A. C, which ac : i eptance may be delayed another six I months or a year. Such an example Id that of tho running broad Jump credited to P. O'Connor of Ireland. I with a leap of 24 feet 4 inches, made ! In JltOl. Thlr rei ord v :j - surpassed last July when E. C Gourdln of '. Harvard Jumped 2 6 feet three inches In the dual meet between Oxford Cambrldgo vs. Yale-Harvard at Cam- liriileo. Taking the records as they appear tin the latest official list, however, It is shown that the American athlete j is hotter in more events in the rec ord list lhan any one other nation-1 allty. Every record from 100 yards to a mile Is held by a United States athlete: from two to 25 miles Eng lish runners hold sway, although most of these times were made in the early i I nineties. In metric running records Finland, Sweden and Franco hold ill but the sprints, which go to Amorl I can athletes. Walking records are ' bed by pedestrians of Creat Britain. Canada and Denmark. CAN i GETS HURDLES ; Substituting Gourdln's new record in place of O'Connor's, all the Jump- EGYPTIANS ATTACK ENGLISHMEN DAILY LONDON", Feb. 20. A dispatch to the London Times from Cairo says a series of attacks on Englishmen dur lng the last week appears to confirm statements recently attributed to lrre j sponsible Egyptian circles that an I Englishman would be shot dally until jtbe return of Said Zagloul Pasha, for mer minister of Justice, who sometime ago was arrested by British authorl lies i The dispatch adds that there ap pears to bo no doubt these attacks are directed against Englishmen irrespec tive of their position or character. oo PERU SELECTING ARBITRATION PAIR LIMA, Peru, Feb. 20 Dr. Herman Velarde. Peruvian minister to Argen tlna. Is prominently mentioned In well informed circles as the leading mem ber of Peru's delegation to be sent to Washington to carry on negotia tions there relative to the controversy with Chile. Dr. Mellton Porras, ex minister of foreign affairs, is expected to be tho other delegate COMING WEST FOR ROBBERY SUSPECT DETROIT. Feb 20. Joseph A. Raima, head of tho Detroit division of the United States department of Justice, announced Sunday he would leave ror Los Angeles early thl? week to attempt to identify a mxin held them as Eddlo O'Brien, wanted in connection with the $1,000,000 Toledo postofflce robbery If the man under arrest Is identi fied as O'Brien, ho will be brought to Toledo by Pal ma. who was assigned to leadership in the hunt for those Involved in tho robbery- LANDIS QUITS JOB WITHOUT CEREMONY WASHINGTON. Feb 20. Th rvslg ' nation of Federal Judge Landis. an nounced Saturday In Chicago, was re Icelvod today at the White House. It Iwai written In Judge Landis' own ! handwriting, was dated Chicago. Feo. I 18. and read as follows "Dear Mr President: "I reelKn as district Judge for the '.northern district of Illinois, effecltve March 1. 1922. "Very respectfully. "KENESAW MOUNTAIN LANDIS-" Tho letter was addressed "imply to ' "The President, Washington,, D. C." BOWLING TOURNEY WILL CLOSE TODAY ST. PAUL. Mtnn-. Feb 20. The annual tournament of the International Ibowlin - ansocl&tlon which began hero I on February 10. will conclude late , today. The A H. Arnold brothers team of Chicago won tho five man champion ship with a new L B. A. record of 3.062. First prize was $325 and five i ifold medals. I The singles and doubles events will b' flnlnhed this afternoon. TRAP SHARKS PERFORM WELL Fowler and Jones Turn in ; High Scores at Salt Lake Shoot i Special Dispatch) SALT LAKE. Feb. 20. A. H Jones! and W P Fowler were high guns at the weekly shoot of the Salt LtM Gun club here Sunday. Each shattered 49 1 out of a possible 50 birds. Tho veteran Jack Sharp busted 48 ' lout of 60 Tho rest of the shooters! 'were bunched at from 32 to 44 points.; The next shoot will be held next Wednesday and shooters from other: parts of the state have been Invited to I attend. The scores follow: Sh.-t Broke, at A. H. Jones 49 .in XV. P. Fowler 4 50 J. N. Sharp . . 48 r,u J M Anderson 44 60 j Bert Bailey 44 60 1 I W E. Anderson 4 3 60 R, T. Barnev 4 8 r.u 1 . R. A. Wilson 13 50 1 G H Johnston 4.' i, J. C. Jarrett .40 50i 3. Rite 3'i '50 Challenge medal shoot: Shot I Broke, at 'Fowler 26 25 j Jones 24 26 ! Sharp ' , 24 2 I Bailey 22 G l Barnev 22 L'.. jj. M Anderson 21 2ti Johnston 20 25 ! Wilson 2" 25 ! CRUCIAL PLAY IN CUE TOURNAMENT PHILADELPHIA. Feb iO. Either i Edouard Roitndil ( France or Percy N 'oil ins, ("hicaco. will be eliminated i ! today as a contender In the champion ship honors In tho 18 2 balk line aina ' teur billiard tournament. They op-' j pose each other this afternoon. Each lias won two crames and lost one and I the losei of today's match will be out j of i he running so far as th- title Is j concerned. oo REG n i PEOR V ST. LOUIS. Mo., Feb. 20. The cen- ; tral states rowing association met here today and awarded the annual regatta of the association to Peoria. Illinois, with the date not determined. The event will be held in connection I with a week of water sports fin the Peoria lake. inp records are In the hands of Am erloan athletes and the same Is true of the weight events. Finland, Swc- 1 dsn and the United Stntes divide hon ors in the discus and Javelin compe titions. Canada gets two hurdle rec ords, as E. J. Thomson of Dartmouth college, was born fcrOSS the border. All others are held by United States hurdlers Of the 10 relay records eiht are held by American teams; one by a Creat Britain ciuartet and the other by a Swedish combination. PACTS ASSURED, ; OWENS ASSERTS PARIS. Feh 20. (By tho Associat I ed Press ) "in my opinion I am cor jtaln the senate will ratify, virtually un animously, the treaties and conventions slKned at the recent Washington con ference." said United States Senator! Owen Of Oklahoma, replying tb quer ies rnndc by the Journal Des Debates) find published Sunday, Concerning the' allied war doMs to the United States government. Senator Owen Is quoted! as saying: "I think that America will postpon from 30 to 50 years tho debts upon which European debts will become, due, fixing the rate of Interest at tr ree per cenL "American? already are too heavily j taxed ever to agreo with any member j of congress who should favor a can cellation of the foreign debt." Senator Owen Is in Europe to study, j on the ground, whether a federal re-' servo loan measure of $3,600,000,000 which the senator proposed to the! senate January 4, la feasnble. I BENCH OBJECTION PARIS. Feb. 20. Agrcemn'i reached by the Washington conference! are attacked by Lieutenant C"olonM Re boot In an article published In opinion! an important weiklv publication con-j ducted by Under Secretary of State Colrat. While he concluded his ar ticle by saying: "Let us not ratify the I Washington treat los. ' the writer de-' clares he doe.s not wish the conventions1 I definitely reiecfed. He would have I them serve as a basis for fresh ne I gotlatlon Colonel Rehoul points out that the Versailles treaty left Germany with a1 fleet that cannot be ncgleated. andl that the Germans might be able to carry on argreLsive warfare along the! Rhine. He assert that French troop! coming from Africa might he delayed through an If al!an-SDnIh agreement. Colonel Reboul axprefsej r?gret over the "unreasonable" French demands EIGHT GAMES I ON HOOP CARD I Executive Committee For mulates Plans for Stag ing of State Tourney ' 'mm Eight games will be played on th opening day of the stato interschoi- mm astlc basketball tournament at Salt Lake. March 1. according to Inform i- mm Hon received hero today from Secre- mmm tary C. Oren Wilson . of the Utah High School Athletic association. All mm will be played at the Deserct gyrnn Mmm slum. The first game Is to com- mm mem at U:30 o'clock with the other- mmm following every hour on the half mmm v I Three gymnasiums were used on mm I a hardship on some uf tho teams as t the lighting systems affected thsli playing. By playing all of the games gymnasium floor a! i Wr tho teams Should have an equal W The seat sale for the tournament v ill begin tdda al the Dsserel gym- a continue throughoul the jl A4M r.ms who Intend to attend the I rB rim jtmM md 6 p C Oror 5VU n f I secretary-treasurer ot the state rsmo- ' The prices as announced by Mr. Wilson last evening are as follows: Students' notirescrved tickets good for hi tournament games. $1.50; general Hfl admission nonroserved tickets for all tournamenl game?. $2.50; single night nonit f r ed tickets, 50 cents; H single night nlnreservcd tickets, low r HH floor, SI. and single night reserved tickets, lower floor. $1.25. WLU Mr. Wilson reports numerous In (luiries from out-of-town fans about mM reservations. Indications are that there will be LhI more good basketball displayed In H the tournament this year, which will Vam continue over four days March 1. 2. H i befi r . i . 1 remembered thai the annual meet H last season had been the best Up to .jkm that time, and what with the stand- tion of pla ng, the k sixteen teams which will participate in the meet next month will 1 eyen IB more evenly matched than the w re III then. LANDIS WILL HELP STRENGTHEN LEGION 4M CHICAQO. Feb. 20. Judge K. M. Iandls. who has announced bin reslg- H nation from the federal bunch, Sun- H daj told of his plans to devote more H time to the American legion besides his IH duties us supreme dictator of organlz- H ed basotiall. H "The Ami egion is the gr est insurance policy this nation has." he said. "It is our standing guaranty of peace and liberty. I am deeply de voted to the leKlon and shall help In whatever way I can." he said. Il Judce Iwindis said that one of the LbLbb1 first thincs he will do when hn leaves llie Will I s h around the ball training camps in sT the south to ascertain 11 promising rookies have not been given a fair show, as some. of them claim. v ITALIAN HOUSE BLOW TO BITS NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J.. Feb. 20. Vllifl A frame house In the Italian Quarter Ksbbb1 In Highland Park was blown to pieces KsbH today and two others, nearby, vera ll badly wrecked by an explosion which HH the police believe wan caused by a bomb. No one was injured, first re H ' sW Ralph Woenough it, 'he onl; oo jmm rupant of the wrecked house, was ar rested. p?ndlne an investigation. PROS OPEN 36 HOLE MATCH AT HOUSTON HOUSTON, Tex. Feb. 20. Twen- B ty-elght professional golfers, headed B by Jock Hutchison. British open champion, and Jim Barnes. Ainerl- H can open champion, began a 3G-hoIe mulch here this morning for , isll prizes aggregating $1550. Leo Di gel of New Orleans Gene Sarazen. Boh H McDonald, Pete and Pat O Hara. Pat Doyle and a number of other leading H pros, ar- playing. The course is in Vl FEATHERWEIGHTS IN IOWA MAT CONTEST jl CLINTON. Iowa. Feb. 20. William Hurley of this city will meet Jack Finn LSVAVl claimant the . fc.ithtTwelght wrestling champion- ship tomorrow night in a decision LvSSSj match. They will weigh in at 126 mmm mmmy at Washington', and refers to the ' rid Iculous claims" which seemed to (,.. . a desire on the part of France to coin- mmmm pete in a navy wav with Great Britain. BbBBbV THE NUT BROTHERS (CHES AND WAL) I ( I WAS KJ RACE T (LiMK---rg"rTAjAl 1 I VMERE MY TfeE"E Rfrrt , NECK AkD NECK VJlTWl rXMCTWER MORSE TD "3 lJTVJE RMlSU - J .,ii.:.jL of- mm,: