Article clipped from The Montana Standard

oi common picas irom naroin i. n (Roakc* Carter, newspaper columnist, and radio commentator. The grounds were not revealed. They hav* two children.“C. F Kelley,Chairman of the Board.I*Anaconda Copper Mining Company.»Orediggers Will Face Saintsfor Conference Crown inHomecoming Grid Game TodayAlumni of School of Mines Will GatherTonight at Banquet in Finlen Hotel toHonor Veteran Coach Charles McAuliffeThe only American passengers were three photographers, Neil Sullivan, Pathe News; Lawrence Ken-nedy, Mox Movietone, and Walter Lane. Life magazineSullivan said Ameriran censorship made it almost impossible to send news from Iceland, and he described American censorship as far more severe than British censorship.The American officers aren’t worried as much about keeping information from the enemy as they I are about furnishing fuel for isola-I tionists like Senator Wheeler, he j said.He said survivors from torpedoed *hlp* were arriving in Iceland, butreporters were unable to send news of the mishapsThp first annual homecoming celebration of Montana School of Mines alumni will be held today with a banquet following what promises to be one of the most wide-open and bfest played football games of the always heavy local season, in which the Miners play the Carroll College Saints from Helena for the championship of Montana's collegeconference. i ......ALCOHOLIC WANTEDCLEVELAND Nov 7 OP Only drinking men raced apply for this lob, A want ad appearing here Friday seeks. “Alcoholic, who is a salesman of ability, to sell an effective home treatment of alcoholics;we will treat you to your satisfaction first,”BERLTN Nov. 7 hV- Bombers and artillery hammered Sevastopol’s approaches Friday night, but military quarters reported a bristling Red mountain defense throughout the Crimea and a Herman standstill before Moscow,The high command announced German and Rumanian gains in the Yaila mountains “despite impassable mountain terrain and the stubbornly fighting rear guards’’ of the Soviets and aid German dive-bombers ‘‘crushed enemy positions in the Sevastopol forties area and silenced several batteries ”Buf there was no bin' as to how near the Hermans were to the big Soviet naval base in the southwestor to Kerrh the eastern bridgehead to the CaucasusReferring to the Morrow frontwhich he said war bogged down by bad weather, the military spokesman said:“It is unnere- arv to undertakeanything under such circumstancesand we a rent doing it, A little more frost soon and the going will be passer for motori/.f d equipmentti* K* * » mu ii n t mp *u |JJ i’ * i /ill*rinnati and Cleveland, O , Newark. N, J , New' York city, Philadelphia, 8t. Louis Ban Francisco. Chicago i and 20 adjoining suburban cities of essential transportation service,'’!The President acted under an-t.hority of the railway labor act and appointed a three-member board toinvestigate the dispute and reportits findings within 30 days from Friday.The President also sent a telegram to Daniel J, Tobin, president(Continued on Page 10, Col. ft)■*»!*i WWW*! mm ■lt; iwni ju i vrm it i nrti t \s r**Hiillf Purfl* t InfillV *.* f iirila farid Sunday; warmer Saturdaynisrh*Montana of £nnitn€ntnldivide partly fintidf Saturday and Sunday, not much rhanf*in temperature. \\r*t of divide partly cloudy Saturday, he coming colder Sunday with light rain*, north beginning late Saturday, not much change in temper attire.• • v ■Saints and Orediggers. evenly matched and both pointed for supreme efforts of the year, tangle in their historic feud rivial at the Butte high stadium, the openingwhistle to be sounded promptly at 2 p. m.MontanaPlaying for Stale Conference’/rid Title Here today* «The Homecoming BanquetFor the old grads, coming back to one of the world's most famous. -r-’—i': .....mining colleges from all parts of' Montana and other Northwestern j states, a first annual banquet has been arranged by August Grunert, chairman of the general committee on arrangements. This feature of the observance is scheduled for 7 O'clock, with Joseph P. Roy of Helena assistant superintendent of the American Smelting and Refining company, presiding as toastmaster Plans have all been completed for the affair, he said, and a large attendance is expected. The homecoming is being held in connection with the football game between the Mines and Carroll col-in ‘he aPernoon at the Butte high school stadium. The banquet at the Finlen will be in honor of Charles McAuliffe, coach of theteam and a former athlete at the jschool.The principal speaker will be Frank Curran, city engineer. Other speakers will include Dr. Francis A Thomson president of the school, and Dr A. E, Adami, vicepresident.Reservations for th» dmn»' ha* eTHESE OREDIGGERS TO BATTLE UNDEFEATED CARROLL COLLEGE SAINTS FROM HELENASwanson, JamesOrediggers playing Carroll Coliege Saints for the Montana college conference foctbail championship at the Butte high stadium this afternoon are shown above, From left to right they are:Front row * sitting * —George Jackson. Roy Sand vug Glen Shean, Lorimer Hoar Lynn Wilson Walter McAuliffe Henry Roletto, RaipnSwartz Don BeraGambill, Torn Wilson. Clarence Swanson, James Archibald. Clinton Miller, Earl Rouen.s., Iom •.i• elt;1 Joe 1 noma,Rear row (standing* Assistant Coach Ray Gallant, Dee Morns, Robert Leahy, Richard Dunn, Vernon Koeizer, Heinz Apostle Jim Hoar John McClellan, Alex Zbi’n At and Coach Chari*-1 Mr A iliffe. Mis*mg because of injuries when the n/* ue was taken, wereCounter-AttacksOffensive Intendedto ReopenCommunicationsI/VNfrON. Nov. 7 div GeneralSoviet ;lt; t (;ick:- above Mo vow whichappeared to be reaching the powerof a .sustained roun ter-offensiveintended to reopen Mwrow-Lenin-gr»d communications were reporter Friday night by Informed personhere.Germanforward position30-mile-derp zone extendin; the area of Volokolamsk, fijnorthwest ofIn afromMow ownines to Kalininfarther northwere under violentassault by mobile Red forces which In 'ome area- appeared to driven the Invaders back lt;mile*,fi £1 t t-f*2.SJX mWRailroad KrcsptorrdAbout Kalinin limit aroorid-mm wrtilrnad wag Mid alreadyput bark in fiovirt*#to rrnronifoiandnpora* ion branch Ijnepren awhirh would ft*ogrraRfj »*u:*nXw) r f, a n r € \ n m o v i r i u 1 or a I’uippJtm in iho northwawt*r r n p f *In action was nrarJv gvr?1 *#vi«% r m nrfinfantrII*Afi fitn t*I it *-*w* -rtovjetcavalry, »i plane* and author quarter* here declared that thf jwi ‘eq withdrawal of the bulk ofGerman aerial Mjuadron foii' and prospective service in the outri uad given the R*-d air for'*- an » .«n jxr nion if no* aneffective superiority m th' air.Reflect* ImprovementThis, together with the seizure ot Initiative by the fioviet groundtori' reflected a material c tinning improvement in the •xe if ion all about Moscow and to? ome rxtf-n* apparently aboutLeningrad ;lt; well and even ‘he day's accounts of the Germans themselves admitted that, their offensive in the Moscow theater had oeen wholly halted.New successes for the RAF fighter wing In Russia were reported, the air minhtry announcing fha ’Biiti.ii pilots trad destroyed LfGerman airplane’-: and passibly 10 more, losing only one British plane British aerial operation* it wasreed we r* f.x*r noe/; »s far*4 i * tfi mm
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The Montana Standard

Butte, Montana, US

Sat, Nov 08, 1941

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USA 16 Dec 2022

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