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Show THE LEIII SUN. LEHI, UTAH PAGE THREE I rani 1 acts Ma4 tula: s j SAM; and f Eriri-t f h reft the r le if Leading Grid ears ago the debate was red . . .L the relative gridiron merits ghost of Illinois, and George Wilson, sensational University of Washington Washing-ton halfback. . selections and both turned to U" Bota gridiron. VClc where their performances ! ; A na :t& , z If her"; t ' It M S I RedGranoo. this fall Pyle savs wlu lnclude EddIe Tryon, former Colgate star; Wild Bill" Keliy, crack Montana player, and Jeff Cravath, Southern California center last year. Morton Kaer, Southern California halfback and 192G all-American choice, also may come into the Pyle fold. portiob3 San Francisco Is anxious to hold he annual , anuj-i'j " lassie .- .';' ;- m Coach Lou Young Intends having he Penn football team use tne nua- e system this fall. ..- Now they ask you In the locker mr, bogey or bobby?" The Braves recently paid $15,000 . mntiB outfielder named Clark Jn the Virginia league. Yale plans to build a field gymna- ium for use or us auueuc leama urlng the winter month? The first golf tournament for the United States public links championship champion-ship was held at Toledo In 1922. John McMullen, all-America n tackle lof Notre Dame, win De at.sibiaui coach of this year's Creighton unlver- ity football squad. ; ToDeka has purchased Outfielder Eddie Kies from the Okmulgee ciud. I'itcher Cribble, Joplin city leaguer, has been signed by Okmulgee This new Italian' boxer, Roberto Robert!, hasn't a chance to become heavvweisrht champion. ' There hasn t fbeen a single suit filed against him. The original name of Jack Shar key is Joseph Paul Cukoschay. He wna hnrn in r.inchnmton. N. Y.. 01 L.11UUUU1UU aiCliLO - The only unassisted triple play ever made by a major league outfielder is credited to Hines of the old Provi dence clnh. who turned the trick In 137SL Welker Cochran, holder of the 18-2 pwlkline billiard championship, and Jake Schaeffer. ex-titleholder, are fplaylne exhibition matches on the racific coast f I Bob MpuspI hna hppn Hi onlv mem- iw oi ine xsew xorK ran sees wm lias been seriously handicapped by in juries this year, suffering both a bad a rg aim arm. - Bill Barrett, heavy hiting catcher of the Knoxville club of the South Atlantic association and home run I g or the circuit, has been sola to the New York Giants. . "Uncle Steve" Phillips, elghty-flve- year-old veteran of light harness rac ing, who scored many outstanding vic tories with Sleepy Tom fifty years ap, is still active in tills sport. Cyril Coaffee, a native of Winnipeg. nut now a resident of Chicago, looks tike a sun; thins for the 192S Cana- an Olympic team, which will be the inira in which he has competed. long distance swimming Is one of the new sports which Is becoming Popular throuehnnt tho TTnltort Rtntes. fewer than 12 cities are holding marathon swimming races this season. Bill KJam umpired his first profes- 'nai game in the old Connecticut gne in isos. Afterwards he umpired um-pired at various times In every state Ul me Union and In many foreign wuiines. C. Edwin Cockey of Queenstown a representative of an America Ameri-ca bank In the Orient, enjoys the distinction of being the "star" twirler araateur baseball clubs now play- in uongkong. "Hue Tan. a rHTne ka. ki-a ,, the rIg when he substituted for o fisliters who failed to show np for wuts in a San Francisco club. IIP ITfin I. . . - uuui Douts and nas been a Star at Gate hot between the East and Far of Red Grange, the ealloDine - r'-'wiwum aroused fresh argument. The dis cussion ceases abruptly, however, when it cumes to comparing their relative rela-tive drawing powers. As a gate attraction, Grange Is alone. lie Is the Babe Ituth of his sport It takes only a casual cas-ual squint at the figures of C C. Tyle to prove this. The promoter made over $100,000 with Grange's New York eleven last season and Is surrounding Red with an all-star cast for the 1927 season. He lost $37,000 with Wilson's Wildcats, a roving outfit, which will be among the missing this year, although al-though Wilson himself may land a pro berth with one of the teams In the newly consolidated National Na-tional Foot Ball league. Grange's playmates . m i i m in 1 1 1 1 1 1 mum n. Red Killefer Gets Plenty of Rest f Red Killefer, manager of the Seattle club of the Pacific Coast league, : drew more than a month's vacation last season. He was chased from the park on 38 occasions for trouble with the umpires and the total time he was off duty was 38 days. If a change Is as good as a vacation, vaca-tion, Killefer profited Immensely Immense-ly as he had plenty of change. Some of the specie variety was deduoted from his pay envelope. Mill ii ii n ii i minimi i Tackling Parson Rev. Charles IL . Urban, candidate for tackle position on the University of Pennsylvania team, is shown help ing to build the Pennsylvania Christian Chris-tian association building in Philadelphia. Philadel-phia. ..The tacklin parson has been working on the building all summer in order to harden his muscles for the football season grind. Princeton Grid Players in Different Vocations The football stars of Princeton uni versity turned tailors, stokers, Dron- cho busters and mountain cnmuers during the summer vacation in preparation prep-aration for a strenuous schedule this fall. - ' Bill White and Sam Levine, two . L- linesmen, stoked tne Doners m me hold of an ore ship between New York and San Francisco. Mike Miles, full back, and Chuck Howe, varsity cen ter, boarded ship as common seamen. Kd Wittmer. a backheld canaiuaie, and Joe Caldwell, guard, spent the summer working on a Western ranch. Bill Moore, a freshman tackle last fall, worked In the Oklahoma oil news. Jack French and Jack Lewis, lines men, worked with a road construction gang. ea weu, uiuu. ployed on a New York skyscraper. , . . . Ihnnlf WQ B Pill' Dr. Cooke Says Dribble' Ban Hurries Up Game rtoei-At hall will he a "much better - - . ;th fha nn qqI n f? of ana raster game "- r-iV.i.lA nr. Im J. Coofce, lormer bakt-ball coach at the university m .11 Arrt. nnr.fsnta for 'Zl years, saiu w t r, ta rprpnt chance in the .,tt. tlo thP rtr m e aown iu rule?- KHUH - nun bounce, running ne.xi "It will make the gnmeaqmcK pa.N-, pa.N-, ..am that will be a better lDg, ft contest to watch and will also ellm inate ninny personal Mins. said Poc- -It will not entirely eliminate stall-hA.ver. stall-hA.ver. as many coaches seem . lt i h onntinned. "The o,rt rcan will undoubtedly be handi ff if 1 V 'A 1 P - Secret Drill Aid 8 , . Suit Some Coaches Secret football practice Is desirable, de-sirable, not so much for the sake of keeping plays secret as for the protection of players' 'feelings In the view of Dr. O. W. Spears, head conch at the University of Minnesota, "I am not greatly concerned," he remarks, "about keeping pet plays secret Feelings of young players I consider far more Important Im-portant If r have to 'call a player he accepts my remarks In the right way If only players hear. But a "call-down' in front of a large gallery Is demoralising." demoralis-ing." ooooaxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxwoooo TENNIS AND GOLF ' CROWD BASEBALL During Last Decade Boys Desert Diamond Game. Golf and tennis have made great In roads into the ranks of the boys who formerly manned the sandlot dia monds. Compare the number of golf links In the country today with those of a quarter of a century ago. Of the great hosts who knock the little white pill over the hill and dale the great majority have been at it less than ten years. Those busy golf courses need a tremendous lot of boys for caddying purposes, especially on Saturdays. Sundays and holidays. The kids who used to get up at six o'clock in the morning on the Fourth of July to get the early baseball diamond now get up that early so that they can carry clubs over three rounds. The American boy doesn't change, He always stood ready to make an honest dollar, and golf gives him chance to knock out from $2 to $5 a day. Then the kids also are playing golt They also are taking more and more to. tennis. Many can go back to the time when we regarded boys who brought their tennis rackets to school with a certain amount of superior dis dain. Tennis, they thought, was "sissy" game, not to be compared with such a manly sport as baseball. Today most every one knows that playing a double-header doesn't take nearly as much starch out of one as a hard five-set match. Emmer, Crack Shortstop, Is Headed for Majors Frank Erumer, Minneapolis . shortstop, short-stop, can hit as well as field. Emmer tied th all-time American assocaltlon fielding record of 22 consecutive er rorless games by handling 140 chances without an error. Emmer has been batting better than .300 all season. During his fielding spree he was tied for runner-up position posi-tion for home-run honors. The day he tied the A. A. fielding record he drove out a triple to score three runs, putting put-ting his team back into a winning spurt at a time when It was four runs behind and there was only one Inning to go. - Emmer got Into the big show with' Cincinnati but was sent back. lie is determined to vindicate himself and Is considered to be headed again for the major leagues. ' Helen Wills Disagrees With Suzanne Over Pros Professionalism In tennis bores Miss Helen Wills. "If 1 were as poor as a church mouse should not become a professional," Miss Wills asserted. "I cannot quits understand how any one can play such a good game when he or she knows that the prize will be received whether the game Is won or lost" But Mile. Suzanne Lenglen thinks differently. She Is quite certain that "sport professional or otherwise, does not spoil a woman a lemimnity. "Far from it," was Mile. Lengien I reply to criticisms that too much indulgence in-dulgence In athletic and sport was tending to make women masculine. Meehan's Star Team "Chick" Meehan's crack New fork nnivprsitv football team, which went through last year's opponents like a J prairie fire, losing only tne lasi gaum of the season to Nebraska, Indulged In early gridiron practice at Farming-dale Farming-dale L. 1- Coach Meeltan has a number num-ber ' of last year's veterans around whom to build his tram. The photo shows "Chick" himself. J j - riwe&& ' j, Head of Legion Parade at Unknown 1 &mf U v PyWnyrjitK jzKwykMA,. 8 y i i I ivil . I It P tL i 1 1 v B 'ii lf M fife l.f El If f 1 S IT -' 'f i cr f -V T. iUv ' ft V It t 9 IF 1 1 5'" J 4 - . This photograph, Just received from Paris, shows the American Legion parade .passing u.a grave of France'i Unknown Soldier at the Arc de Trlomphe. Mississippi M 1 A group of steamboats at the St. Louis levee, their fires under forced drafts, about to depart for points along the Mississippi river from Keokuk, Iowa, to New Orleans. Last year more than a million tons of freight moved through St. Louis and this year is seeing further increases in' river shipping. The Father of Waters is fast regaining the prestige it enjoyed during the glorious eighties. Lindsey Burns II5 s i - I : s VII -Z-. dr r " y Ben B. Lindsey, former Judge of the Juvenile court In Denver, burning some of the 5,000 confessions of troubled women and girls which he had ..,ni.ti rinrinir ht PTnprlence as Judge. "Mr. Lindsey has been charged ho j.- metric Attnmpv Phlliln S. f !,, nnifrt nt the time VUlVtHI MVW V v ,vw - answering the charges. Tulsa Slow Club Bans Petting C f - - o ' 'tit V V 2 ""I X- T Left to right, Mary Bodenheimer, Dorothy Yoeam. Mary Jane Murray, Nina Burkett rnd Villita Vaughn, all young and pretty, who have started the girls' Slo dub movement in Tulsa, Okla. They say that they are out lor fun. but they put the ban on cigarette smoking. liquor drinking and letting. . River Is Staging a Come-Back Up Confessions ft'- Van CIse with removing some of the he was ousted. He took this means of 4 f Soldier's Tomb 4 ' f ft if' : IN INSPECTOR GENERAL Col. William C. Rivers has been appointed ap-pointed inspector-general of the army with the rank of major general to sucf ceed MaJ. Gen. Eli A. llelmlck, retired. re-tired. - E. T. MEREDITH Most recent portrait of Kdwin 'P. Meredith of Iowa, former secretary of agriculture, who is considered a possibility pos-sibility for the Democratic residential residen-tial nomination. Anxious to Know Oldest Daughter And he is continn aliy mentioning over the things he is going to have in life. Anxious Mother And does he ever mention you, my dear! - iJ t v--r, !"f. ' .--. ; - v n ' 1 f 1 J sessional ever since. capped with this new style of play |