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Show i UTAH MACNA TIMES. MAGNA. NOT IN THE BOX SCORE: SMOKEY JOE MARTIN,withformer BaltiInflelder, new more, will be a papa some time this month . . . Jim Braddocks training camp at Grand Beach, Mich., was the same one need by Tom Gibbons when be prepared for Georges Carpentier . . . Golfers always di Ink hot tea between rounds in important tournaments . . . Hank Lnlsettl, Stanfords great basketball I feet I Inches player, In ihe V. S.Crdual meet and yet failed to score . . . The Giants are among the aeveral National league cluba now convinced that a banting game will beat Dltiy Dean. Paul Runyan seems due to win all d prizes for being the golfer this year . . . One secret of Hirsch Jacobs success as a trainer ia the attention he pays to his horses hooves. Does all the pedicuring, except shoeing the gee gees, himself . , , Frank Menke, the sports expert, now handles publicity for the Rockingham park raceA track. Gosalpers insist that the Miasonrl Valley A. A. V. BaaketbaU league plana a new aetup independent of the A. A. D. Commercial sponsors resent the limitation! In schedules imposed by the amateur authorities. U the break occurs there will be practically no A. A. V. basketball left . . . J. H. Lonchhelm, who owns Pompoon, and Danny Clark, who trains him, were boyhood chums. They united In 1936 after II years of only nodding as they passed by. Villa-nov- a Although Santa Clara and had hoped to play football in Jersey Citys new stadium this fall the place will not be ready for gridiron combats until 1938 . . . Damon Runyan is waiting a novel . . . Ken Smith, the baseball writer, has bought a new automobile and plans to invest the rest of his millions in summer estate on the banks of the Housatonie. More than 60 per cent of the books ies who operate at those hunts meets In Westchester and Long Island come from Philadelphia . . . Promoter Jack Pfeifer claims that the New York state athletic commission has mined s fine mllilon-dellbusiness wrestling . The Boston Garden has paid $6 dividend on preferred stock . Mark Kelly ia doing n life of John L. Sullivan which will appear In book form and on the screen . . . Probably Just to show that baseball is an expensive proposition the Cubs reveal that they used 9,124 baseballs and 774 bats (this la approximately 59 balls and 5 bats per game) last year . . . Joey the fighter, claims he is a distant relative of hizzoncr the mayor. d Scenes and Persons in the Current News WHOS NEWS THIS WEEK... By Lemuel WNU Servxe. Terry More Certain Than Erer Cubs Are Giarts Big Threat what (her 71 "The more we look at the rest of the league the more we figure those Cubs are the ones we have to beat. Of course you cant tell how well their pitching will stand np. but with Hartnett hack there catching It looks n lot better. They stayed np close to the top when they were having plenty of hard luck and now their power boys are bark In action theyre bound to be tougher. r "What? Yes, thats right. Theyve been something like us with Leiber out and Otty not doing so good. Don't know when Hank'll be back, either.-Yo- u know they only gave him light food when he was In the hospital and now hes got to build himself up again before he can take chances on hard playing in the hot sun. Tough break that, because he certainly looked swell In spring training, but let me tell you something. That other guy out there in his place (Ripple) Isn't going to hurt any ball club. Hes hitting close to .300, won a couple of games on the road that nobody seems to have given him credit for, and he can field as good, or better, than anybody you can name in the league. "Jersey City? Its a great baseball town with one of the finest parks Ive ever seen, and our tieup is bound to be helpful both to the Giants and to the folks over there. We bought in too late to do any real good this year though, even if we have got plenty of money to spend and so we cant promise anything this season. But we're improving. I was talking to Travis Jackson recently and he says Bluege is Just the shortstop we've needed over there. Also there's a couple of other deals we may swing before HERE'S long. New Income Tax WASHINGTON. Carl Hubbell "Do I measure my panta every day to as to get them Just exactly one inch above the second white stripe on my stocking? Nope. Thats just because they don't make baseball pants any longer. I like em long and I stretch em as far as they'll reach. Charley Grimm "Yeah, we fig ure we've got to beat the Giants but you've got to take them all in this league this year. Maybe Bowman won't continue pitching so good in Pittsburgh but they've got a better club out there M tha,.lasl rar- "Then go down in the second division and look at Philadel phia as an example Jimmy Wilson's come up with three good pitchers and that kid Scharein knows how to handle the ball at shortstop even though he is a little green and mainly used to second base. Yeah, we've got some good youngsters ourselves. We figure Marty's going okay out there in the outfield now and that Shoun is a pitcher almost anybody would like to have. "Parmalee? We let him pitch his own games because we kuow he's got as much as anybody in the league when hes right. If he gets Into tronbte the infield doesn't come charging in telling him bow to pitch ad neither do the boys start yelling from the bench. We Just let rv Gabby Hartnett handle him and theyve been doing a migbly good Job together even If be has lost a couple of tough ones. "What's that? You're blamed well right we're pleased with Frey and he may win a regular Job with us If those others dont continue to hustle. He's helped us a lot. Right now were practicing him in the outfield more than any place else and that may turn out to be his spot because theres a chance his arm may not be quite good enough for shortstop. "Anywhere we play him Is okay with him though, because hes a swell kid to handle and loves to play. Fast, too. When we got him 1 knew he could shske a foot hut I had no idea how fast be really was. Roy Parmclee "It feels swell to be with this club. Especially after las,t year. Boy, that St. Louis heat was terrible and it was only part of it. New York? Hey, don't go quoting me on anything like that The fans were swell to me there. I.onny Frey "How does It feel to be sold down the river and then wind np eating In the dining room with the quality folk? ThatS baseball. Brooklyn was okay, but theyre great te me here and ,!! if n 1 1 tem . . . th 7m Uh i I - G C 1 Cadets at the U. S. Military academy at West Point march in a recent review. 2 Field Marshal Werner Von Blomberg (right) and Premier Mussolini pictured during the German war ministers visit in Rome to review Italy's armed forces. 3 Marshal Mikhail Tukhachevsky, one of eight high ranking officers of the Rus- A driver may ride alone or with a mechanic next year in the Indi- e automobile race if anapolis a contemplated change in the rules is made. Once more fuel will be restricted as it was a year ago. If international rules are adopted, the drivers will have their choice as to the kind of fuel . . ."George Marshall race this will conduct a summer at Dallas, Texas . . . Dick Merrill, the transatlantic aviator, (eels safer in the air than he did in a tour of the Indianapolis speedway in a car driven by Ralph De Palma. t Byron Nelson Is the closest Vimouthed of all top golfers ola Dana, the former movie qneen who now is Mrs. Jimmy Thomson, is when as nervous as a her Shawnee Slugger husband t playing an important golf match . . . Art Smith, brother of Lon. the Cincinnati Enquirer's very good baseball writer, is pro at a Cincinnati e baseball golf club . . . managers are plotting some harsh tieatment for a radio annonneer in one of the Western towns. The gent has a habit of dropping around to the hotel and fixing up the teams' bad boys with dates, drinks and other entertainment Roy Hughes, Cleveland iijflcldcr, never had made a home run in the major leagues until recently, when a line drive which Just cleared the fingers of Billy Rogell, Tiger shortstop, rolled to the left center field Wall in the Cleveland stadiuro- 600-mil- lace. Their tall, support, aS Wen their tonirup tt PU ed and barbed. Ferret. The more took tt pretty food from farmer are Foster Man.. ,, saW s I aotheyT' maU holes r I" down on thuwS1 gin became special assistant to tho 1U Insect diet withiS secretary of the treasury, to ex- ear growing tn Held? and point out the plore young fowl, which icoLH dodgers. splitting the unfortS1' He was known as a conservative, mi. 'head. and he is a son of the distinguished 1 Hugh Stewart Magill of Chicago, Labrador Oace who, as president of the American for Leif Except EricsonwL ' Federation of Investors, Is bracket- .froraCreeffianddowiJi haves than 'the ed more with the was an w nots. The have land until well on htoiL g crowd here wanted Harold Groves teenth century. Traders, of the University of Wisconsin for lonaries and the Oblate the tax job. Economic royalists are coureura de bois, Hudson, Bm Mr. Groves favorite clay targets. tor, traveled in Labrador te. ua times; but it remain.! Secretary Morgenthau Insisted on as in Professor Magill, bringing ,Plorera like John McLei m? an authority on federal taxation, and ,Father Lacrosse (1875) j as a man who ought to be able to Holmes (1887), Cary ui In (1891), uncover hide-out- s and Bryant and Kenistoa tho income tax maze. The Magill Low (1896), to discover thTj report on tax evasion spurs a drive rich area aurrounding Grind a for general overhauling and tight- 250 mile above Hamilt pt) ening of thb income tax law. Presiwater. dent RoosCveJt, in his last press conference, made it clear that the Six Largest Rivers swing on The Nile, Yangtze, Yenisei, was entirely premeditated and that ion, Congo and Niger m 1 a congressional investigation would worlds largest rivers, mO follow. This writer gathered, at the Mississippi and Missouri (on t conference, that action would be im- er) be combined, when finktfl mediate and overt, possibly jtart-in- g approximately 1,500 nflg, with the President's return from than the nearest competitor; t Hyde Park. Nile. The Yukon, generally Hold-out- s on the Magill appointof as a small river, is nun k ' ment are cheering the Colombia 2,000 miles long. J professor today. There is no Indication that he pulled his punch in his Gwinnetts Signatures VihV The signatures of Buttos inquiry and the President seemed to think be had enough nett are valuable becaus fixes ammunition to sink one or all of so rare. This signer of the Deck; those $100,000 yachts, allegedly used tion of Independence iru set, for tax write-offgovernor of Georgia for two Professor Magill might be one of in 1777, but failed of popular k those "six men with a passion for tion to the post A duel liter anonymity for which the President same year resulted in Gwbk j yearned when he was telling about death at the age of forty-twfTheBrcwnIowrTeport7N aturally a Literary Egypt tax expert isnt garlanded or spotj Ancient Egypts golden agent politilighted like the cians here, and that is all right period of literary activity. Sate with Professor Magill who has been of song were written on tooM busier than a gopher burrowing scriptions and rolls of papyri r: eontuc1 through the treasury tax under- put into mummy coffins love ditties, philosophic pons a. ground the last few months. which' were b r He is surprisingly human for one wonder stories, vide entertainment for the fete of his profession, with nothing desiccated or actuarial about him, and the next world. has made a pleasant field day out Listed Industrial Sfas of his tax evasion study. Britains royal commission i Professor Magill is forty - two quiry, during the last century, r years old, a native of Auburn, 111. cerely and honestly catalogued t He was graduated from Dartmouth sins of the industrial world i 1 and from the University of Chicago, in its royal reports-re- pc day as a Doctor of Jurisprudence. He from which Karl Marx drew hk was a captain in the World war and facts in his indicts-ospiration and began the practice of law in society. in 1920. big-inco- sian Soviet army recently executed for treason. NEW A. M. A. PRESIDENT ii Signs Em With Rubber Stamp Pepper Tr fact-findi- y4 Dr. Irvin Abell of Louisville, Ky., of the Southern Medical association and leader in Southern medical activities, who was elected unanimously by the American Medical association as its for 1938 at its Atpresident-elec- t lantic City convention. -- former president Necessity is the mother of invention, they say, so Pepper Martin, one of the St. Louis Cardinal stars, does some pioneering on his own account. He is shown the requests of autograph hunters just before the start of a ball game. rubber-stampin- Pickets Flee Tear Gas in Labor War Flare-U- p writer, fixes. razo1 get-awa- y can play the piano well enough to turn down bids to perform in night club orchestras . . . New York's chief boxing inspector. Lou Beck, carries a variety of pictures, all different poses of his new baby boy. Things change rapidly In golf. A short time ago Sam Snead was rated tops among the nation's younger golfers. Now the better minds are patt caking for the blueeyed Texan, Jimmy Demaret. Say he has the finest game of any youngster in the sport . . . Courts must hate to have prizefight cases come before them. There always is so much baseless whispering about racket and newspaper .. ' . treat-em-rou- v? Toney Betts, racing c 464 i Rogers Hornsby has convinced them that they cannot buy a pennant and they are Intent on developing a farm sys- sen-ousl- bountiful I ar 000,000 own the St. Louis Browns. Even with all that dough la wS high-clas- Five shoe millionaires with an available capital of more than $50, Jr' out homes woodpeckers. Their teel. keen as Parton - - hard when Prof. 'Roswell best-dresse- Shoe Millionaires Are Trjing to Boost Browns Fa el Nature TTTTffTfTffTTTTTTfTfTfTf high-jump- g, New York Poet. in wMtLvl lmot exclusively fmbi burrowed In f Chicago He was on the University of Chicago faculty from 1921 to 1923 and has been with Columbia since 1924. He was adviser to the tax commission of Porto Rico in 1928 and is the author of several impressive, and to the layman quite bewildering, books on federal taxation. Conservatives on the Supreme court turn liberal. Certain congressmen talk like sockless Jerry Simpson and work like the Commonwealth Edison. The conservative Professor Magill gets a big hand on the left. Past performance doesn't seem to be the guide and indicator it used to be, here in the capital. Social Security Advances. JT'S "Anchor Aweigh for the so Pickets shown fleeing under a barrage of tear gas from the gates of the National Electric Products company at Ambndge, Pa.. 20 miles from Pittsburgh, during a strike in which the unions representing the C I O and the American Federation of Labor struggled for control of the plant. Strikes over a nationwide 'front brought violence and unrest. Confederate Vets Recall Days of 61 ROUND-U- P QUEEN 500-mil- e French Prefer SL Barth j Saint Martin is the most pop of aQ French saints, if popiic may be measured by the numlte cities, villages and churches m, after him. 3,672 churcha bear hia name, dotting the ?. 1 country. Ht ol ould I Its and Its . $ Its without an apostrophe possessive form of It; with a trophe it is a contraction of Bkt said that if disturbed a cubs. j its new-bor- lot Czechoslovakia Has Ke h I his phT Shakespeare, tn on of Bohem41 of placed the country a seashore. The fact is. Czechoslovakia of whid j mia la the main province, w , I sea. Ihen n 1 ened 1st b 1 or of dor Pas vis 'ii security board, as the Supreme court hands It its clearance papers. Arthur J. Altmeyer, in the I chart room, had the course already Combustion of Tap mapped. Plans for immediate wide The combustion of extension of the scope and activi1 In a cylinder is so rapid ties of the board, in six fields, are of as spoken usually announced. This extension will bring combusWMj although the word several additional million persons more correct Combustioa under the act. the act or Instance of burns Mr. Altmeyer has burrowed in dry statistics for years, coming to the Thought It ParadJ surface as director of novel governThe Moor once tohabiw ' It mental financial operations probably da, Spain, and to them unprecedented in history. He is a dise, over which they J native of De Pere, Wis., the son Heaven to be suspended of Dutch parents, an alumnua of fall portion of it had Wisconsin university, a former staearth. tistician of the Wisconsin tax comStarted mission and chief statistician of the College Football Wisconsin industrial commission. The first football gam In 1933, he was made chief of the 'colleges was played atn labor branch of the compliance di- wick, N. J., November , vision of the NRA, and later was tween team representing f . VflD. . appointed second assistant secretary of labor. He is the author of several books on subjects In the field of labor law and governmental a beg how-th- U Mi b sti it M orel) din tit j bout Ling L Jl omei Lit 1 (t go :avs imt tour T liatU iro f kil counting. ... Consolidated New WNU Feature. tilt Service. ouch Big-tim- Fish Walks on Its Tail The wah$p is a tropical game fish averaging five to six feet In length, and weighing in the neighborhood of fifty pounds. It is a hard fighter, and very difficult to land. it "walks on its tail" along Hooked, e the of the water, as the angler trie to haul it to his boat, according to the curator of flshea at the Field museum. The wahoo is shaped somewhat like a mackereL It has an extraordinary aur-fac- A ten gallon Gen. Homer Atkinson of Richmond, Va.. and Gen. Harry Rene Lee of Nashville, Tenn., talk over the days of at the annual Confederate reunion held at Jackson, Miss., recently. Many interesting characters of the South attended the reunion. It marked thfe time the boys in gray have held a reunion.- -" " 61-6- 5 forty-sevent- h hat replaced a crown for the coronation of Miss Dorothy Alcorn above, as queen of the St. Paul. Minn., stockyards, She was chosen to reign over the hnnual round-uof the Hook em Cow club an organaation of stockmen, farm-er- s ranchers and shippers who mar- ket their livestock at St. PauL backbone with special engineering feature consisting of a latticework of unique bone ,Cl1braCe 016 spine ln uch that the fish cannot bend its way body up or down, and is extremely limit-ein bending sideways. Th6 scientific name of the fish Is Acanthocy-biuPetus. d The ntn hllei hg Wi Lteo Irnoi iU dour ill Wi ct ear S1bi te a. |