OCR Text |
Show NOT IN TOE BOX SCORE: has replaced th MEL OTT Mark Keening as tbs Scenes and Persons in' the Current News best golfer among the Giants. Ho shoots in the low Mo sad, like Carl Hubbeil with whom be plays two or throe times a week la Florida, does d. it Joe Moore is fairly good but inconsistent. If he does the outgoing alas la less than par ho bobs op with a 5 doming home. By the same token, when bo reaches the turn la sad state ho' osually plays the last nine ia no style. f . . Adolfo Luqne Is the biggest ester among the Giants. Guo Maacuso tells the sad tale of the time whea ho invited the coach to dinner sad taw him devour six doses blue points without a letup . . . Bill e Now lark PurtWNU SorvU. Terry nlwuys turns to the financial qootat'ona first whea ho opens his morning paper ai breakfast . . . a Long before he became o ball player Srm Leslie, one o the easiest going jf the Giants, was am bit ions to become s professional prise fighter . . . Giants were not surprised when the Dodgers handed perhaps earns Freddy Lindstrom his aacoaditionaj FAINT wrinkles loaf afternoons of peering release. They recalled that Freddy inis blasinf sons while galloping and Manager Grimes never were hell for leather down the home anything like pals. encroach stretch The recent' deaths of Judge Walter upon his steady gray P Steffen and Johnny OBrien In bine eyes now. The Chicago cost intercollegiate football 111 -reddish hair is thindearly. Steffen In early middle age ning on the top per- had achieved a magnificent career 1 Chief Justice Hughes, who recently declared that an Increase in the number of justices of the Supreme haps worn away by as a player and a coach. O'Brien court as proposed by President Roosevelt would not promote the efficiency of the court 2 Gen. Hugh S. the billions of pats was a young man, just beginning to i Johnson (left) and John L. Lewis shown as listened to speeches at an meeting in New York. Inevitably, albeit fig- earn recognition as a coach a Notre S Bust of Grover Cleveland is unveiled they Of Fame by his grandson, Thomas Grover Cleveland (left), Hall for uratively, bestowed Dame. As an athlete "One Play f there by adoring bet- Johnny OBrien earned Immortality and Dr. Harry Woodburn Chase. tors. Yet the Earle in Notre Dames football lore. . . Jack Sande wbr rides on- Dempsey continues In a quiet way RISING ly saddle horses now his philanthropies among old cronies and mounts them of the prize ring. Dandy Dick GrifWWWWMWI.H only in the cool of fin, a bantamweight from Texas who the morning when fought on the Dempsey-Carpcntie- r few are present to heed or cheer card at Boyle's Thirty Acres, had still Is a slim young man who must two operations recently In New York le reckoned with around a race to restore his sight The old mauler track. Examine the list of winners is footing the bill 'at the recently closed Bialeah meet-in- . if you doubt that.' Recalls When Schalk Sande brought seven horses to the Six Gloves was a woefully small Used meeting. That number Ta " comparedTo roIesT of WhenRay Schalk was achieving stablestnvited to try their luck at this race emporium. fame with the White Sox he always Bu Sande saddlcd.fourtecn winners, brought at least six glove into the most of them triumphing with wide dugout with him each day. Each of these gloves dif, stretches of open daylight to spare. V 4 fered slightly from This Is a rare success for a man who or in others shape took up a new job scarcely three the amount of padyears ago. All the fingers of one J& ding and each of hand would not be needed to count them had been bpill the veteran trainers, already wise according to exact in the ways of their profession when from dlrectiaas slim kid a was booting home Idaho Ray. This was behis first winner in 1918, cause he figured who can boast of as much good Graham N. Lowdon, who has been each pitcher fortune. named special sgei.t in charge of Kerr Faber, How does this once greatest of l thi Philadelphia division of the threw others and Jockeys like the work to which be bureau of investigation. Mr. A frft nBrnmftn WVMVMWAsoniu particular now has turned? We sat on a faded Lowdon is a na.ive of Fort Worth, type ol ball which old brocade sofa in front of hla barn It took a Allan Hoover, age twenty-nin- e Texas. He Is a graduate of the and son of the only living kind of glove to special door and talked about It. while handle cf the United States, shown with his bride, Margaret Coberly. after their Washington and Lee university at properly . . . Roy Henshaw, thoroughbreds craned their necks Cub pitcher traJed to Brooklyn last marriage in Los Angeles, Calif. Former President Herbert Hoover and Lexington, Va., and the George out of nearby "doors and his two to attend Washington university law school at winter, carries his own table tennis Mrs. Hoover drove from their home at Stanford university the ceremony. dogs, a police and a red setter, Washington, D. C. He on with him began trips. clamored to divide Earles atten- paddles a', the practicing at midnight tion. Dodgcra camp and had a visit STRIKE ARBITRATOR Yes, training was a lot different from the house detective when the from riding. You had to pay at- bail, bouncing off the wall, antention to a lot of new things. Things noyed the guest in the next room. you might have noted before but The detective was all for throwing never had regarded as really imhim uto a dungeon when Roy said portant Manager Burleigh Grimes could What things, for instance? Sande identify him. Grimes was the Inlooked at his visitor, grinned, then dignant party In the next room wha fondled the setter's ears. Well, just had lodged the complaint. things. Ted Lyons, dean t.. the White Sox The visitor changed the subject. pitchers, says Larry Rosenthal is the bes center fielder the team has Wbat would Sande rather do? Prepare horses for some other jockey had since Johnny Mostil, and Mostil, Lyons, is the greatest t' win with or boot them home him- according toseen . . . Emil Levsen, self? There was s moments hesi- he ever has pitcher for the Cleveland Indians tation, then earnest response. under Tris Speaker, 's now in Why, ride them, of coarse. There of a creamery at Spring-ville- , charge was nothing in life like that. One . . near Cedar la., f the hardest things to get over He has been director ofRapids basejunior was not even being able to straddle ball for the American Legion the some colt for a morning gallop on last few years. . . . One of the u fellow of course But the track. of this program is Bob producta with so much weight couldn't do who had his start in baseball Feller, that. It wouldnt be fair to the with the Father Frederic SiMenburg, lley Junction America horses. - T)f the i ve rtcaUntvcrs1ty iof Legion Junior club. Sande , now weighs 125 as comCount Jerzy Potocki. the Polish ambassador to the United States, who as chairwas selected Detroit, to Joe promoter According loey, pared to the 115 or so of his best at the Chicago Stadium, reaerva-on- s man of the mediation board to settle pins or Dr. Arthur Rodzinski, the conductor of the New York Philharrising years. Was he training any the numerous strikes which were monic orchestra, the Polonia Restituta. highest order of merit, apart from already in hand for the riders to follow In his own renown? bout amount to nearly threatening Detroit military honors. At the right is Mrs. Rodzinski. . Larry Northoott, star No, not now. Most of the jocks 5500,000 . who rode for him were experienced wing of the Mont. eal Maroons, was bank employee before entering fellows. Still he would like to do it some day. Real jockeys were bom. professional hockey ... . The city no made, even though experience fire chief runs the bewllng alleys In and training did smooth them out Beaumont, Tex., and insists on his What he would like to do was go fire fighters keeping fit by rolling few games daily . . . Bob Gar-barback home to Idaho some day, find Toledo catcher, who is resome little kid practically raised a trial with the Cubs this ceiving see the could in saddle and what spring, was mentioned on several bt done with him. all-stfootball tear s for Ms work Scrneshifter, winner several days will the Gettysburg college eleven previously for the Maxwell Howard in 1932 Joe Savoldi is on a atable for which Sande trains, was tour of South America . . . wrestling from a nearby door. whinnying William H. Lewis of Harvard Sande rose, patted the colt on the placed at center on the teams nose several times, spok . to him was1892 of and 1893 and still is named and then returned. teams. on many Were horses just like people? Did He afterwards coached at his alma you got to like some cf them right mater and became an assistant away and were some of them almost United States attorney general . . Gibson White, owner of Rosaimpossible to understand? Surely, they were. There was lind th Hambletonian winner last little Billy Kelly who ran for Com- year, is taking health treatments at . . Homer Martin, mander Ross almost twenty years Tucson, Ariz was national official, union labor a ago. Billy was gentle chap, liked to play and loved to be petted. Sir hop, skip, nd jump champion lo Barton, a far bigger money winner 1924. Baseball umpires In Cuba are at. In the same barn and at the same o time, also was a great horse, but least a goo as their semi-prbrethren in the U. S. The best of he was inclined to be a bully. Is a gentleman named Raul What was the greatest hese them lived In whose - ancestor Atanf Sande ever rode? The answer came China . . . because most Probably without hesitation. of their stars are living examples Man a War, of course. Big Red of that "good field, no hit erark liked lo have his own way and was of Mike Gonzales. Cuban fans apkind af temperamental, but nobody plaud fielding feats more vigorously made any mlstakebycaning him than they do occasional long disFans ar permitted truly great. The others' Well, it was tance blow . ' the pretty bard to pick them in any I keep balls knocked Int kind of order. That Gallant, Fox stands, hut the Cuban spectators are With bowed heads and faltering steps. Texas buries its dead. A tragic scene In a New London cemetery. could run nil day, Osmond was as not ia u class with Brooklyn fans where weeping relatives of, school disaster victims are assisting each other to the childrens graves. good aa anybody could wish. when It comes to catching them y Yamii, r Accuse '88 M. right-hande- Tops as Trainer Sande Longs for Old Jockey Days big-tlm- anti-Naz- Allan Hoover Takes Bride N J JUMA1 the-mlg- hty big-tim- e c, fed-eia- A Poland Decorates Dr. Rodzinski ex-ec- Louis-Braddo- Victims of Fatal Texas School Blast Laid to Rest k, ... all-tim- e . ... By LYLE SPENCER English Mock C Westers Newspaper Uoioo. - How Did Bonus Originate? checks paid out "pHE bonus to our veterans of the cently World war gladdened the Cheese Sour tezapoonful salt Y cupful boiling water fit cupful butter r,v. cupfuls lit Y heart of While this many an bonus was undoubtedly the biggest given by any country In the history of the world, it was by no means th fit Cupful butter tk eupful sugar 1 cupful tresb-grata- d cocoa egga S teaapooofula cream 1 teaapoonful vanilla Maka rich pie cuSLft flour, salt, butter and the boiling wateTsI first The word "bonus comes from out, cut In rounds, and line Latin and means good. It has ah tins with it. Make filling of the ways been used in English in the sense of gift In Great Britain it cupful of butter, well creZf was first applied, to dividends dis- add the sugar and cream and vanilla. Fold tributed from the surplus of life insurance companies. In America it coconut, fill the lined tins. 2 bake In a moderate oven ontni was used in the industrial and comdelicate brown, and they ariL mercial world to designate a payment above that expected," whether These may be topped tin an extra dividend to stockholders whipped cream when they 1 or an extra pay check to wags cooL CopyrlshL WHO Bant, earners. Later the term was applied to your body free of accumiM sums of money given to men as an Keep ed waste, take Dr. Pierces PZ inducement to join the army, and ant Pellets. 60 Pellets 30 cents. only since the World war has It been given to compensation for Knows the Value army or naval service. The original He who knows most grinq veterans adjustment compensation, to all World war veterans most for wasted time. Dantt three-quarte- rs well-beat- granted by congress in 1924, was u bonus endowIn the form of a paid-ument insurance policy. While never called that before, the practice of giving bonuses for military service is an old one. Even George Washington received a parcel of land and a sum of money from the state of Virginia for his part in the French and Indian war. And Abraham Lincoln was given a piece of land in Iowa for his services In Iho Blackhawk war. Except for his home in Springfield, Illinois, it waFTBout thFTnly real estate he ever owned. p The First Envelopes HUNDRED years ago, the business of posting letters was an expensive and difficult job. In the first place, there was no such thing as an adhesive postage rftamp. And even worse, there was no such thing as a modern envelope. A In those days, when travel was slow and hazardous, relatively few people ever had occasion to write letters. The few who did, wrote their messages on one side of the note paper only, and carefully wrapped it up so that none of the writing showed. Then they either paid the postman directly, or sent it postage collect The reason envelopes were so seldom used was because an extra charge was made for any paper, no matter how small, when wrapped up in another. A few wrappers that might be called envelopes had been used in France early in the Seventeenth century, and a few were sold in England as early as 1830. But the first American to manufacture envelopes was named Pier.on, who in 1839 began to sell them in his Fulton Street Stationers shop in New York City. The United States mail ervice has come a long way since those early times. The Pony express, which numbered Buffalo Bill among its brave riders, was a thrilling if brief interlude. The first time mail was carried on a railroad train marked the beginning of a new era in communication. And the way that our modernized Uncle i am delivers literally billions of pieces of mail annually with efficiency and soeed is a tribute to our unexcelled form of government -- Form a partnership with Nanue-fl- ai some flowers and vegetables from SEE) and watch diem grow! For grates turns, invest In Sttds Yom Cat Tng bred and grown by Ktl BRED for quality. TESHD for germination. DATED to ams freshness. Ferry-Mors- e - FREE : Send post card for "Snetted aid Seed," valuable planting guide Martha Phillips,. (2ko o it SEEDS TOV CAN TRUST This tsy tjr trtNettrijStortt ferryTmorsoeedIcMAKTHA PHILLIPS SUNDAYS, 9:15 CAfl GARDEN A. IA, NEC 113 The Correct Thing j those who are wJ behaved is never a mistake j Copying LIGHTS IXSTAITLT-- K 0 WAITS . !j Bara'a tba bo that wffl ",nneS Origin of Chinese Laundrymen day. It will w yqr hIpyoadbattoriRulasaaw(a7 itllttMlL ao on Irakine ' I ' HE Chinese are admittedly the best hand laundrymen in the world. No American towt. would be complete without its Chink and his laundry. The Chinese first got Into the clothes-washinbusiness through a queer set of circumstances. Back in the years around the California gold rush of 1849, miners on the west coast found they were unable to hire people to do menial labor for love or money. Everyone had come to California to dig for gold and nothing else. So desperate did their straits become that many sent their clothes all the way to Hawaii and even to China to have them washed. This was China's original contact with the American laundry business. When the first transcontinental railway line wa being built many e years later, whole shiploads of were imported because of their cheapness and industry to work on the road bed. After the line was finished, many Chinese wanted to remain and mak their fortune in the new land of opportunity. But they quickly found that jiue to temperamental and language barriers, the doors of most were closed to them. They had to find a business requiring li'tle capital or education, and where they would be their own masters and have few contacts with ' Westerner. The laundry business vas one of the few which met these require ments. Many of the original Chinese and their descendants havi become in it g A IboJ ImM Xickdo Iroo . . . f with matebas...no wmltinc. The dooblo pointed bare iron. cannnt wW j th bw. ttrokas. Lar a ireoinc tioM b roduoad ono-t- h ird. .M . . . on it any whore. Eeooonueal. j anlr V4f ao boor to opasta. 8aa hardware daalar. FREE Foldor nhHtnthc anJ about thla woodorfol boa. Seodpcatwre? THE COIBMAN LAMP ANDSTOV Dcpt-Wima- .' Wichita. Kanw PhUadMpbla, SSS WNU W SALT LAKE'S IEWEST HOSTEj Oar lobby Is KcilgbtftHf cooled deling tb awntnef a Uadi lac Krary Kao m lab 200 Kaaaa 00 J J if Chi-nes- busi-ness- well-to-d- o 1 I ill 'It J !!!:;: ira-f'V- rl HOTEL Temple Bafaa Square 1.50 to 2. Tba Hatol TmpJ hlablr drelrobhs will Uwor,nlYv wlata, reprereolr p I bocoaablyawrerebU Sow "TT lare aadreota-- d wb rkwatM III CULT RECOMMEND' To reaabwappretowbyi fTa a arerik of tMa bswwtlfal ERNEST C. ROSSlTEllv |