OCR Text |
Show . THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Page Three . PULLE'D FIRST OF TRIPLE STEALS ~ ~ : Heavy Hitters in Cub Outfield • 0:'-/LY • : • .: • • • •• • •• :' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 1-Mtss Anne Morgan laying cor:>.erstone of $7,000,000 clubhouse for the Am~rlcan Woman's associatiou in New York. 2-Secretary Kellogg and Ambassador Prlttwitz signing the German-American conciliatimt and arllitrution treaty. 3-Parade of undergrad1•utes at May fete of Wellesl,ey college, Wellesley, Mass. EWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS atson Defeats Hoover in Indiana-Japa n Is Fighting Chinese. By EDWARD W. PICKARD XDL\N .\ farntl'rs h1tlil'ated lu~t W(·el> that th»y did Dot npprO\'C Of Prpsfcl~ntinl can<liuacy of Ilerhpr·t '!'he rote of tlte rura: disin the ltl'puhlican primary was E>nou;:h to give Senator James Watson, favorite ~on, !l nwjority romething like 2.i.OOO o1·er the secry of commerce, who~e strengtll mnlnly in the C'ities and lar~er ; and the 3~ IIoo<ier delegates Kansas City will ''ote fnr the sen at least on the first ballot. Anti· claimed the rPsult In Inwas a se' ere blow to Hoover·~ ~hRr.C!'S,, but his supporters a~sertefl renlly had won a victory by keepWatson's majority down to comsmall tlg-ures. Despite Senator Watson's protestathat he Is In the race to win, politicians nearly all a~sume that Is a stalking horse fnr Lowden Ol' and the opinion IS> wide,pr·ead the Indiana delegation. or many Its members, will shift to Dawes as ns the ~nator relea•es them, they may first ~ive Lowden chance. G. Burt Thurman. the WntcamrJni~n : mruw~r in thP ~tate "Inilian~ will he for Dawe-< nr or any other Hepuhlkan." significant empha•ls on the word Mar~·lnnd Hepublieans Tuesday plellged their 19 deleto Hoover. 30 delegates to Houston Instructto vote for Evans Woollen, the In tan.ap<JIIS banker whom Tom Tag-gart Pnnaht forward. He was unoppo,;e<l. Republicans renominated Senator nnd the Democrats plrked Stump tor the senate. The uw•uuuuJJJ:' for governor must be by the party conventions, for candidate on either side won a mnjority. Klchlgan's state Democratic conv<:>nvoted to Instruct the delegntion SO to vote as a unit for AI Smith, opposition being easily squelched. the fight against the New Y&rk Is not entirely ahandoned, In Alnbamn tbe anti-Smith or "unlltl11Cited delegation" taction captured majority of the state's delegate, to Jn Texas the bitter strugto send an unin~tructed delegation the Republican convention seemed to win. S1'EIWER'S campaign expenditures Investigation commithas not brou~ht out anything ln"""''t!n"' ~o tar except a ~mall dlsplnv temper by Herbert IJoovrr. Ue suf~jected to a long examination to' promb--e~. contributions nnd podeals and managed to retnln of him~elf, but when !<rnator of Kentucky asked him whrthhe bad ad dsed the manufacturE>rs chlnawnre to raise the price of he exploded, ~aylng: ''I wonJIIr. Chairman, If the committeenot getting down to dealing with a small type of street slander." From the other candidates for the res~df>ntlal nomination the committee Information In the least the dit·ectlon of the secretary of war and the supen !,•ion of the chief of war, tilom;il tool! otJ:cially, llel':IU'r 01'H the house and s<:>nate accepted the conference report on the flood bill after the nu·usurl! hall so altered that It would meet the npproval or the President. Important revisions suggested Mr. Coolid~e were made an' It understood the bill would receive th•e npproval, although the Presstill dislikes some of Its proa~ It reached the President the expenditure ef $:1~:-i. for the flood control project, according to President Coolid:!:e Maj. Gen. I;d;:ar .Jadwin, chief engineers, the actual minimum cost be nt least $~00.000,000. The bill finn! authority in the hands of PreRi<i<>nl Actual construction wnlti<l he in charge of the pres~ff~c: 'ct ...inrtl rivor rflmmisR-ion under bill ~------------~ • • : • • • • • • : : • : • I ~ ~ I D. llOC'KEI'ELLER, JR, has The foot hall gl'iilii'On is to be put J OIL~ marJe public two letters to Col. I ttnder t11e scie~tific microscope. ·~'l•e Hobert W. Stewart, chairman of the hoard of the Standard Oil Cotllpnny of Indiana in which he asked the latter to rPsi~n his po,ilion becau!"e of the revelation of St~wnrt's participation In the Continental Tmrllng company's deals that were hwolved In the Teapot Dome lease ~Panda! Ur. Rockefeller wrote Colonel Stewart that he wos calling upon him "to make good the promi'e you voluntarily !(ave me 8ome week~ n~o that you would resign at my request." Ste\\ art up to the time of writin" has deelined to comment on the ~utter. nockefeller Is a Hry large ~totkhnl<ler in the Standard nf Indiana, !Jut it wns said in Wall >-trret that he midtt not be able to enfo 1·re lib demand for Stewnr·t's resi~<uatinn if the chairman dPrided to res i-t. Jli,tr·irt Attorney no,-er In Wa-<hin~tnn ~ubmitted a transcript of Rtewa1·t'R te•timony hefore the senate Teapot Dome committee to !he l'€lleral granrl jury "itlt a view to his indictment. c_ollege of agr·~cultu:·e ~f the tn_l'ersty of lllr~ms Is ~ee!-lng to soh e for the athletrc assocmtion the proh· jtem of mai11tainlng a satisfactory tlll'f for football field~. '!'he e~pl'rim~n~s are t~ . be con1 ducted 0~1 90 nnmatur·e gndH·ons, arrnngerl. It I><> a ch_~rkt•rl.lOard Into on~ ~ regulntto~ field ..!\me •hffer:nt gl·as~e• or tu_rf fll,lllts at.e to he s' \\II lns!nps runnmg _crossWise of the gn<IH·on 1 ~he•e stnps are tl~en to lle cm~sed at rrght angles mth :en dtl1'erent nmounts and combinatiOns of fertilir.ers, runnin!! the length of the field~ I Tints t~lrre will he no dilferet~l l!rass anrl Sotl trP.ttments for stu<i,l. The CXIWI'imentnl gridiron "ill he u•etl hy the Illinois squad for pratti<-e nexl f:\11. to subject . ~t _to the , same It Patment. It "ou~<l- 11 <'er\e un•ler actual pla,-mr: conchltnns. I I "Bo" McMillin Coach P ' B I had a re,·olution R last wel•k,almost but the gm·erument nipped it in the bull. The peasants gather·ed In vast thr11ngs-two hundred thou,and In Aloajal!a and sumllcr numbers In other places-and formu luted demands for n chan~e of government and the end of the despotic regime of Premier Bratiuno Some of the lenders wished to ha'e the hordes march on Bucharest to enforce their demnnds, but others di~sented and only a few thousands started on tl1e trek to the capflal and they soon quit. At the gatherin~s the government had stationed large detachments of tr·oop~ which did not Interfere with the deliberations but eiTectually squelched all the ardor for militant attion. An lntereslln~ feature of the affair was the fact that Prince Carol, In Io;ngland with his female companion, plotted to take ad,·nntuge of the assemhlnge of the pen~nnts to gain possession of the • : • : • • • ·' teetion to the Shantung railway auil to hPr nationals there. l'rote't' nf bollt the l\'ationn!s and the Pekin~ go\el·nment wPre un!J..edetl an<! hloody clashes between tl1e Jupane~e and lite Southwest Again Claims Southerners at 'l'sinan, capital of Shantung province, followrd. There were as many casualties on both sides antl the A. ~("Bn") ~ldlillin's ndH•nt at 1 fighting continues at the time of writ· llBiHDE~T COOLIDGE told callers ' the Kansas State Agricultural cnl!"g~ ing. E:uch side blanwll the other for at the White House the other day next fall as head coach of foothull the outbreak of hostilities, an<l each that if all projects before congresR are j ~~Ill be a ll~omec~mlng to t~le s~;tth accused the other of brutal outrages. approred the required expenditure 1\t>st for t e fot mer Cenll e co ege '£he Japanese commander In Shnntun~J established a neutral zone along the woulcl hf> so huge that tax reduction gl'ldlt·o~ _stnr. would he impossible. Indeed, he Mc~Itlltn was born at Fort Worth, railway and HI latest reports had warned, it would be necessary to levy ";'exn_s, anu has spent most of Ills driven the· Southerners out of lt. The ndditional taxes. The aggregate ex- hfe m t_he Southwestern states AfTokyo government speedily prepared penditure called for would be more ter leavmg Centre, where !tis IPaderand sent over heavy reinforcements than a billion dollars according to ,. Rhfp of the "Praying Colonels'' curand dispatched additional warships. Chairman Snell of the lt~U!"e rules com- ried tlt~t team to nntionn~ fnme In Then ~farshal Chang, dictator of north mittee. Included In the bi<> projects 1019, 19~0 and 1921, Mc)1illtn went to China, issued a proclamation order·ing are: Flood control, at least $323,000.- Gene,·a college, Bea\'er ~'nils. Pa. all his forces to cease fightin~J the NaAfter two successful years at Ge tionalists, In order, evftlently, that the 000; farm relief, $!00,000,000; Boulder dnm, at len~t $125,000,000; Muscle neva he now succeeds Conch Charl~s Chinese nation might employ it~ combined strength In combating the Jap- Shonls, $75,000,000; good roads, $75,- W. Bachman, who resigned la~t tnll anese nggresslon. rn his pronuncia- 000,000; retirement of civil employees. to become head coach nt the Unlvermento Chang Intimated his Intention $il0,000.000; Welch federal employees' Rlty of Florida. ------of soon retlrint; to Manchuria, stating ~alary Increase bill, $18.000,000; l\Iissls~ he was willing to be not Insistent re- sippi river barge line, $10,000,000; war Leader of Red Sox garding national politics, and he con- mineral relief bill, $~.000.000 to $10,cluded with the statement that the 000,000. and vocational training bill, ship of state was sinkin~ rapidly and $ G, 000,000. ' he hoped the people would come to .\HON VO::-< HUEXEFELD. Captnln their ~Pn>'es and snYe the country ft·om Koehl anu )Jn.for Fitzmaurice, the destruction. Suggestions of m~·diuti(lll hy the Bremen lrunsatlanlfc flyer8, flew from United States ha,·e been made but Hl'e Philadelphia to Chira~o and spent two u•eless, for Washin~ton has said a strenuous day~ and ni~l1ts ther--e. 'rhey would not undertake to merliate unless were fen<ted nnrl entertained in variasked to do so by hoth slrll•s, unrl ous wu.r~. and 011 !':tturday there was Japan says it will ueither a-·k nor ac- a gratH! pnr·ade to Soltlier fiPitl on the Lake Front where they were fornially cept melliutlnn. The unoffitial govern ment view In Tokyo Is t11ut .JaJ>an wekonwil to the city. More than one does not consider the pre~ent situa- hunrlren Gl•rman anrl 1.-f,h societies tion wnr and that therefore tlre matteF 1\ <>re tn the line of march and too It can be settled diplomatically helwepn pnrt In tl1e CPremonies. Among the Juvan and t'hina. All Anwticnns in guest~ of honor 1\'PI'e Prof. llogo .Junkthe war zone ure believed to he safe, ers. manufncturPr of the Bremen plane, thongh some, inclullin~ Consul Price and '!' A Smiddy, minister of the Trlsh Free State at \Vashin~ton. at Tsinan, were untler fire. U~I.\XlA • •I 1: P offcr·iu~ Japan in:-;i~t~ on ghiu;; milit:1ry pl"o· :.• . • r ,,i I BASEBALL ~-i NOTES ~ reaching the W11r denartnwnt "hows that Great Britain's ut'lll)' expenditure~ during thll coming yPar for the devt'loprnent and purchase uf new mnchine weapons and motorir.ell equipment will be ten times the amount ('xpended by the United States for a similar purpose. 'l'lte Britbh will spPnd S:i.OOO,OOO in army modernization work. Tl1e United States Is planning to expPnd more than ever before In peace time on machine weapons, but its total spf'ndings for te~ting and n<>w nev('lopment wot·k will not ~xceed ~300,000. Of the funds allotted to the ordnance department or the United States arrny ahout $140,000 will be utilized for the purchase of truck~. tractors ammunition power carts, and other mnterial for completely motorizing an Infantry regiment. 'Dhe balance will be expended in tank experimentations and In pPrl'eetln)! new arti!IPry. The photo shows • P-ill Currigun. manager of the Boston AntP1·!can lrague team. who Is confident his t<•am will hattie it' way out ot the cellar, so long occupied hy the A meriran league reprPsentath es In the Hub. Levinsky Going West Battling Le\'insl<x, Yt\teran heavy· weight boxer, who ltns found the fountain of youtl1 somewhere in his tru refs and Is k<>eping It n del'P ~ecret, Is planning nu in\Uf·ion of ('alifornia shor·tly. The rejuveuatell battler hn_s quit Philutlelphia and ere long will mnke Lo~ Angeles l1is headquarters. AI Lippe, quite prCiminent unrt \'ery well llkerl along the Pacific ~lope, has several tentati\e mat~!tes lined up for Rnt. fm Given En!iin8ering Play. ILJTTlE JJESTS POOR BUT HAPPY • "You llUYP heen CHlllin~ to Washing ton U great IIIUJIY .}'P:LI'S." "Yt;)s,'' HIIS\H~rPd RPilator Sorghum. "an rl I h a ,-e shown my lm e of coun try In rloing sn" "You nwa n you ttu ve made suer!li<'es ?" "\\'ell, I don't exactly say a govern· rnent Is ung1·uteful, but It doesn't 1111'1\SUre UJ) to a hig COf'JHJt'atfolll !0 mal;in~ up ,, liberal flH.v roii."-Wasblngton Star. W£tfl the Spaces Knohr·a_rne-EHr)' evt>nitl~ before go to bed I write d•1wn my thoughts In my tl:n1·.v. Interesting. don't you thin!;? !'\ina- Oh. most. llo\\ long tJave you !wen doing It? ''Ahout n !'onple ot yl•ars." "Then ~ou must 1J,1ve the first page near!,\ full." BALLED UP RIGIJT I Head of Cagers ' • • • ~ • i II ulihy-"l'uor old Bro\1 11 Is hulled up 1·i~ht tloi• time." 1\'itie-"Been )JI one of ill~ little toot•?" HublJy-".No his wife put a 38 bul:et into him last ....... ~--··, . L Bob B1·owne, well-know lnfleldet, has been signed to manage Lincoln in the new Kebraska State league. •• Credit 111 a gam .. at those o!c.l < olt1111hia uve' ue gr())IIH!s in l'hilauelpiJia, ll:~rry t 11 i~ cn;;iu~ernl what i~ t•rohahly the Iii'S! triple steal in the libto1 y of the ;;ar11e. In tlti~ game the Athletll'S had tl1e lwses full with nu,·ls I.Jeing the r·urme1 ''" third. After the pitcher had Jl1e next Athletic batsman In the hole with "two and notlriug," !Ja,·i:> ligm·cd thnt he would certainly "wuste" the next bull, and quickly Oushed the sigual to the other runuers to start with the pitch . As the pitt•her started his wiiJdup, Davis, who WJS a slow ruuner, nnll therefore receh lug scant attention from the opposing pitcher und catcher, dashed for the plate, the runner on second st:!rted for t!Jird, and the ruuner or fi1·st headed for second. llany had figured the play right-the pitcher •·pitched out," and the butter beiug a right-hand batsman, this gave Oa\ls an opening to slide OYer the plate with the ruu, the runner on second reached thil'll, ant! the runner on fir~t stole second, completing a triple stt'ai. Harry Duds Is also responsible for an adrlition to the •·squeeze play"ono that scoretl two runs on a ""ltJeeze buut" in~lead of only one. The Al11letics intt·oduced this "<louble squeeze'' play in 1U13 and workecl it successfully six out of seven times that season, scoring two runs on u bunt c•n each occasion. The only time it faileu to work was once against \\'l}shington, when, with noholiy ont and runners on second and third, Barry llunted n loopint, littlt~ liner rigllt Into the hands of ( 'hkk Oanrlil, 1he Washington first lmsemun, 1 who was tearing In tJ fielrl the bnut, ancl thl' la!t<'r tompletecl a triple piny, as both runners were so far ~dranceil ttwy were unahle to return to their re-<pectil e ba8es. The Association of l'rofe~sional Bull Players of America has 2,-!~j n!emhers. night." Significant Silence • The oratur may find hi• skill Into oblivion smkln~. While he w!th gifts fur keeping still GainB credit for murh th1nklng, Catcier Fount 'fillrnan, promising receirer· of the Fort Worth Cats, has heen sent to Emnsrille of tile Tbrt e-I league. • • • Heavy Dog!f • • • ~ladge-Su Juc.> i~ no longer In yom· gootl grace~. You founu your Idol It ad feN t>f !'1.1_1, eh? l:tlll'l- \\'or<e, I d.\l'CP.I with bim Hilt! foulltl he had f~et uf lead, Jack Dunn, rnana~~lr of the nalti· more Ol·ioiPs, is n I,Cl'n folln\\Pr ot tl1e tmf mHI attPnils rare meutings whPnen·r· he c·nn. l~a~l'hall l1a~ ils int~mational ftaYor this ) Par, tc•o. Ou tliP Gnirrr~ily nf lllonnis ll'am is a thiru haseman named Lympem ponlo< • • • t;rnie \\"in~ard, for111er Rt. Louis Brown, \1 ho Is now with ~Iinneapolis sa.Ys he !lopes to return to tile big leagues after thi~ season. • •• 'l'etTe lluute of the 'l'hree-1 !('ague has snlu Pitc·her Tex Nugent to T)·ler of th~ Lone Star loop. :"ugent has been n, rei ief hurler with the Tots for two seu;.ons. Tough! 'l'he photo >hows IJ1'. Forrest C. AI· len, an internationnl autho1·ity on the game of basket ball, who ha~ just been elected pr<':'sideut of the N.. tional Bnsket Ball Condtes' A~soclation of America. Doctor Allen·~ teams at the Gui\·er>ils of Kansus, !luring the past se,·eu yenr·s, have won six championships of their conference. Glnrlys-!<o your pnrents are going to lun·e .vour marriage annuled? lletty- Yes. They t hlnk I'm a baby. I jus! can't make them think I'm old er.ou~lt to get a dil orce. • HE WON'T RUN FAR • • • Jim York. veteran southpaw pitcher, has been turned onr to Binghamton of the NY!' leal(•te by the Reading In· ternationals. He Is the property of the Chicago Cuhs. • • • New York scribes are already count lng the Giants "iH." Andy Cohen has made the Infield, while the catching stall' Is the hest In the league-at least so they say. • • • Gr·eyhound racing Is extending to Egypt. ••• Hilerio Martinez, the young Spanlard pugili:;t, wa~ at one time a llulltlghter in his native land. • • • A race around the world by land, sea and air is being sponsored In Tokyo, .Japan, to determine the minimum time and expense. • • • catther Tip 'l'ipton, with the Blr· mingham llarons this spring, has been handed to Tampa of th<' Southeastern league, rounding out Manuger El· lam's cutching staff. AI Lippe, ,veteran pu~llist manager, recently expel'ienced the pleasure of watchin~ th-e of his boxers win their lloul~ on the same card. Two of the most promising youn~ pitrhers in the major leagues this yea1· nre from Rrown ttniYPrsity. They nr·e ITndley with Washington and llillin~;s with Drlo'Oit. After coaching UL Montana state for seyen ,rears, Ott Hrnnnry recent!~- resigned to a~>ume char~e of athletics at Brigham Young unh~r,ity In Provo, Utah. Bill ltn~b. a fit·st ~nrk<>r who has heen 1\ ith the St. Paul Saints of the Ameriran ns~oc-iation, ha~ h2en pur!'ha~~•l hy the ~p:·in~fieltl ~IId~ets of the West~rn ns~orintion. DJn 0 Lear·~·. the ,-eterun long-distance walker, lws walked well over ltlO,OOU miles in comtletition <I nee 1H'il. The l)i,tnuce is, four ti•neo ar.)und the earth. Bill fluher. a YPternn who did the thlr·d basing for the Buft'nlo <'humpions in the International last sea<on, ltns hrrn purchn~e•l hy Llttl~ Itnl'k of th<> Southern league. The olde't and yonng-p<t cnnt2;;tants in the "Bunion dt•rh)" fr"m L•J$ An gelcs, Calif., to New Yo1·l; city, nre t'haril'S llJrt, n;:ed sixty-thr·ee and Ted ,Jo,eph, nged sis:teen. The Bloomington cluh of the ThrPelengue announces the put·ci~:Jse of Pitcher RtHl.1• Wepfer frnm MontgomPry of th~ !:'outh<•:Jstrrn cirl'nlt. lie has hnn two years· experiem·e. In New York s-tate a jockl'y is rated an app1-entice until he ride~ l1h for·tieth winner. Else11 here the peri or! of his no\ !reship lasts until one year after the date of hi< fir,t ,-ictory. The O~ll!ls Steers have ~old Pitcher Leo Skidmore to ~linneapolis 'f the American n~snciution. 'rhe Steers bou~ht !:'kiclmore from Baltimore of the Jnlernatlonnl during the winter. The pacing dh·lsion of the Hambletonian stul:e, to be lirst raced lu lO!lO, has been named "The fleers" after the fa111ous drii·er of ll~ht harness horses who died n few years ago. Jimmy ~loore, vete1·nn pla)·er und maua:;er 11 ho was bumed in a lwtel fire nt De Funlak Springs, Fla., durIng tne \\'Inter, is recm·ering- and hopes to don a uniform this season. Culilornin Is spendiug more than $12 000 reconstructing It>' footbull field at Berkeley where nPxt full It will entel'tnin rival <quu<ls on oue of the finest tur·f g1·idirons in the wot'lcl. I This Brnnnon the Browns hn ve on second base is enjoying his first ta~te of baseball ns how It Is pln)·ecl in r he majors. Last year he wns willt Tulsa In til!' \Yestern leall!/01, a St. Louis owned farm. The C'hil'ago Federation of LalJor has purl'l•asl'd a 100-acre site near the city ou which a golf course and clubhouse will be erected for their exclusive use. Each one of the 300 members bolus a labor union card. • • • • • • • • • • • • :'>'FOH~IATIO:'\' Ur 1ry Davis :' , ;, ,r·. _;;: · Fnn tl~ first time In histo1·r the sen- HI); A and Japan are ac>tually ut : • (•) -· " -;hl ; 1··~------~.,- !-'. . . .---· \\'hile the !Jill declares for· the retention of the pr·Inciple of local contributiol' towar·d flood control projects, loeal inte1•e,;ts uncler the bill mu't furnish only such additional rights of way as are neelletl fill' lev~~ on the main channel of the Mi"'i"ippi nnd must maintain the !!nod control "·ork~ when compl~tetl. The federal go,·ernmcnt will h~ar the entire C<H of Cllll· strnctlon of leYees nnd other tlood control \\'o)f'];g ;;n,J ·,\ill furnish ri;:hts or "ay for icn'es along flood way~ 1\uu ~pillwa) s. C • hitting <'orps of outer ganleners In the lnnd, hi~ pitc·hing staff an "up and coming" thi'Ult, and his catching d<>pnrtnwnt "tl<> cau~e for wul'ry.'' "It Is hurd to sny ju>t now what the Cubs wltl do." tlw Uhic>agn Nationals' pilot said, "l,ut If present uppearnnces are ot any conse· qucnce we should be at the top. "I expect l'ittsbul gh to be the hnrde~t club In the league to hent, with New York an(] St. Louis also standing In the way ol the dram pionship. Brooklyn should he a hetter J!Cfo!!:. dub this year, and the snme g11es for ~ Cincinnati. , 'l'he rate slwuld be even ·' ...'' closer than that of lnst sc•ason." Heverting to his own teltlll, the !run.· "'''•'''~:'"' ' ; hnndcd but well-liked leacler nf Ch!cal(o's i?c:+i.¥ , i ' \ Northsiders said second nnd third hnse ·. •,t,'·l,?;, hn,•e caused him the most tronhle, hut 1 these now have been pretty well flllen /{1!from the outstanuing mlltel'ial on hand. "Freddy Maguire nnd Normun MeMillan, both newcomers, hnve sh~wn good work at second, while ~;!mer Yoter i '' · and John Butler, the latter also a recent \~ addition, make It hard to rltoose between ( , \.!_·. them for the 'hot corner.' I consider . q,,. all ahle to cover second and third with · · credit." }~ \, ":.< 1 ThP other In tiel<.! posts he has made ,.' ,-.# I I ,6.~ .,.~"' ~' up his mind about. Elwood Eng! I~ r, ' L~ ..., twenty years oltl, i~ "a fixtur·e at ~hort," y· · · and Cltal·iey Grimm a "certninty at first.'' i throne. He lnt~t:•l<:>d to send airplanes over to ~cutter mPS">I!:e• to the peo• ,,, . ... .. .. ~ ~ ,-. pl<>, an<.! I•"l'itaps to fiy thPre himself. • .IJc('nrthy Besidessui<l. bt!lie\ iug his outfield "the :• : ; ~;;,:,-;>,~Ali.~·:····'· But the British f;OYPrtlment discovered countr' 's be~t hitters," the Cuh~· pilot ~-! ~ ·.,q;-.o:;?><~Vl'~,,., ~dectar·es it abo is good llefensil·ety. the plan, fnFtratell it nnd ordered k':Vt·t~ci:L:-i $.{~'~:.'>~'1c1i; ''The ndclition of Kikl Cuyler fr·om Cai'OI to leave the country. It was ru- 1 Riggs Stephenson. thc Pirul<'s gi1·es us a good hall player mo1·ed Ia• might cnme to the United 1:: w ho Is a powerful butter. He po~•e>~es u strong arm and is fn'it. I ":fy States. LearlPr-< of the pe:"nnts' party denirll that they had any part in >;<• lool: for Hazen to make this season an outstanding one for the Cui)S. ~·: @ "\\'ith Strphen~on and Ha!'k 1\'ilsnn In left and center, and .,1mch Carol's scheme. extra strength as Cliff llenthrote and Earl \\'elJb, is it any wonder ®. that ! ~ny it is the greate~t of hitting outfi<'ius?" ® ttE)llE!t ~rn:sOLIXJ, In an official :~ "The pitching staff looks uote to Se('rt•tary Kdlo,!!~, states good to me. It Is young-only twu men •:!! : are o1·rr thirt~·-anll is· com in~ along all the time. The oldsters or the ~ that Italy is entirely willing ro collnbor.lte with the Cnit('rt Stutes in the C! ro1·ps, Art Xrht und llarold Cnr·bon, ure not through with the game ~ hy any means. Tlwn the1·e is Perce ~Ialone, gotten from ~linnea[J<•iiS. ~: negotiation of a mullilatl'ral anti-war : a young fpllow who ~hould mal:e good on the team. And the 1 et- ~ treaty. The State department otliciuls, :' eraus, Hoot. Junes, Blnl:e and Oshorne. made a good showing in tr:Hning. ~ howeYer, do not like the rlictator·~ sut;~.J gestion Jhat the CnitPd States should [ ® pa1 titipate in uu international jurl~ts' ~®®\!J®®€@®~®~1!>®~~®®~@~®®@®®®®®@®'.!>€~ conference \\ hil'l1 would discuss the whole ~uh.ieet of ou~'awing wa_r. It Is Illinois Experimenting not believed Italv w1!1 pre~s th1s point. ·_ for Sod for GridironB en~ineer~. ate has assumed the prer·ngati1·e of at I\ ice to the ~uprcme Court of the l"uited States. lly a vote of 40 to :11 It approverl a resolution a•ldn:.; that Qonald C. llichherg of Chicago, rnun>--el for the national C'lnference on the ''aluatlon of American railwnv~ he allowed to lnterwne in pr·oceedi1;g~ befot·e the court fnr the purpo~e or making nn oral nr·gunwnt nnd filing a b1·ief. The conference llicllberg represents was form~ll some rears ago by radical groups and Is headed lJy Senator Nor·ris of Nebrnska, who iutroduc~d the extrao1·dinary resolution. 'rhe ca•e In question I~ an appeal by the railroad~ from a lower court'~ decision upholding t'te inter-tate commerl-e commission's ruling with respect to tl1e determination ot valuation for rate-making and recapture purposes. :.· two IH>~itions on tl1e Chien~o CUllS' squad nre w11rr) ing ~hmager ,Joe Mccur·thy, 11 ho heliPI'Ps his outfl<>ltl tu lle the hest LHFJE~S • • • • • • • • • I "IJI<.IJu gil hold <II unJ dough, Jack, since you hroke jail r' "Yeh, I got 100 bu~lts for ruunln' expen~es." • • • Intimacy With Geniu1 While ne kept silence, he seemed great His art wa~ fine tn paint or outty, He talkerl an hour-to indicate That mn;be he wn• kind o' ·'nutty!" • • • Not Too Harsh Dot-Su they're married. Why. she's oil! enough to be his g-rnndmother. )Jargy-Dou't !Je unkind. But ~be Is oltl enough to be his mother. • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• No Courting Houle Oil iter- You can't kiss tlmt girl In here! llurohl-llut we're here to get married. Isn't this the courthou~e. Ollicei·-Ycs, !Jut not the courting hou~e. Left Him Nothing "You say thnt nrlvertising ruins )our busiuess?" "! tried tlwt la£1 year, and the people hnught out everything I had In tile store.'' More Sophisticated "Deare,t," he said rather sadly, "It <lopsn·t ~eem like the sarue old smile you u•erl to gl\ e me." ":"/o. Juck," Ehe returned, "this Is t1 new one. !'1 e been studying at tl Sl'hool of d.-umalic art." Telling Her Symptom• Doctor <meeting patient's buhby)llon't suppose she sniTNed any after-cn·.... ts of Iter Illness 2 IIusiJ:uui-Xo, but e,·erybody else dill." No Interest in Life Hus~and (anxiously) - ~1y wife seems not to hnve the slightest In· teres! In life. Doctor- What makes you think that? Hushund- Weli, I've tried her with golf. billiards, footb:JII and racing, nnd It's just like talldng to a stone. An Extremist • "She's a <OII\'1'1111 tiPu•l ISJl I she?" "I should say ~'' Tl•t' Ius! !)inner she nttmrl<'<t ~11e carr!Pd tlWr.J the cook.'' |