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Show June 15, 1928 THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Page Three •:A..:..:..:..:..:..>:..~ C0 OO>«XJ,.:..:..X..) 0 ~0 t ~!J,.)'...:+»f...:..y_..:..:..:..:..:..-:..:~ :!: A A 1' 'A \Vilson Started as Fighter A y :: ? t :i; :i; S; t t J ;i; ;i; 1-Ciass ot 1028 In "convict" garb In commence ment costume parade at Columbia university , New York C'lty. .--L(Kige , at left, and dining hall of the Pierce estate on the Brule river, northern Wisconsin , picked by President tor his summer vacation residence. 3-Fiag-dr aped Security building In Kansas City which was the ~~hu~... party headquart ers during the conventio n. •• f t. . REVIEWOF CURRENT EVENTS our Aviators Make Flight Across Pacific Ocean in Three Big Hops. By EDWARD W. PICKARD ALIFORN IA to Australia by airplane 1o three bops I For the first the Pacific ocean has been by the air route, the great being accomplis hed by two Aus· Capt. Charles Kingsfoi'd war ace, and Charles T. P. U!m, two Americans , Harry W. Lyon Jamrs Warner. Their machine the monoplan e Souther11 Cross, used unsuccess fully in the Arctic by Captain Wilkins. constant communic ation with tl:e and with ~e-ssels by radio, airmen made the 11lght to na wail much trouhle. The worst pnrt the trip wa~ the next hop, nearly miles to the Fljl lslan•ls, and this they ran Into repeated that were mo~t skillfully by Kingsford -Smith, the chief This was the longest overseas ever made. and If they had been down before reaching Suva the pos~!Jle places to light without were two coral atolls In the group 1,866 miles from the point ln Hawaii. As Is was landed safely at Albert park, with only 30 gallons of gas left the tanks, having made the hop In and 33 minutes. White~ and of Fiji joined In giving tbe a rousing welcome. After a rest the plane was flown to beach for the take-ofT for BrlsAustralla, 1,7G2 miles away, the taking the airmen through a reof frequent storms. south of the Island£' and New Caledonia . Brisbane they were to fly to Syd1100 miles to the south. newspape rs printed the rethat Captain Kingstord ·Smlth was brink of Insolvency and started to raise a fund for blm. the trans·Pacl flc flight orlg· was planned Kingsford -Smith the aid of the Aus-tralian govand It was promised. Ad· payments purchased the plane the flyer came to the United There followed the disastrous ftlght from Oakland to Honolulu seven lives were lost. The governme nt withdrew Its and urged King~ord-Smith to home. He refused an11 conplans tor the Callfornla ·to-Anstllght on limited resources anrt obtained backing from Allen mllllonnlr e oil man of Los But even with this backing faces financial ruin. the week there were report~. on alleged radio messages, that and the dirigible Itnlla were on Josef land east of Spitzberge n. for the missing explorers was by the steamship Hobby, by Holm, Norwegian aviator, by parties of Alpine chasreurs. Italian departmen t of aeronautic s In communic ation with Captain hoping to Induce him to join hunt by air. FAR as the Republica n national leOmi!nlttee was concerned , Herbert was given nearly all the con· Southern delegates In the hearconducted at Kansas City. The however, It was stated would .. ,.,,1,11 before the committee on and possibly before the In the committee hear· the secretary of commerce woo of 73 contested uelegates, bls Impressiv e victory being In the ot Texas In whlcb be gained the delegation . By conrervat lve this brought the total num· Hoover votes to 472, the rnanecessary to nominatio n befog The experts then figured that with his 79 Peonsyl~anla delecould put Hoover across the he chose to do so. The conthe South Carolina delegation , wa& for Lowden, was withdrawn Hooverlte s. the politicians gathered In CltJ many expressed lhe opln- ton that Senator James Watson of Indiana or l:lenator Charles Curtis of Kansas woulrt make a good ,-tee pres!· dentlal nominee. Some Hooverltc s especially favored Watron for socond place, figuring hls nominatio n wouid "pull the stinger of the corn belL" Farmer cruroders of the regions sur· roudlng Kansas City were preparing to move on the conventio n city In con· siderable numbers, by automobil e and train, and many of them wore badges on which was printPd this amendej version of the Hoover slogan: "Who but Hoover? Anybody." · A I'CORDING to the part!nl report of the ~enate campaign fund com· mittee, total expenditu res In behalf of the various Presidenti al candidate s to date have been only $731,087. Of this rum the Hoover (:xpenditu res have heen $:lS0,822. Frank 0. Lowden Is tredited with having spent ~G0,922.00. 1'he commit tee found $37H.50 has been collected onrt expenrted by the supporter s of \'lee Pr·eRiflent Dawes. The expPnses of Go;ernor Smith of New Yorl,, leading Demo· cratlc aspirant, were $121,471.0-l. Col· leetions to the Smith fund amounted to $120,911.40. The need p1-..cnnven · tlon campaign fund amounted to ~41,430.(\l. His expenditure~ are list eu at $38.752.79. ·J. PERSTII. 'G made a GEXrushJOHN trip from Paris to Cherbourg and Jumped aboard the Leviathan for the United States, and both in New York and In France the report was clrcnlated that he was called home hurriedly by friends who were starting a boom for him as o dark hor<P. candidate for the Republica n nominatio n for Presluent. '-1 ARSHAI, l \- Northern CHA:'\'G TSO-LIN, war lord, gave np his dictatorsh ip and abrmcloned Peking to the Nationalis ts. With his household he tied to Manchuri a and just as his train reached Mukrten It was bombeil presumab ly by Nationalis t agents. Some soldiers were killed and Chang himself was so badly lnjureu that his recovery was considered doubtful. The Nationalis t troops gradually occupied Peking while forces left by Chong and those of the foreign !ega· tlons strove to prevent disordrr. General Hsl·shan, for years known as the model go;emor of Shansi province, was appointed garrison <'Ommanrter of the Peking-Ti entsin area and at once began the "ork of reconstru( 'tion and developme nt. 1'he Nattonnliflt govprnment n•I•ed the immf'fllate evacuation of Amrricnn troop~ from Tientsin, where the United States hn~ maintained part of a regiment fiinre the Boxer rebellion. In \\'ashlnl!to n It was statecl that our governmm t could not comply with the request at once. upon two cases arising in PASS!NG the state of Wa;;hington, the Su· New York federal courts. Also writs of attachmen t agalnst any property held by or for Bluckmer were filed with 22 companies or lndlvldual s, In· eluding all financial Institution s In which Blackmer Is believ~d to have accounts. In New York city they were also served upon banks with whlcb he did business. Only a part of the tax, lnterect and penal ties assessed ngalnst the oil man was understoo d to be for his alleged profits in the ContlneutR l TrarUng com· pany, un adjunct of the Teapot Dom' CliSe. I :l; ~; l + .. + .,. BASEBALL ..@II NOTES 1!41 Chalmers Clssel Is called "Chip" In Perryville , Mo. •• • 1o Walberg nod Grove the Athletics A'S assertion, In her reL ITIJUA:'\'l cenUy adopted new constitutio n, that Vilna Is the capital or the country was denoum·e!l before t11e r;eague of Nation~ couiU:il by Poland when the council opened Its fiftieth session in Geneva. Forel1;t1 ~finlster Zaleski sub· mitred a copy of his note of protest to Kovno In which he asserted this could 011ly envenom the Polish Lithuania n relations. Lithuania 's claim, he said, bad no juridical foundation as Poland's ri ~h t s over Vllna were deftnltely estnhllshe d by the Vilna and Polish diets and by the ambassad ors' conference in 10~4. It was not believed this se,slon of the council would do much business as both Rrinnd of France and Stre>eman n of Germany were absent on account of Illness. have two great left-hande d pitchers. • • • l~d ~!orris, Boston American s' rookie pitcher, was an airman in the marine corps for two years. • •• Chattanoo ga has returned Pitcher llurry Ili0miller to Columbus of the AH:eriean assodntio n. • • • Pitcher Speed ~Iartin, cast adrift by the Seattle Inliinns, has been tuken uboaru by the j!i;;~ion Bells. • • • Babe Hutb lws set 500 us the home run murk which he expects to reach before ending his major league career. • • • llenry Cullop, hard hltlng outfielder. was purchased from the Buffalo clun 0! the lntemalio nal league by Atlanta • • • ym:-~NA received reports, s-eemingly anthcntlc. that Ahmetl Bey Zogu, President of Albania, was getting rearty to proclaim a monarchy with himself as the king. lie has had a stormy career, fighting with the Democrats and Liberals and once being wounded by an assassin. In December, HJ~4. he led a successful revolt against Bishop Noll's rule and next month was appointed President by the national assembly. He Is only thirtyfour years old and besides being Pres· !dent has held the offices ~ premie~ and command er In chief of the oa· tiona! forces. P deal RE~tiER l\IUSSOL il\'[ took a good of wind out of the sans of his detractors by the restraint of his annual address before the Italian senate. His hearers were especially interested In what he might say about the threatenin g situation In the Bal· kans. hut the Duce cut out all violent talk and made a plain offer of friend· ship to Yugo-Slav ia. 'l'hen dismissing the idea of enmity, he declared Italy could not walt forever tor Yugo· Sl:nla to settle Its domestic problem3, and warned that treaties would be no gornl anywa.v if a fl'iendly, moral atmo~phere bet wePn the two peoples wa' not developed . He ridiculed f11e pre· diction ma1le hy a former Yugo-Slav minister that war soon would break out between the two countries, end· lng with a peace signed at Venice. He had nothing to ~a.v concernin g the dis· putes with Austria about Upper Adlge, hnt announced that a treaty would soon be signed with France that would settle all out~tanding difference s betw~en·the French and Italians. Mu~solini spoke at some length nhout the astonishin g J!:rowth of t~•e United States In wealth and world power. lle salil hP hart no complaint to make ac;alnst American lmmigra· tlon r<'strldion s and the Italian quota, thougl' dcplorini: lhe reasons which prompted that legblntion . "As for the naturalize d American~ of Italian or!· gin," he rontlnued . "thPy are Amerl· ran citizens and therefore forel1;t~ers so far as we are concerned . We limit our;;elv<'s to hoping they will continue to be proud of their Italian origin" W. Ta1·bert, an outfielder, has been 0urchaf.'eu from the Boston Americans by Hollywood of the Pacific Coa,-t league. • •• During his big league career, from 100;:) to the end of last season, Ty CoiJb ama~ed the g1·and total of 887 stolen bases. • • • The New York Yankees have released Joe Marty, young right-hand ed pitcher, to Albany of the Eastern league under option. • • • New York Yankees esta!Jllshe d a record last year as the first club In American league history to finish with an average of over .700. •• • Franlc Frisch, St. Louis second baseman, set a new chances accepted when he 1,027 during the season of • •• Cardinals ' record tor went after 19:.!7. .Manager Spencer Abbott of Pueblo bas released Doc Silva, the veteran outfielder, who will revert to the HeadIng club of the Interuatio nul league. • • • At one time last season ail el~ht of the New York-Penn sylvania lengue teams were tied for first place with an even percentag e of .GOO. • • • Johnny Conrad, a small infielder who I~ not so much of a shake witl• the bat but who can field ring", has been taken on by Lute Boone's Des Moines entry. • • • preme Court of the United States ha~ For six consecutiv e year~ Duzzy ruled that evidence of pmhibitlo n vlo· Vance of the Brooklyn Dodgers led lations obtained by wire tapping Is the National league in strikeouts . Dur· admissible In a criminal proceedin g log the l\J~7 season Duzr.y funned 18-l and that a conviction resulting from ambitious batters. such evidence Is not a violation of the • • constitutio nal guarantee against "un· Cd Morris of the Boston Hed SCJ:t Is reasonabl e search and seizure.'' The b1·inging nil sorts of smiles to the face question was decided hy a five to four of Manager Bill Carrigan the~'C d;\YS. ruling. Chief .Tustlce Taft wrote the The rookie Is looking like the best majority opinion Ju>tlces llolmrs and roung~ter on the team. Brandeis, In dissenting opinions. scath· • lngly denounced the placing of judicial Leo Mangum. right-hand pitcher sanction upon the <'Ommission of a anti banjo player, was released by the crime to detect crime. .Tustice Rutter Giants recently to the Buffalo club 'll also filed a dissenting opinion and the Internatio nal league. Leo was ob· Justice Stone announced he con<'urred tnlned from Buffalo last winter on an with the views of .Justices llolme~. optional . agreement . Brandeis and Butler. In holding wire topping did not • -Arthur Julm, Giants' outlielder, is amount to a search and seizure with· TL.\:\TLC CITY ha;lng nbandon~>d j said to have the largest bunus of any In the meaning of the fourth amend· It; annual beauty contest, the baseball pla~·er since the lmmortnl ment to the Constituti on, Chief Jus· "'internuti onal pageant of pulchritud e" linus Wagner. Jahn can hold sis tlce Taft said that while this amm{]· held in Galveston attracted the IItten· baseballs with hls palm turned face ment might have a proper applicatio n tlon of thO'le who enjoy such affairs. downward an~ not flrop 'em. to a sealed letter because of the conf;elected beauties from many states • • • stitutiona l provision for the Post OfLaurence Alvarez, star athlete ol fice flrpurtmen t and because ~mch a and a number of foreign countries letter Is In the possession of the gov· gatherNl in the Texas city, and paraded 1 Jacksonvi lle high school. has been along the sen wall. Mi>'S Ella Van taken on by the Jasks01n-ille club and ernment It could not npply to com· Hue son, the entrant from Chicago, was will be carried til rough the sea~un munkatlo n hy "·ire. flr;;t chosen as "M!Rs America," and Pre>idcnt Gl'iuer has unnounced. lit· then, heln!( adjurtged the mo~t pulchrl- play;, lntleld, outfield or catclies. NCLE SAM proposes to l!;<>t a lot tufllnou;; of tile whole lot, was crowned • • • of money from IIenry M. Black· "jJI;;s Universe." She Is twenty-tw o Toronto fnus, In IJUrtlculur, an ·. mer, the wealthy Demer oil operator years old, tall and ;--lender, with long, those of the lnternatio ual lea1,'Ue h who fled to France to avoid the Tea- dark brown hair. The other prize win· general, are remarking nt length upon pot Dome Inquiry. Income taxes, In· ners In their order were the girls from the clouting abilities of Dale Alexan terr~t and penalties aggregatin g $8,France, Ttnly, Colorado, West VIr· der. His h:tting has been one of tht l 4fl8,9:l5 have been a~sessed against ginla, Canada, Luxembou rg, Ohio, Sao big 1·easons why Bill o·llara's Leaf,him nnrt tax lleng filed In Dem·er and Antonio an<i 'l'ulsn. ne rustling In the hi~h breezes. • • • • • A U '71-/IS IS IVHAi eoMES !=ROM NIJ'TJ-IER, SEE IV.4AI I FOUJ.JD Pt.A.VOJG !V/11-1 8Af) BOYS, OVER 1/J '77-IE. I J.IOP£ IT WilL B£ A LESSOM 1b YOU NEX:r BJ.Oel< I OUFl .soNr "FIND" 0 F YEAR y WELL known Hstic pro- chose the latter and, after a nnm- '1' ,1, moter SIIYS that wllen H:~<'k ber of ups and downs, made the •y• 1 ·',· Wilson of the Cubs decl.led highest grade. '1' ;1; to sene hls country by playing Wilson Is one lldng proof of the profes~ional basebull the prize ring fact that baseball managers make ::: ,:, was deprived of a man who might many mistakes. He was on the 't' lmve won the hea,•y-wei!(ht cham- roster of the l\'ew York Giants for :;: ,:, pionshiJI, wl'ites nalpt. Cunnon In two years, but failed to set the • • A the Chif'ngo Journal. •• •i•v1 ,:, world afire. John ..uc1 •• 'l'he authority for Graw farmed him to '1' ~ ,1, this statement Is Toleuo, Intending to •y• 1 ·!•~ none other than Jim recali him at a later ')' ~ ,1, Dougherty , thP baron date, hut Johnny or .,. of Leiperville . who some other person ~; ,:, g1·ew up with \Yil· In his employ slipped •1• '1' son an d 1Joug 1It hi m .;. up on the job and ';' ,, 1 •.• his first basehall the time for filing •:• ;i; suit, for which he reL-alls passed by •1• palu the muniflcrn t without any recall •1• ,1, ,1, sum of $1.50. action being ta k en. •'I'• 1 \\'ilson was noted When the drafting ,:, LD his own borne season rolled around, •1• ;i; town for his tremen Brooklyn and Phlla •1• dous strength and his uelphia both put in •1• speert. Hack loved bids for Wilson. But •1• to hattie and was the Hoblns had fin· '1' A ? ,1, mixed up In all sorts !shed a half gume ,., 1 • • of fisticun's, e,•er willahead of the Phils, •I• ing to give "eight Hack Wilson. which meant In the I. •l• and never asking wuy of baseball fig- Y l ·.:,' quarter when the going got sultry. uriog that , the Quakers got fi rst 't, ;i; As he grew older and kept tak- choice on Wilson. They exercised :~:1 ,1, log on weight, he assumed the pro- the right and Hack joined them. •I• 1 portions ot a heavyweig ht, aud for His transfer to tbe Cubs followed '1' a time hesitated between following and today he Is one of the most •:• ;1: the ring or the diamond. He flnHily highly rated swatters 1o balldom. :~ .:. ·!• •:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:+>:..:..:..:..:--:..:-:..:..:..:--:+:..:..:..:..:..:+:..:..:-x«+:. .:+X..!+) ;i; TIGER S SECUR E Soldier Field Stadium Paul Has Made Rise in Game. Easterl ing Remark able A ~urly, ~rCJad-shoul•lered yCJung fel · low frum Ueo1·gia, wilh ll stit·~ tlf u~· n umte for a hut, may rt>store Iii~ natile statp'~ unelent halo or bast>IJall fame, if l'aul Easterling , tweuty-tlm •e-yeur· old recruit outlieider of the Detroit l'igrrs, cnntlnues to smark the horsehide ut his present explosiYe speed. l\'ot since Ty Cohb tirst burst UIJOD the !Jig leagues as the Georgia peach In that same 'l'iger outfi eld has a II player given the Geo;·gia fan~ so much to cheer about. Young Easterling 's dramatic rise to stardom forms one or tile most absorbing romances baseball lms developed. A little more than a year ago. he was riding plunging field urtiilery steeds und dntwing down $12 a month from Uncle Sam as a regular a rrny corporal at ~'ort Lewis, near Tacoma, Wash. Today the ex-artiller yman's a certaln fixture In the big ~how at $800 a month. He is said to drive a baseball farther than any man in the Amerl· can leUb'Ue except Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, the Ynnl,ees' mastodoni c maulers, both of whom outweigh bim by many pounds. When Easterling reported to the Detroit training camp in Texas this spring, he was, in Manager Moriarity 's eyes, just another busher trying to get along, nut he promptly proved himself that blue diamond of the tlareball world-a born hitter to whom all pitching, minor and major league, looks alike. His conquest of fame was assured when he hammered out home runs In ~nch of hls first three games in the American league. 'I'he first smash was the longest four·baj!g er ever bit at un Soon to Be Comple ted When Navy meets l\'otre Dame on Soldier Field, October 13, In a football classic of the fall, Chicago's $7.· 500,000 memorial to its war uead wl'l stand complete d-not only as the greatest stadium In the world, but also ns one of the world·s greatest amphitheater and exhibition halls. Famed alroady as the modern Coliseum where 200,000 worshiped at the Eucharist ic congress, where Army playeu the Navy and where Tunney defeated Drmpsey for the seconcl time, Soldier field, when completed , will include, br siues a place for spectacular. outdoor llngeants, an extensh·e ~eries of exhibition halls. On either siue, halls 97~ feet In len~th and 50 feet wide will afl'ord great quarters for exflOsitions, In ad clition to the 000 feet long hall at one enu. 1'he temporary woollen structures forming seats at one end of the statllum have been removed and con <·rete stands are rising in their place. 'fhe~e woodeu seats won promint>nre during the Tunney-D empsey fighl as the $5 rim-side locutions. The staPaul Easterling . tlium's builders, the South Purk com missioners , have promised to have the the St. Louis park. Then lie went oo completed stadium In readiness fot to leau the league with the dizzy avthe :'\'avy-Xotre Dame game this fall. eruge of .G2:i. A native Georgian, Ea,terllng as a Again Olympi c Coach youngster cheritihed no hopes of some day chasing flies In that Detroit outfield which Tyrus Raymond Cobb, Idol of the state, then graced with such distinction . Instea.d, his one ambition was to become a soldier. He did so, too-enlisting a mutter of hours after lie reached the minimum age of eighteen on Septembe r 14, 1923. Easterling ·s baseball career dutes from a certain afternoon when Capt. Clarence ~'. Murray, Lewis coach, saw him fooling around on the fort dia· mood with some fellow "redlegs" from his own battery. As the officer watched, Easterling banged the ball a healthy clout. THERE Is nothing that has ever taken the place of Bayer Aspirin as an antidote for pain. Safe, or physi· cians wouldn't use it, a.'ld endorse its use by others. Sure, or several million users would have turned to something else. But &et real Bayer Aspirin (at any drugstore) v;ith Bayer on the box, and the word genuine printed ~ ~ed; A.Bptrln Ill the trade mark ot Ba:rer Manutaetur e ot llilonoaeetteaeldeater ot SallCJIIcacl4 APPETITE IMPRO VED ••• QUICKLY c~rter's Little Liver Pills Purely Vegetable l.auUwe -..q~!!::.i~J move the bowclt free from. pain aD.d unpleasant after They relieve the evttem of collltip .. tion poisona which dull the de1ire for food. Remembet they are a doctor'• prescriptioa. and can be taken bv the entire £am.lly. All DruJgiStl 25< and 7Sc Red Packagea. effect~. CARTER'S llrliPILIS Chance Brought Wild Rice to United States r:tee t'a111e 10 Ame ric·a lJ~ ucc itil!nt. In tile rea I lli! l-l n riPe la den r e ~ se l fro m ~l a daga'• · ar f111 l.he rpoo l put in to ('lmr! Psloll ha1·hor to a rug-iag storm Tile cnp tnin, not i11g thnt the la11tl anti soil near l·fmrleston reseiD· hied tl1u1 wiwre t he 1·il'e wus g rown. ga r e tile !!o1·ern or tof lhe colony a ha n<l fnl . tf'l li n ~: !lim tL.tl it mig ht grow if planteLI. rel at e:;. lile 1\'as hlngton St nr. Tile gu,·em•Jr IJI :m ted the rice and se1·ern l mnntl 1s tater hnn ·esteu tile tlrsl crop ere t g1·owu in America. Since thut time rice has steadily ad,·unced until now It I ~ a lt•a ding product of the somhe rn s tates. II tl rst spren d In to Geo r~la from the Carolinas, liiid wi t b til~ heg inning of the Cl•:il w<Ir it entere d !.nnisia na , nnw tbe leuflin~: rire sta te of the Uni on It gradu a lly f11Und Its way to Florida, Missi ssippi, Aln hama, Texas nnd. fiMI· ly into Arl< nnsa s. Lat Pr its c ult!~a· tion was tried with s ueress lo Call· rcrnia. '""""I On the Carpet "Your stand ing tn stu dies Is ~tls· factory bul your 1Ieportment Is not." "\\'ill thai keep me fro m graduatin g, prufpS:--tJr?'' "Well, if you keep on we may have to give you a bi nd; sheepskiu ."Louisdlle Cour:er- J our nal. "There's a coming sta r!' His Own Buffet The captain had culled · the tum. Policeman (to tu-r es led s u>pect)'fhe eighteen-y ear-old lad who hall How clo you nccount fo r a ll this sil· ne'er played on a regular team rle· verwa re iu your pocket? veluped amazingly under the officer's Prisoner - \\' ell . you see, offi cer, we tutelage. Soon, hecuuse of his terrific aln'l g~>t on sideboa rd a t home.-Bosbombardin g of the best slants the soltoo Trans('rip t. dier-twirle rs could produ ce, he . was being calleu the "Gunner." Charted Course Tile> phuto silu11 >; \\'ill""" L. II a~ lle became the army's "wonder hit· "Anyone can see," s:dd tile waggish ward, who for the fifth time will be u ter," In 1924, dr·iving oot 14 bome run~ member of tile coaching staff of tho' In 2:! games for an average of .4:19, gtnzier as his ns ~ i Ria nt lwndPd him a Amc1·ican Olympic team. Uaywurd and the following year knocking 22 piece of j!luss t1 e'd jus t rim med, " that I've got my work cu t out for me."has !Jeen traek coach nt the unh·ersit~ homers In 31 games and averagin~ l'arm aucl l•' ireglcJe. of OI·eg<Jn for 2G years and In that .41 !J. time has created ll mo~t em·iable Like Babe Ruth, who twlrleu big record. That Kind league ball before tuming swat specialist, Easterling 's talents are varied Hnrold-L ittle girl . you ha ve made on the bull field. In the decitling game me happy. Here Is the r ing. for the service champion ship of the l'hyllis-IR that it? Don't I b'et any No1·thwcst the opposition filled the cracker jack with il? bags in the last of the n in tli. There was but one out and the score wa~ Impress ed An archer In l'lori<la recently shot tied. • "Thnt snlesman seew" interes ted tn an arrow 1,1'i:i feet. Into this di·amatic >iluatoon strode the leopard." "~~h! lie thinks It's a • • the Gunner. Stepping iutu tile box h~ dottert lion." Spain will ~hortly boas! modern vel funned the batter, till"n cli-hed up ofiromes iu St. Sel!astiau and Madrirt tlu·ee sti·ikes to the nexl man. r-etiring Well, That's Profitable • the side. Dick Ca\·ill, a profession al In 1910, ""·lwt 11ifl you reuli'!.e on your s tock. Not coutent, be tore into tile Hrst ~worn 40 yards In 18 seconds at Port· hall pitched and dro1·e It out of the marliN [Jiunge?" laud. Ore. "What a rtunce I was!" lot. 'fhnt clout gave the pPnnant to the Lewis nine, and it al so hrought Tile pitting of game chickens against several tempting [lrofesslon al ofl'ers ttl As They Say each other ls regarded as a nutional Easterling hlm>'t'lf. ".\ fter you fenther your nest?" s.port in Delgium. L'pon his discharge from tt1e arm~ "Then you rnn plume yoursclf. "In SPptembe r, 192G, EuRterling wa~ Mobile Hegister. A total of $1!!,600 will be hung up signed lly Seattle of the Paciftc Coas. ln purses at the Ohio state fair races league anrl farmed out for seasoning !Rn't It unpleasan t to ulways hnve 1Jt Columbus, heginnlng Angus! 27. to Bloomingt on of the Three·EyP a "high-~trunj!" pprson 1n the crowrt? league. During the 1927 race Seattle recalled the ex-regular army fence Gr~ylwund mc-lng may be barred buster an•l Detroit grabhed him when from En;:land as the result of recent attacks on the sport by p;ominent the sea,on ended. Is Foot Comfort persons. F1 equently yon hear people C say, ") ly fed perspire win· • • • ohen's war Cry ter and summer when I put The new rules regarding chess or" Back In the not -so-long-ago da)~ on rubbers or heavier toot· ve1·y dhupp~>ii l t l ng. The re Is nothing \1 hen DaYe Baneroft was cuptaln ol .-!ll~,wear-th en when I remove :n t hem almut penuliziug either player the Giants, he wnulrt (Jenetratc the nlr fi•<•es my teet chill end ofren my hooe for snoring. with "BPanty" whene1·er one of the t luough. 11 In e' cry • • • thousands now . I1ers threw a ~tl'il<e over :\ew York rntc In Oklahoma A. & ~1. college trackmen the plate. !\ow when a Giant twirler U81llUW.oyfttl d and .uasts a ~u . wo ciuue r truck, recently bu7.zes a strike oYer or one of the ebake into the thto cumpleted at the Stillwater ins titution. other players bohs llfl with 11 pluy out ant .~~ptic, healin:; powder. Full 1l 1 re ct ~ons on oox. '!'rial It Is one of t11e finest tracks In the of the or<iinm·.v Anli.v Cohen ~ires th(l Package and a Fo o t .En~e Walkmg Doll eent Jlksourl nllley confe1·euce. Free. Addrcsl!, Allen's Font-Ease, LeRoy. N. Y. famous c·owhoy rry of "\\'hoop re !" In a Pincb, Use Allen's Foot-Ease I • • • • • • • • • • • • One Secret of Beauty I A\V R.IGHT! BUT {)() I J..()OJ<:, L.IKE I BE£/J PLAY/AI~ IVtnl I • 1 To :uohrm (( Tohnt"co nt Our Expt'nse. sweet by u aturt>, !.l f>llow with a ge and a Ta ste, Aroma a nd Ki<k no;:;sesse(t by no other lobaceo in the na tu1al or manu fa c tured Its p rod uc t ion ts confinetl to Virg inia. A THIAL orde r o[ chew ing or smold ng de~ Jlv crrd $1, Pse It a wc(·k, If you are not aall-fied It is th e mos t t:l lofttable d o ll~:~.r 8\'t'r fiJi cnt Wl' will rrfund mon ey, 90 % , s.ll orders repeat. Mohawk l•'arms, n uckl ngh a m,V~. ~La te. Q111.1' t•rt;('t:\ot-A ll 11fzes, a11 colora prluts , p ercnl es, g inghams. So Lds and ('h rck.s. 2-lb. rolls co ntain 15 yd s Ma lH! quil ts, cum!ort ·, 1·ag ru ;!;. ~atls . g ua•·. l 'u v IJIJStm a n 611c plu:t JIO!itage, BrPntrn o 1r ~.::. ! s \,' o., K irkwood, Mtt. "'Sucit'ty." tinant•lnx bt·nrch tor lo.st mtne, re puted Wu1 hJ.' s r lch P3t s tor1 house ot Gold, d esires mr>mber~ hlp, \V n te- Cor lt·pn rt . agree .. me nt. D. Gar1·ett. 1Je nl nu1 Bh.l,;. , IJ .,. uvcr ,Colo. inturmat |