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Show - 1 - --- ----------------- Seelllg Big teague BASEBAL Thursday, March 20, 1930 THE MIDVALE JOURNAL • 1 Pop Warner to Aid Coach Hanley I ' • By BILLY EVANS Sporuwriter, Bil _Luau• Umpite aacl General Manager of the Clevelaod Indiua Don't· neglect a COLD D ISTRESSING cold in chest or throat-that ao often leads to IIODlethins serious-generally responds to cood old Musterole with the first application. Should be more effective if used once every hour for flve houri. Working like the trained hands of a masseur, this famous blend of oil of mustardr camphor, menthol and other helpful angred1ents brings relief naturally. It penetrates and stimulates blood circula~~hel~ to draw out infection and pain. Used by millions foe 20 years. Recommended by doctora and nurses. KeepMusterole handy-jarsandtubes. To Mother•-Musterole u I wanted, or thought I wanted, to be a lawyer, when I was a boy. With that In mind I entered Oornell unlveraJty In 1900, and It was there that I met t:;e late Hughie Jennings, then coaching the Cornell baseball team after a glorious career as a ball player. He later was p:tanager of the Detroit .A.merlcan league club. Jennings won successive pennants In 1907 (his first Jear wltb Detroit), 1908 and 1909. I went out tor baseball at Cornell and .Jennings was my tutor. It seems Ironical that I, one of his pupils, was to be the first umpire to banl!!h blm from an American league baseball • «am e. But that belongs to a later chapter, .Tennlnp, who was a Cornell alumnus himself, pro'-ably considered It rank treason when I "gave him tbe gate." great baseball coach Hugble was -aa great a coach as he was a man· ager. I remember distinctly his first comment on my own baseball ability, which at the time I thought was rather fair. Now I am a pretty big fellow phys· lcally, and I was even In those days. I bad played baseball ever since I was a little kid and by the time I entered Cornell I had dPveloped Into a prett~· fair player. With my weight. which was around 170 .Pounds, I could drive a ball os far as the next 011e. I thought I was quite a hitter-until Hn&"hle Jennings told me a few things. The first time he ever saw me bat I knocked the ball out of the lot for a home run, I bat right handed ond, oddly enourh, I hit that ball over the right neld fence. Although I didn't know lt, I was pulllng away from the plate and swinging late. That's how tllso tnDde in mildel' form for bobiu 11114 .rmoll chUdren. Ask jor Chil- dren'• Mwterole. Coach Hanley (Left) and Pop Warner. I a PLORESTON SHAMPOO-Ideal for use Ill connection with Parker's Hair Baloi!Jil. Hakes the hair l"ft and llolfy. 60 eente by mall or at drn_g· au, Hllco&. Cbemleal Worka,Paldlogue,N. Y. Woman Scalea Zealand Alpa Mount Teichelmann, which Is more than 10,000 feet high, and the only peak In the southern Alps of New Zealand which had not been scaled, was recently conquered by a woman. She Is Miss Kate Gardner of England. l::lhe was accompanied by H. E. L. Por· ter, an English Alpinist. Porter de· clares that the \"iews of Mounts Tasman and Cook from the summit of .Milunt Telchelmann "took one's breath away." Does as Much Harm as Intercollegiate Battles. A lot of these cock-eyed theorist!'\ seem to think that Intramural sports i!! the one snre cure tor all the evils that they ~Pe swarming- all ovPr col· lege athletlcs like a phalanx of ants. They excu,.;e the big money colleded by the colleges from football by pointIng out that the profits oftPn are turned o\·er to the Intramural and ''athletics for all" programs. writes Ray Cannon In the Chicago Dally News. In theory, no doubt the Intramural program Is sound. but In practice It probably does as much or· more harm to the student body than the great lnt~>rcolleglate battles do. Hang around some of these intra· mural contests some time where the hoys ar~> boxing or wrestllng or play. lng basketball or running the half mile, and see what happens to men who overdo competition when out of condition. But you say, why not make the boys get Into condition before com· petln&'? The answer Is that they wouldn't go for the stulf If th:!y bad to get Into condition first. Intramural sport!!, organized bettPr than they are In their present pioneer statP, may become In time of consid· eMible value to the student body Rt large, but they can ne,·er replace the white heat of the big game as a crucible of what a man Is going to be up against later on in the bigger game of life. Hugh Jennings. r bad happened to send the ball to • rlgbt field. I felt pretty proud of that bit, but my pride sufferQd a jolt at Don't Seem Reaeonable caustic comment. .Jennings' Jrfllzle-It tells here of a jane suing "Pretty rotten," he observed. a man for $5,000 damages because he "Pretty rotten I" I gasped. "Didn't kissed berl It out of the lot?" knock I kiss One It! tie you Daisy-Can and It was nil luck. You bat "Sure couldn't damage a complexion thnt much, no matter how rough the big with one foot In the water bucket. Any ~rood pitcher can make a bum out boy got! ot you. Do It this way," and he It Ia the loudest laughter that lllustrated his meaning. doesn't Indicate anything much but The next time I came to bat I folgood lungs. lowed Jennings' Instructions to the letter. I stood with the approved stance, waited for one to my liking and then took a healthy cut at it. The ball went hopping WPakly to the shortstop who had the easiest kind of a play at first. I was disgusted. But Jennings said, "Fine! That's the way to h.lt 'em." And, In justice to ITughle, I admit that I did improve greatlv under his coaching. Perhaps I mi::ht have be· come a big Ieub"'ler myst>lf If clrcumltances · hadn't ruled otherwise. But, at any rate It wasn't to be. The death of my father cut short my career at Cornell after two years of at•1dy, Back to l'oung:.otown I went after my father's nell th, to a job as writer on the Youngstown Vln· sports HOTEL dicator. I was an ardent baseball fan and, naturally, relished the opportunity of SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH being a baseball writer. I would have O~e of Salt Lake City's finest laurhed at the suggestion ot .becoming hotels, where guests find every an umpire. I had never umpired a co111fort-with a warm. hospiball game In my life. aud thought 1 tality. Garage in connection. would. But evidently it was In never Cafe and cafeteria. the cards, although my opportunity 4()0 Roonu. Eor.h 111ith Both was created by sheer accident and I $2.00 to $4.00 tried my best to get out of it. J. U.BAYBUR!"i", Mana•• The league I was covering at the time for the VIndicator was called the Protective association . . It was the nucleus from which later was formed the 0. & P. league. Youngstown, ot F• ..,._ tllat ca ll111lletter roes tlwl ova was the home team for me, course. 1 .,..._ Nld old yr. Z _ . , 7r... U aeed. o u r - · - ••• llaallle•• 1 and on the eventful day, toward the ••• we aeed 70ur ; finish of the 1903 season, on whlcb I IJ'riH trw C.l•"'• made my debut as an umpire, fcungs· FOilDILUilRIRSERY CO. 1 . towu'a opponent was Homestead. -P,....,.,IJCalallllds.br.. lleCU,.,Utall fSO.OO REWARD I j , . . 1130, Bell S)'adlcat•.) ~pO~ti~~Jqti~~S: 1.: - -- ··- ' When some girls are already thinking of the wedding ring their health faila, they be· come nervous, highstrung, irritable, and through this loss of control many a young woman loses her future happiness. As a tonic at • this time, and in motherhood or in middle life, there is nothing to equal Dr. Plefte'a FaTOrite Preacription. One who used it said: "Before I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription I was all rundown in health. Just a few bottles of this medicine built me up wonderfullf. I have no more of the aches and pams that bothertd me so much."Misa Ethel Jackson, 2541 Curtis St., Denver, Colo. Write Dr. Pierce's Oinic, in Buffalo, N.Y.. for medical advice. free. Newhouse Teacher and pupil will collaborate when Pop Warner, Teteran <'oacb at Stanford university, a:sslsts Coach Dick Hanley In offering the football cO'Ilrse at the annual Northwestern unh·erslty summer school, August 11 to 22. Hnn· ley uses the Warner system In his football coaching. Wamer will give his course during the tlrst week of the school. Conch Hanley lnvitl'd the famous west coast grid leader to give his football course whf>n he went west with the all-star East team and trained at Palo Alto: Lust summer the school attracted 185 coaches. This year the enrollment Is expected to exceed 250. Besides football the school olfers courses In basketball and track. Coach Dutch Lonborg has charge of tbe basketball class and Coach Hill conducts track. CALL INTRAMURAL SPORTS CURE-ALL Many Weddings in Sight Kiaaea at Altar Ordered One of the most popular clergymen ln Belfast, Ireland, Is Rev. John Me· Catrery, since his recent announcement that after a marriage ceremony per· formed In his church the bride and groom must kiss at the altar. "It ll'l a good way to start married life," said the priest. "It Is becoming that the ceremony should be sealed In this way, and Invariably the couples carry it out wltb enthusiasm." • YoUR chicks are In danger ••• Cocci· I and Aspergillos is College football coaches often come closer to vicious professionalism than anyone else In the higher range of sports. James Rowland Angell, Yale president, bas said: "'Men who play for motives other than the love of the game, men to whom victory, however, won, Is the controlling end, are men already on the road to professionalism, men who have sacrificed their amateurism.'' When a football coach ducks out of a contract to capitalize on a cham· plonshlp with a new job at a big Increase In pay he Is a professional of the strictest order. Though Babe Ruth will receive a salary of $80,000 this year and next, he actually will receive less than $70,000 himself eaC'h time, because $10,246 must go to pay the annual income tax. • ~ -·- - ' ~· . - ·- • - • -· The Cubs have few outfield worries with Wilson, Stepilenson and Cuyler In harn<:'ss. TuE editor of this paper and gowernment authorities advise you to first: Serape out the fdth and droppings ••• then scrub with a solo• tlon ol bolllng Lye water. • • • 1\lel Ott of the Giauts wafted out the pitcher and walked 113 times dur· lng the 1029 season. • • • The Cardinals have six southpaws in Mitchell, Sherdel, Hallahan, llill, Fowler and Grabowsld. USE one lSc ean of genuine LewW • • • High-Test Lye to 10 gallons ol boD· lng water lor best results. Lewts• Lye water euts right through the dirt and deans out the deadly germs quldd7 • •• easOy ••• and surely ••• Thea spray with B-K dDutlon. H your groeer ean•t supply )'ou with this dependable brand, don't aeeept a substitute ••• send Post Offaee order for $1.80 dlreet to us lor a ease oll.Z eans, together with valuable Instructions Pablo Dano, Filipino flyweight, Is rated the greatest boxer of l1is nationality since Pancho VIlla. • • • Henry L. Johnson, Jr., of Waban, Mass., was elected captain of the Dartmouth varsity ho<·key team. • • • Rowing Is enjoying a new popu· larlty at Harvard. Twenty-two crt.!ws have been working out this winter. • • • Brooklyn has a Southern league battery to start the 1930 baseball season In Blothon, pitcher, and Lopez, catcher. .lAMES D. SW4N, Mar. ol Speclalfie~ THE PENNSYLVA.NIA SALT MFG. CO. ·Dept.Slr3, 34! .North La SaUe St. VhlC!IWO • • • Buck Ewing, old-time player, batted over .800 for 11 strnlght years. His high mark was .371 with Cleveland In 1893. • • • Dr. Walter E. 1\feanwell has coached Wisconsin basketball 18 years. In five seasons his teams lost a total of three games. • • • Tod Sllngshy, British Columbia Ion~: distance swimmer, plans to swim across the Stl'aits ot Juan de Fu~a In the summer. It Is 18 miles across with conflicting tides and fast current. • • • Snn Francisco sold a complete outfield for $173,000. Smead .Tolley went to the White Rox rPcE.'ntly for $!'JO,OOO. A year ago Detroit paid $75,000 for John~on and Cleveland got A verlll to:SfiO,OOO. • • • co-eaptalns, the United States .Military academy basketball squad selected Cadets Dean C. Strother, Winfield, Kans., and Orrin 0. Krueger, Buffalo, N. Y., to lead the Army 1931 tenm. El<~t'tlng Street No Gabbler In 40 years the Brooklyn club of the National league has hod only 11 managers. Till~ is due largely to the lot!g tenure of Wilbert Robinson, who Is going on his seventeenth year as leader of the Flutbush team. Ned Hanlon had seven seasons with the Dodgers. Bill Dahlen officiated for four years, preceding Uncle Robbie. In his annual report, Dr. David Kinley, president of the Cnlverslty of 1111· nols, voices the opinion that the eight· game football season Is too great a strain on members of the varsity team and favors the elimination of the last week In the season. Doctor Kinley declares the Institutions ln the inter· collegiate confl'rence would gain It the last week were eliminated. A dlge!!t of after-the-fight comment on the Miami atl'air Indicates the most Important result was a lluge loss or prestige hy Sharkey. Nothing was expected of Scott; but or the man who Is to carry this country's banner In the next International mateh for a title, It was at least expected that he would bear himself like a great fighter. Sharkey looked like anything but that, as reflected in stories of the bout. He punched wildly and he lacked ring poise. He lost his bead and behaved like an excited sehoolboy. A level head and a good disposition are I absdlute requisites In a great ft&hter. dlosls • • • Diarrhea will take their toll unless you clean and disinfect Incubator, brooder and hen houses regularly. Most folks think Manager Gabby Street of the St. Louis Cardinals got his name from his How of language. The ol' sergeant can turn on a fountain of verbosity that would make Dan Webster <'Rll In his shorthand expert, but lle didn't get his name from thnt nccompllshment. Cabby halls from Huntsville, Ala., where baked 'possum Is the principal dlsb and all the negro boys are called The Card manager packed Gabby. that to the big leagues with hiDL. Note Not Exactly What Perkins Had Expected Salt Lake City Directory ~~ the walter, gazed at the picture postcard that had just arrived for ToR~JMorehim. ~'hen a wave of purple ascended l• to Learn MoTe his rotund neck and spread over his face. The hallboy who had brought All Books at Pabllsher•a Prlcea lllm the car<l burst into fits of laughter. We'll send them C.O.D. if you say so. "You Jlttle hooligan!" gasped Perkins. "What the-" DESmET BOOK COMPANY 44 East Soath Temple St. "Why, what's the matter?" P. 0. Box 1793 • • • • Salt Lake CltT "Matter!" spluttered Perkins. "Do you rememher that bragging, swankIng American who left here last week? I waited on him hand and foot, ami of Eminent Tench~rs when he left he said he wouldn't In· Leadingl-'aculty Music School In In t e rmountaln Region Dancing Art Dramatic suit me by offering me a few paltry Music l'nlt J.nk~ ruv. Utnh. 200 North ''"'" :O:t. shlilings, but would send me a note (;JUSUOl' & lllll:.HOI.S when he got to town." AND CHEMISTS "Has he sent you a banknote, then?" ASSAYERS omce and Laboratory 229~231 S. Weet TetnPlA St., Salt L:.ke City, Utah. P. 0. asked the boy. Malllng envelopes and prlcea Box 1C86. "Not much!" gasped the Infuriated rurntsh~d on reQuePit • walter. "It's a picture postcard of a monkey, and the note underneath Fends: ''l'hy bright smile and winning ways haunt me stlill' "-London Tit167 Main Street Bits. Perkin~, McCone School of Music and Art Little Hotel SALT LAIUt CITY Oklahoma Girl Strong as Boy "Louise Allee was fretful, nervous and all run~down from whooping cough," says Mrs. F. J. Kolar, 1730 West 22nd St., 0 k 1 ahoma City, Okla. "The little I -,-=::="' could force her to eat wouldn 't ever digegt. She became underweight, sallow and weak. "Then I decided to try California F1g Syrup, and the results surprised me. Her bowels started working Immediately, and In little or no time she was eating so she got to be a pest at the table, always asldng us to pass things. Her weight Increased, her color improYcd and she began to romp and play again like other children. Now she's the picture of health, and strong as a boy." Pleasant-tasting, purely vegetable California l!'lg Syrup acts surely and qulcldy to cleanse your child's stomach and bowels of the souring waste that Is keeping her half-sick, bilious, sallow, feverish, llstles!'l, weak and puny, Rut It's more than a laxatiYe. It tones and strengthens the stomal"h and bowels so these organs continue to act normally, of their own accord. Over four million bottles m-ed a year shows Its popularity. Ask tor it by the full name, "California Fig Syrup," so you'll get the genuine endorsed by physicians for 50 years. Room a, Single W'thout Bath, p...- day. II to IUIII 11.00 Roome, Duuble Without Bath, per da.r, Rooms, Single With Bath, per d11.7, !t.ro to 1!.00 Rooms, Double With Bath, per day,tS.OO to 8.50 All Depot Street Cars Pass the Hotel ltEARNS BLDG. CARAGE Opposite Little Hotel. li'IREPROOll'. Cullen Hotel FrPd ;J. uouard. JIIOJIR&'el" Paul Purdue, Ass't ~r. Meet Your Old Friends at the Cullen Cafe and Cafeteria 8S W. :rod So. St. Snit Luke Clty, Utah. CULLEN GARAGE 2Dd" So. 37¥.. West STORAGE AND SERVICE Pipe - Valves - Fittings NEW AND USED JI"OR ANY PURPOSB m SALT LAKE PIPE CO. W. Sixth South St.. Selt Lake CltJ'. Utab Used Pipe, Fittings & Valves Newl,y threaded a.nd coupled for all p u . . , - Monsey Iron and Metal Co. 700 So. lrd Weet - Salt Lake Clty, Utali. PICKLES ARROW BRAND , For thos" who want the best UTAH PICKLE CO., SALT LAKE CITY. Office Fumltare and Supplies. Theater and Ghurch Furniture, Edison-Dick Mlmeograpla" and Supplies. Full J.lne ot Stationery, Wrapping Paper, etc. Oldest and Largest School Supply and Equipment Houso In the West. UT;\.H·IliAIIO SCHOOL SUPPLY CO. 155 So. State t!treet Sal& Lake City. For Pool Tables and Supplies and anything in., Show Cases and Store Fixtures work write Restricted W. L. WETHERBEE "Is this a restricted suburb?" SSW••., T••,l• • 8alt Lake c:t~ "Yeh, you gotta go down cellar to W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 12--1930 •wear.'~ |