OCR Text |
Show THEJORDANJOURNAL,MJDVALE,UTAH Hako~h Players Arrive to Join Jewish Soccer Team ommuni.~ CAREER / IVARIABLE OF JACK DELANEY Weak Hands and Bad Ternperament Held Him Back. ,. ,-- 'Builm.UCJ • • • T\l'o-thirds of the cities in "'ew York state have started, ln one form or another, municipal fore:;ts, chletly ort c:itv water~heds, and s!'veral already ·have IJianted more than 1,000 ncres. Some of the;;e forests in nddl· tlon to the _\Ouug plantations contain mature trt>es that may he utilized for lumht>l' and wood. In the Alban;, city fot·P:st, w h kil contaIn,; more than (;()() aeres, a consi<iPrnhl!i! port'on of tlw land is CO\'Pred with rnuturP !•itch pine, a reL'I'Ilt .~uney showed $:lU,OOO worth of lumht'l' for {lile,; l.Je,;ltles 2,000 conb of woml. The cousPn-ative commis~lon Is recei\ inJ.: inquiries from all varts of the state in reft>rence to the planting of municipal forests by counties, cities, towns, • illagp,.; and school district~ that are cou;.idering the u~e of idle land to gTow lumher and wood to meet their local needs. 1\hmy cities iu Burope haYc SUC'h forest::; that are more than one hmulred years old and are stead~· sources of ren•nue. In Switzerlancl the city of Zurich regularly employs oue mnu for evl'tT sa acres of Its fot·est, and in the winter and times of iJHlustrlal depr·esslon employs mort•. \\'hat luropc has been llolilg :suect>ssfully and lftotltably for -two •·entnri!'s Amet'i('an citii!S are just heginnlng to do, twd u.re UBing for that purpo,;e land not "ui terl to raising agt·iculturul crovs, of which thet·e an; large u1·eu.a. • • • Make Garage Conform to Style of Home .m '· 1 I Stars of the famous Jewish Hakoah Soccer team here 'to join the Brooklyn Wanderers of Alllerica. Left to right. Alexander Neufeld, star of the team; Halman Konrad, foremost play-er of IIungary, and known as the outsj:J,Uldlng soccer player of Europe; Eb<enhoffer, Schoenfeld and Drucker. BUDDY MYER WINS I COMEBACK STUNT Helen 'Vilis Retires Shows Much Improvement in Fielding and Batting. ~· Til health, appendicitis Helen ms ni:s pinyin~ dou!Jtful i r seas Sometimes a baseball pool Is as dangerous as an uncharted S'l'l"lmming pool. • • • Once In a whilE> there comes to the big baseball show a young fellow who <;eems fo have everything nect>ssary to rhe mnkh g of a brilliant player. Yet this same youngster. after a fair trial, falls utterly to measure up to the major league .,_tandnrd unu drifts hack to U1e minors, wrltPs John B. Keeler In the Washington Star. Harely dues the roungster after his failure gl"t a ~econd t1·ial the same ,:;eason. nnrl he who redeems himself Is, indeed, a rarity. The Nationals are fortunate to have one of these rarities In Buddy 1\Iyer. This youthful produc.t of the Southern u~soela1 ion, such a bltt!'r disappointment during (he early part of the campaign, since his return to the game after a month of bench-warming promise>< to develop into one of the finshie:;t shortstops of the Amedcan league. Todn)' he Is rated ns one of the best hitters occupying the shortfiel<l position in the circuit nod he is imiH'OYing steadily afield. During the training !'eason Myer showed ;;o muC'h ahility at hat and aft<;ld that ::llunuger Stanley Harris thought he hurl the finrl of ~easons. So Bu,J<lv was instnlled as rt>gular X atlonui short!;top at the outset of the chamr>fnn~llip cnmpaign . HP WI\~ gh·pn follow in~ an operation for In France, has caused to retire from active tenfor th~ present. It Is ~<he will play again this The Giants have signed Joe l\lorri~P sey, the outfielder from Holy Cross college. A Milwaukee ball player has been sold for $75,000, but nearly everything Is higher. . The wood most used for baseball bats Is second-year ash, sun-dried and wen ther-curet.l. • • • \\'alter Genln, former Albany and Hartford ontfie1der, 'has been signed by Waterbury. • • • Nashvllle Banner-This Is the ~an nlng season for baseball managers as well as housewives. • • • The Det rolt Tigers purchased Leon Pierotti, shorRtop, from the Pocatello club of the Utah-Idaho league. •• • • Bill Clowers, left-handed pitcher from Ardmore, Is trying to make a place for himself with the lled Sox. • • • Infielder Henle Batch, who broke an ankle early iJl the season, Is again In eondltion and has reported to Newark. • • • Outfielder Jol·nny Tobin, for ronny years with the St. Louis Browns, ls plnying good ball for the Boston Hed Sox. • • • A polo teuu, frolll India will visit the United ~l'ta tes l n 1:)27. • • • It costs between $13,000 and .Timmy Bishop, right-handed pitcher, ls a new addition to the Brld;;eport stuff. He was obtained from 'Vaterbury. ~~0.000 to st~ge the English Henley regatta each year. • • • • • • New York and Phllarl!'lphia probably .are the two greatest boxing centers In the world. l • • • Charlie Weinert, the veteran New.ark heavyweight, Is the latest recruit to the listie colony on the Pacific o(!Oa;;t. • Waterbury obtained Pitcher Max Rachac from the Portland club ot the Pacific Coast league to replace Oave Keefe, who was recalled. We wouldn't be :;urprlsed to read of Bobby Jones putting on a kilt and taking the \vomen's golf championship, too. Jean Dubuc, former Detroit pitcher, who Is managlnf: the Mnn<'hester team In the New Englund league, has ·his outfit battling for first place. • • • • • • • • • Jack Stewart, golf professional at the Thornburg (Pn.) dub, estahli:shed a record of 31 for the nine-hole course on his birthday. • • • The -fr ish open golf entry list prefixes the names of amateur players ·lth " r." '!'his is omitted In the listing profu;sionuls. • • • One doesn't iully appreclate•what a fin<l boilermaker Jim Jeffries ruust have been in hi~ younger days until one sees him on the stage. • • • - Albany has secured another pitcher from the Piedmont league by the name of Parkt~r. lie comes from the Durham club. • • • Paul Berlenbach has changed his mind ahout auvancing to the heavyweight dlvlslnn-01· It might be more accurately stated I\Ir. D<•lnuey changetl It for him. • • • 'rhl' belt won by J jil<e Kllraln when he dPfeute<l .Tem Smith In England wel~hs about 300 ounces In silver and ~ .!~ . nd Is the most valuable ring tr'JJph-y in history. • • • The more Walh•r Hagen thinks about the British und U. S .• open resuits, the le~s satisfaction he gets out of the 12-up victory he hung on Bobby I t ! t Jones' eye as w n er. • • • } ·'our "be~t dressed" gorfers at the reeent national opNI tourney are go In" to receive their clothe free from a ,..·clothin!! concern for a year. \,"ho ~ dm~·t make the mun.? said clothes • • • 'l'om O'Hara of the DPnver country club h s bet>n a c-:ul<ly master at variou. clubs throu~hout tlw country for the past :!8 year~. His code for the rPgulatlon of <·atlcli<·~ Is used as a model hy many du)Js. • • • :ua"cdonnld l-(mlth. Americ-an golf pro, and Abe Miu·hell of Great Brituln, are generally recor,niz<>d as two Of tile f''•PomCt~t Ill ote~slonal~ ln the ' ~ win theyet 'J')f'n world, bothtjtle. have he en I I Buddy Myer. every opportunity to make a permanent job for himself, but after seven weeks o! effort he had failed to make good. So the shortstopplng business was turned over to the veteran, Roger Peckinpaugh, and young Myer was left on the bench to reflect upon his fail- I • ••• Hank Gowdy thanked Minneapolis tans for their Gowdy day recently by soaking a homer, double and single and nipping three attempted st~als. • • • Senor Gonzales, the sensational bal1, Is no longer shortstopplng Danvllle, although he was one of best In the business. He couldn't • • • Cufor the hlt. llill•• •• Jack l>eluney has been l.Joxlng for seven years. The new world's light heavyweight champion, whose real name Is Ovilla Chapelaine, is a Frencl· Canadian and was born March lfl, 1900, at St. Francis, Canada. He started boxing in 1910, acquiring the name Jack Delaney through the "lrnllarlty In Round between this nom de guerre and the common pronunciation of l.is real name. He Is married and makes Ills home In llrldgeport. For the grpa te1· part of his curet>r Delaney has b;•en under the mana:;e ment of Pete Hc.lllr, whose ~klllful handling of the Bri Jgpport Ia <I stamps him as one of the ht>st. Deltpli'Y was discovered by AI .1 enning,;, but was developed by Heilly. Jennln~~ <IJ.;. posed of Delaney early In the latter's career and Hellly then piloted him eonfidently to a world's championship, even when othet·s ridiculed the Idea of Delaney ever reaching the top. There is a story in connection with the partner~hlp between boxer unci manager which Is worthy of telling •here. Delaney was a promising pros· Employing Idle Land lor Public Forests I Scapa Flow Jg Colt for the Year - lil'iD "The colt of the year!" Such was t1:e expreRslon hea.nl tfter the sensational victory of Scapa Flow in the fort~·-third running f!/ the tnmous ?ld United States Hotel stakes at the Saratoga (N. Y.) track. 1'he colt, winch ne\·er before that afternoon had sported silks, is being hallet As the greatest offspring of !\Ian o' War. The muj01·1ty of the houses tl\,lt ure being built today--at len ..._t the het tcr housPs of today-are being cm·efully planned and exectiterl :so that wiH·n finished thl'y nre..a credit "to the b!'ighJack Dela,ney. borhood. Thl'y ·wm alwars remain ~·o, fot· they are pbt tiimsy In cor\~truc· pert when H~illy un<l~rtook his mnn!ton nor ~trueturally ornnte with gin- aj3ement, but lie bad his drnwback>'. gerbrentl work. In otlte1· word~. they For one thin'g, he was teinperamentul. are planned on con:sen·atlve lines. For another,. he hnd weak. hands, Jl!ll'Howe,·er, even ~·Pt, we often tlud a ticularly the right hun<l. •· These comhouse that Is well built, following 1 plaints 'fprnh;l1ed C'On:-lderable of an some certain t~ pe of architecture, I obstacle In I>elaney's rise to ring fame, such as the Engll~;h cottage, the but he grnduaUy O\'ereame the haiHll1 Dutch coloulnl or oth~rs t>qunll~· well caps and went ~moothly along. known, and this house is really a · 1 After directing- the· atl'airs of Dcsource of priLle to the owner and the , laney single handep for a time, Rellly whole ut>i>;hhorhood, hut nurny of Fold an Interest in the fighter to the"e same lamses lmn• ;;-ara;:;es ou Frankie ;\furlowe, who was the munthe rear of the lot, :simple hoxllke 1 ager of .Johnny \Yil»on, former world's structurP>; without thought as to tie- 1 middlt>weight champion. Dis!'lathdled sign. 'l'he;;e di•trnct from the general with the temperament of the fighter avvearance of the property: and the wPnkness of hi~ hand~. which The garu~;e ~lwuld harmonize with retarded Delaney's pro!;"ress, Marlowe the hou,;e In vh~·sical structure and sold out his ir~tere~t In the Brld~eport finishing. It costs pmclicnlly no battler and Reilly again acquired the more to build u gnragP. ufter the sole management. Hellly then gave up Dutch colonial ::;tyle thuu It does to other busln!'ss lnten'llts which had ocbulld an ordinary shedllke gt1rnge. copied part of his time In o1·der to give 'l'rellises may l.Je 11laced agalust a his undivided attention to Delaney. garage, adding to Its decorati,·e Yalue. I J:o"ootball hus it~ humor no less Uum other ph~es of warfare. Sam Ewing, Princeton halfback, was once asl•ed by a young lady if he had a spee:lal chlropodiRt for the toPs of his drop·kicking foot. Ewiug never knew if she was serious or not or whether It was another wav to compliment his work. One dlly a enptnln was figurIng on trying for a ftt•ld goal If the time left for play was short. lie aske<l the umpire ··What's tht> timer' ''Quarter to ftve," was the obliging un>~wer. In building a new home It is of course important that the landscaping he arranged in kef>plng \tith the house. Where the home I;; pretentious the senil'es of a good : landscape gard<>ner ure desirable. A goorl landscape man is an artist who knows how to eliminate the unsightly features of your home and how to accentuate· Its attractiveness by the use of shrubs, trees and vines, not to say anything about vroper grades and terraces. BYen in the home of lesser cost and smaller dimensions, · such an outlay proves In every case a good lnyestment. Yet any number of home builders feel that they cannot afford such an expenditure. That may !Je true In a number of cases where the home purchaser is straining his resources to meet payments. However, that Is no reason why such people should not try to make their homes attra<:tive as those owned by people of greater means. BASEBALL NOTES Boost Clark Griffith toriou;~. • • • • • • • • • Freddy Graf, until recently manager of the St. Augustine team, has signed as player with Montgomery. • • • Washington sold Pitcher Letty Color Scheme Important Thomns to the Rochester club of the International league. He has been We give scant thought to the colors ure. • nuddy and the JS"a pitching for Birmingham ol t he S out h - that we paint ou1· houses, to the •tint F t t I f or una e Y or • • of the body color, to the contrast of Waterbury has sent Utility Player 00 tlonals, too, )lanager Harris did not ern league option. , the color;; of hotly, trim and roof, Elmer Duckett to the \Yllllamsport altogether lose faith In the young fel• • • I. an<i to the relation of the colors to team of the Xew York-Pennsylvania low. 'l'he pilot could not rid himself Fred Maguire, Toledo second basethe surroundings, natural and artlleague on option. of the idea that the player who had man, accepted ten chances without a ficin!. •, perforrul'd ~o smartly during the ml~s in a recent g~tme with Kansas We apparently tell the painter that Success, ~ays the Toledo Blade, if< training season must posses;; big- City. He Is being hailed as the best the hou~e is to he white with gr{'('n , largely a ma ttl'r of g<.'ttlna- .ro ,the place league quality. And so instead of cast- keystone guardian In the league. ~<huttl'l'>~, mHI lH'CPpt his l<lea of the I you had in mind. so, 'after all, maybe ing uhout for u minor league farming • • • :<;harl(• of grPPn without eonsldering the Hed Sox are ~;uccessful. ' spot for Buddy, Harris put the shortCharley Engle, young shortstop, has thnt It may make the difference be~top on the Xatlonals' schooling list. heen returned to Green~boro· by the t"rt'eeu charm aud merlioC'rity. The "\Ylw~ Ira Flugstt>ad, v_ett>rnn out-· After a month of grooming. back to Philadelphia Athletes. This was done hou.;;p of loYeliest design may be- fielder, trn~tured his . collarbone durthe gume :\Iyer came on July 1 and by Mack when he took Dave Barbee, rulnPd l.y lnappl·opl·iate colon;, and Ing a reren't game I at Cleveland, the nlmost Immediately he began to re- slugging third baseman, away fro~ eolor mu~· gfyp dlstlnetlon and churm 1 Hed Sox lost one o! their best bets. vt>al his reul worth as u ball player. the Patriots. to a house that In !tsPlf Is c-ommon- 1 He went about his work in the short• • • ,>lace In t!Te extreme.-Detrolt • 'ews. It Is suid thut Hartford offPred Pallfield in more Intelligent manner and Napoleon Wall, an Indian right1 d:v O'Connor his old berth 11s manager with smoother style and, above all, his hander, who recently joined the Joplin H N d C of the Senators, hut l'ndrly renlged behitting Improved wonderfully. club has shown enough stuff to list orne • ee • are j cause of business lntereo;ts In Spring• Are .vou mw of tho~e> home owners ftald him , as a high-class prospect. Wall ~ 10 tnb•s pride in his home nnd Its , 1 Trudl·e Is No Fl<;)pper, formerly played with the Haskell In· ... riUrroundings allu.• 1-< t I' I\ es a. t H II tl me.~ The Pitt~hnrgh club has llnnotmced Can Cook and Ml-lk Cow• dlans. • • • to keep It at it s 111g 1tes t ~ ft IC' Ie nc ~· and t the ~lg'lllng of Marlon Biggs, )·oung <:ertrll!le Ederle, fin<t woman connttmctiv~ne~s? Or are sou 011 ~' who ) outfielder of the Aherdeen team of the Formal tram;fer of the Atlanta franh as tl te nus · t a 1•en 1<1ea th :tt .'I' ' lur home lndepenuent Timber league OL~ Wasl1queror of the I<Jngllsh channel, 1s a 1 chise to R. J. Spiller by Dan Michael-~Jf ,,·ltltOtlt •anv· lngton. "home body," whose tastes wou 1d aw Ill t 11 k e c-are o f It :--~ most classify her as old-fashioned In OYe has been effected, the consldera· pffort :m )om· part? If ~-ou nre one • • • the world of the modern flapper. tlon having been announced at $267•" of th(' lattPr, you are llkt•ly to find Rllndolph Moore, a big outfielder She Is a good cook, milks COW:l oc- 500. Xo Immediate change In the manthat vour home--owning experience i~ I from Longview·. 'ft>Xns, and Le~lie Cox. casionally when she Is In the country, agement o! the team or policy of the not g.oin;;- to be as profitable nnd us I a rlght-J andt>tl plt .... her from Palest1ne, 1 and does not smoke or drink nlcohollc club Is being c~ns~de~ed. satlsfuc•tory a;: you have <'Yery right Texas, have been purchased by the beverages of any kind. She does not to expect.-CIIieago Evening Post. "'bite Sox. I go In for late partes, an d • accor d'mg The Boston Braves sent Inflelder • • • to her mother, !'he has never allowed Eddie Taylor to the nuffulo club of Highway Signa Illegal I The Cincinnati outfield went through romance to interfere witlt her career the International league. 'tto.ylor 18 California I11 wmuker:; haYe the experiences of not having a putas a swimmer. She does not even have the former Eastern league player who an orrlinunce prolllhlting the erection . out or an a~slst in the game of July a regular "boy friend," her mother said. looked so good in the Sl)ring. An overof signs ami hlllhoards ulon~: high- 28 against Brooklyn. A<lolfo Luque diu Swimming has been her chief inter- abundance of Infielders, with the adtl I d fol' legal b I ll d fanner! nine of the ·' 1 f h r <litlon of Eddie Moore, made n~e. ways. Exc••p on s rna e I t P P tc 1 ng an aary a reduction. life ·as puss!bl e 1n ti 1e open a t' r. ________ __ o_r w _ o_r_k·_. unab_l_e_t_o~~e~st~,~~~~n~rl:s:h~e~s~p~e~n~u~s:_n~s:n:m~c~l~o--e-~:~~:~~:~---------~a:u:d~<~ll~r:e:cl~i~o~n~a~l~s=l:g=n s~. :R:o:b:l:n:l_~to~r~l'~l!~e~v~e~h-l~s--Iu_a~t-c_:s • • Great Britain has not developt>d a world heavyweight champion ~jnce the late Boh Flt;,slmmons left Cornwall nearly 35 years ago. The acquisition of Pitcher Walter Betts by the St. Paul club ought to help Nick Allen's pitching staff. pa~sed • Sir Thomas Lipton has donatPd a <'UIJ \'Ulned at $1,000 to he awarded the winner of the Seattle Soccer league nex~ E>eason. • • • ••• bond was forfeited • • • French politics seem to have the relief pitchers but none who can go In there and stay nine Innings. , I · ~:; Rlnre tl1e anC'Ient Gr!'ek Olympic games were renewed in 1800, the United States has always been vic- • • • • • • • • • l\lorris Meola, mlrl<llewelght boxer, has nine brothers who lead his cheerIng section at each of his bouts. • • • • • • • • • • It Is estimated that seven men would Crew rowing was the first ot·ganir.ed sport ut Wasi!Jngton and I-.ee <'ollege. Hace have been held nnnually :linea 1874. Waco obtained Hap Bris<'OP, a third bll!ieman, from the Cleveland dub of the American league. • .. • • • Five automobile racers weuring the number lR have been killed in f.uropl since the year 19::!2, eonfine his dashe:s to the gridiron. Art Decatur continues to pitch good ball since the Phlllles sent him to Newark. • • • • l'uhllc tennis courts to the number of 6, '110 ure provided in 474 citll'S In the United States. i~ his speeding ea~e. The boy ;:hould • • • • • • Doe;; the lee company that employs Hed Grange do any other advertlslng? • • • .J&.Y.-.fo..."!!t'l The only pedestrian who doesn't have to dodge motor ears these days Is the one who draws a walk to first base. • • • Walter Hagen suys thnt golf Is work . This will he news to most elllployers. He<l Grang!''s . Baltimore has rele!tSt>d Lefty BlaiRdell, recruit college pitcher. * • •• In the midst of It, Hed Grange remains C'OOI. still play golf If It was called work und llald 37 cents an hour. l Landacape Planning F!Drt tes Even Football Can Stir Up Few Grins Clark C. Griffith, I'• ,-:,n;ent of the Washington baseball club, may be the new president of the American league to sucC'et>d Ban B. Johnson, who3e resIgnation has been rumored because of Illness. Griffith h:1 well qualified for the position. II a v!ng been a former ball player, he knows all the ins and outs of the national pastime and he is a rabid Ameri<'an leaguer. With Johnson he was one of the founders of the league In 1901. Mike O'Dowd Nominated as County Commissioner :\like O'Dow<l, popular ~t . Paul cltl· zen who held the world's mlddlewel~ht <'hatnJJlonshlp from 1!)17 to 1!120, has ju:st heen rewarded by his ntlmirers with the nomlnution for county commissioner of Humsey county, Minnesota. O'Ilowd,. who as wordl's champion enlisted in the Sl'rYice unrl served over~eu~. won the title from AI )lcCoy in 1917 and lost it three yt>ars later to ,Johnny Wll~on. He retired from the ring uhout three yt>nrs ago. 1 If O'Dow<l is ehosen for office in the finn! election his annual ~alury wlli l.Je hui a small part of what he received for many of his ring engagelllents. A crusade again~t Thanksgiving day football by colleges has been started by the Presbytel"ian board of Christian education In Phlludelphla. • • • • Montreal Amateur Athletic assoelatlon wlll be represented by a stron~t English rugby team. A team from ~ngland may visit Canada this f111l. • • • Although tournaments have been held annually for the last 25 years, all the records of the American Bowling congress were ~et In two successive years, Hl~3 and 19~4. .' . Humbert Fugazy, the only rival of Tex Rickard as a promoter of cham· plonshlp boxing bouts, come,; from a long line of Italian bankers, but as a youth he fought In the squared ring under the name of ,Jack Lee. Rawlings Back Again F'Irst-H 01e• Hagen ' s-m , 0 ne Ma d e at vuorcester ·v Walter Hagen, former nf\tional open nnd British open champion and preflent king, shot his fin; t hole-In-one la:lt year. Hagen turne d the ace on the sixth hole of the Worce~ter Countr)· cluh course--an lSO-yarder. H~gen was playing with Bohby .Jones, .Toe Kirkwood and Tommy Armour at the time. He was as much ><nrprl::;erlas his fellow pu,t mers w 1en 1 1 he reached the green and found the little pellet ha<l rolled Into the cup. The ace just ahout mude his golfllng work complt>te Wulter having won nbout every tit,le It Is possible for a. proft>~slonul ~n~r~o_:.to:_n_r_n_lc_x_. • ,::,.1. , .:J_,, tu..: l 'illGIOlil'gl, l<amlms hut! a dlfferellt scconcl baseitlan eac1l • sl'ason. Cutshaw •. _'fl-etney,. Rawling,;, !\Inrauvllle nntl \' Il~!}t lun E:l guarded the keystone sa<:k. IJ.l lhe ~ru•~r named nod this season Huwllngs Is bac-k ";:). the job again _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:;_ _ _ _._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ I |