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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH UiiimiiitmiimiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii!: I Speakutcj. I m lit are called and many will MANY chosen. At least 400 football head coaches, not to overlook more than 2,500 assistants are scan- ning the present and future draft lists with anxious eyes. 1 T'HE 1 1 1 X 1 1 1 Iiv CIlKKIi; NICHOLAS f Nwpopr Umo by ' 1 McSHANE By ROBERT m ajf Woolknits, Jerseys, Gay Plaids Big Three Campus Wardrobe A" Steamboat Inventor ut fA NE hundred and fifty years ago d momentary weakness. Just a few short weeks ago the were being handed the Dodgers want football ficials National league pennant. It was all to keep moving at decided that they would meet the its old pace, withNew Yoik Yankees in the World out any exemptions series. The most important quesfor those who hapWould it be possible tion was: pen to be forward to hold the entire series in Yankee passers or blocking stadium in order to accommodate backs whenever more spectators? their number comes Then up jumped the St. Louis along. It is only reasonable that foot- Cardinals to disrupt all the pretty ball's head men should be busy plans. Biooklyns grip on the penafter all. checking on a season that is now nant wasnt so secure were loadSouthworths boys is Billy It only less than a month away. human for a coach to hope for as ed for big game and the big game good a break as his rivals draw in wore Brooklyn uniforms. To make matters worse, Onkle the big gridiron lottery of 1911. Just at present there is no way Frank Frischs Pittsburgh Pirates to arrive at any informative facts. decided to play some real baseball. I asked Dr. Nicholas Murray They annexed 33 out of 43 games Butler, president of Columbia uni- beginning last June 27. During that winning streak they picked up 18 versity, just how the draft situation out of 21 games, storming to a spot was in the lair of the Lion. where esan they began to menace the As closely as I can make timate, I)r. Butler said, enlist- leaders. ments and the draft together will Over Their Heads? take away something like 900 stuThere seems to be a feeling that dents from Columbia. The college the Pirates are playing over their counthe over or university toll all heads. At least thats the opinion try will be heavy. I havent any of a quiet, unassumidea how many on the Columbia ing with the connected gentleman list are football players. There will Leo does not believe the Dodgers. be some, of course. But the ma- Pirates can continue playing their jority called out will be seniors or very successful ball. That may be There has been a heavy demand for engineers and chemists all over the country. It would be my guess that football will have a larger number of younger players than we have normally seen uoon the field. After all both army and navy of- er, s. The College Count Columbia is one of the countrys larger universities. But if the university count is around 900 should be nearly the same at Cali- fornia university, Michigan, Illinois, Ohio State, Minne-- i sota, Northwestern, and Southern California. There would be no such total at Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, StanDartmouth, ford, and most of the southern and southwestern universities that fall well below any 10,000 enrollment. They will lose the same percentage, however. The college contribution to army, navy, air force and marines will be something over 250,000 students, dating from July to October. This may be an underestimate. It will be in the next six months. No Hurt to the Game But all of this will have no hurtful effect on the football campaign of 1941. It would make little difference even if it did. But it wont work that way. There will be just as much keen competition as there ever was. There will be just as much nationwide excitement and interest there will be just as many big crowds. Some universities will suffer, in a football way, more than others. This is completely unimportant with the world as it is today. But on most football squads, there are always many who must be overlooked. These will be given a better chance this fall. For Football After all college football was started and for many years carried on as the greatest of all competitive sports. In the last 10 or 20 years the pressure put upon coaches to bring along winning teams has done the game no good in any way. It has developed not only prose! ting, but direct pay to an unbelievable extent. The bidding for winning coaches has gone beyond all sound reasoning. There has been far too much national championship, e winning stuff, in a game to be played by young colsupposed lege students seeking, in the main, an education. I have never believed that any college football star should receive in any way any more financial assistance than any good average student should get, whose main idea was an education. There have been too many paid players all over the country. And many of these have been no better than hundreds of others who loved the game and could play good football and often never had a chance. The fellows who were taken care of, who had cost money had to have the first call. With the draft cutting in, with the element of chance now involved, this seems to be the right spot for a general cleaning up, where the alumni pressure and the coaching pressure for a winning team can be removed. big-tim- FRANK FRISCH wishful thinking, but Leo isnt very much impressed with the Buccaneers. He figures he would rather have them to beat than the Cards. I wouldnt mind, he said bravely, if they were up there with us in- stead the Cards. The chances are excellent that Mr. Durochers wishes will not be granted. The Cardinals can see the pennant fluttering courageously in the distance and refuse to be wished out of a contender's position. Mr. Frisch and his Pirate crew deserve more than they will get in the '41 battle. They were 16'i games out of first place on June 28. It was quite a feat to draw up within striking distance of the league leaders. However, this is not a new He was experience for Frisch. managing the St. Louis Cards back in 1934. On Labor day of that year the Cards were eight games back. In October they were beating the Tigers to win the World series. of The Fordhani Flash What is responsible for the Pi- rate's recent victory splurge? A large part of that answer is Frisch, the old Fordhani Flash. He took over a listless club in 1940 and wound up the season in the first division. A graduate of the McGruw School of Baseball, Frisch cats, sleeps and talks the game. He suffers unbearably in defeat and is inconsolable when things arent going right. A fighter, his tongue has the sharpness and sting of a whiplash. He keeps his boys on their toes. Though they realize Frisch sputters verbally for that exact purpose, the Pirates are alert and thats what T'IIIS is the swer. Throughout shopping dis- tricts from coast to coast the very air is vibrating with the message a wild in pursuit of rush clothes such as go to make up the and classroom perfect campus wardrobe for Miss Collegiate and her pert little sister, who must anwhen the swer present role is called. Campus clothes collections are so intriguing this fall it is going to be difficult to arrive at actual choices. After you have window shopped and looked to the limit, the better part of wisdom is to calmly and deliberately take time off to go into conference with yourself. To think it through with the aid of notes you jotted down as you meandered through milvs and miles of aisles and aisles of sports clothes sections, dress shops and departments, millinery displays and so on. Sifting it through youll find that all signs point to woolknits, also handknits, jersey dresses and gay plaids (especially smart for suits) playing the role of Big Three in a college girls wardrobe. Invest a plaid suit in a woolkmt that has the new look silhouette. Add a jersey dress cut along a pattern of chic simplicity as expressed in the new drop shoulders, deep armholes and sleeves cut in one with the yoke (see illustration) and you will be started in the right direction toward a wardrobe that will serve you faithfully throughout your fall and winter campus career. A new day of triumph is dawming for knitted fashions. Sweaters especially were never more attractively designed and varied in mood. Plan to buy several sweaters for they are so versatile they tune to of tw'o-piec- e, Plaid Ensemble double-header- s Or. NUMBER ONE GIFTS If you have any doubt about what to give a man m any of the nations military or naval services, send a carton of cigarettes or a pound tin of smoking tobacco. Tobacco rates first as a gift with them. And when you check up, actual sales records show that in Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard service stores (where the men buy their own) Camels outsell all other cigarettes. It is that Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco is the National Joy Smoke. Local tobacco dealers are now featuring Camel cartons and pound tins of Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco as well-know- n number one gifts for men in Uncle Sams services. Adv. Death and Sleep Death, so called, is a thing which makes men weep and yet a third of life is passed in sleep. Byron. J. Fuller Pep By JERRY LINK. ular B, two-piec- screw-propell- it or Old Doc Wiggins used to say: No man is rich v hos got a hole In his pocket." Which reminds me of getting your vitamins. Folks need them aU: If an; one of them is missing the old vitality Is punctured. And that's why this delicious cereal, KELLOGGS PEP, Is Important source of the for Its an extra-goo- d two vitamins that are lacking In many meals Bi and D. PEP's a tastin' eereal, too. Why not have It tomorrow? I Just know you'll like ltl Jim-dan- PEP g hand-knitte- d well-ordere- dropped-shoulde- style-conscio- school-farin- Ptr servinf: 12 tkt daily need of D; dS to 1S tkt mimtmum daily need of Bp, Tasteless, Thoughtless They never taste who always drink; they always talk who never think. Prior. d MIDDLE-AG- E WOMEN HEED THIS AD VI Ell C Thousands of women are helped to go smiling thru distress peculiar to women caused by this period In life with Lydia E. Pink-haVegetable Com- - pound famous for over 60 years. Plnkham's Compound made especially far women has helped thousands to relieve such weak, nervous feelings due to this functional disturbance. Try ltl g Brown Outstanding for Autumn Frank wants. Uhen the team was rolling along at the crest of the seasons victory streak, Frisch decried any team The boys are hitting greatness. good with men on bases, he said. Weve had good pitching, but aboe all, weve had real team spirit. And you can't do a thing in the world without spirit. In this connection, Frisch brought up the matter of Joe Medwick back m the old Cardinal days. There we were winning a pennant and going after extra dough and everything a plaer wants and Medwick would like as not complain that his shoulder or arm was bad. Hed want to rest a day. How can you even think of rest with a real goal ahead? It doesnt stand to reason It's very easy to believe that Trisch couldnt rest at such a time. In fact, he'd be uncontrollable. According to his own version, it's the that wear you down. They're not really actual games. Theyre the two games in one day the one the team plays in the afternoon and the one "you play at night up in your room. You always win the night games because you have it all figuied out how things should have gone, but it cuts into your sleep and wears out the rugs. Ive walked 500 miles around eery room in the National league. Radio, Automotive. Diesel, Machine-Sho- p, Body -- Fender, Welding. Free booklet. AddrttiM pertuor OREGON INSTITUTE of TECHNOLOGY, Portland. multi-tub- time of the year and so what? Theres no guess work about the an- d Onkle LEASH AVIATION Cirttficafd Cow sea two-pie- n sixth-plac- e two-fiste- on August 26, 1791 the newly established Patent Office of the United States issued 13 patents. This, in itself, is not important except for the fact that it maiked the beginning of the controversy over Who invented the steamboat? which, after a century and a half, is still unsettled. For among the 13 patents issued on that day, six were awarded to James Rumsay (or Rumsey), one to John Fitch, two to Nathan Read and three to John Stevens Jr., and the names of all these men were destined to be linked with the invention of the steamboat. Of course, the school book histories say that Robert Fulton was the inventor of the steamboat. But whether or not that is true depends upon the definition of inventor. Partisans of Stevens, Rumsay and Fitch assert that all three have better claims to the honor of inventing the steamboat than does Fulton. most from formal Read had begun experimenting every occasion, to most informal and sports. with steam engines for propelling The new woolknits are simply boats in 1788 and his contriamazing. One of the big favorites is the trim swank jacket suit that bution to the d looks as if it had been expertly development of of a stunning wool weave. the steamboat Once try on a woolkmt jacket was the invenand instantly you will be maktion of the boiler ing an inroad on your clothes allowance to the extent of the amount on V and the porta- the price tag. There is a great deal ble high - pres as is to be said for woolknits sure engine these days. Their production has both important been so perfected they neither but hardly a stretch nor sag and they are styled large enough to the nth degree of chic and contribution to entitle him to the charm. honor of being called the inventor See the charming machine-kni- t of the steamboat. dress shown to the left in the illusStevens began studying steam ene of tration. This casual in 1789 but it was not until gines all gold nubby wool chenille yarn has 1798 that he completed his first exthe appearance of a classy steamboat and operated it successIts only trim is fully on the Hudson clusive handknit. river. It was the knotted plastic buttons and Stevens who made the first applicacrescent bordered pockets. With it tion of steam to the hand-knis worn a new and flattering for driving a boat through the wahat made of bows that stand ter and his steamboat contained the up behind a pompadour, the bows first condensing double-actinengine attached to a band of the same ever made in America and a multion accent The yarn. tubular boiler on which he secured knitted and crocheted hats and American patents in 1803. trimming details on wool dresses is the patents granted to Among strong this season. was one for Rumsay for for that, boats or vessels and his propelling this, jersey Jersey claim to to hats from for everything jersey of inventor steamboat title the dresses and blouses is a trend that rests these facts: On Septemis bringing vast influence to bear ber upon 1784, 7j Washington saw as to what must be included in and certifiedGeorge to Rumsays model of of wardrobe every a boat which could go upstream by schoolgirl and college miss. For of- machinery; in 1785 he obtained from fice wear, unwrinkable, unstretch-abl- e the Pennsylvania assembly an exclujersey is regarded as the ideal sive right for 10 years to navigate fabric. The jersey dress pictured and build such contrivances; in to the right is designed on a pattern on the Poexhibited he 1786, March, of simplicity thats news for fall of tomac a boat river propelled by r Smooth 1941. steam; in 1787 both Virginia and yoke, elongated molded midriff, acgranted him patents on cent on hips are exclamation points Maryland he obtained similar patlater it; defto a of high fashion that point in ents France and HolEngland, initely new silhouette for this casual land and in December, 1792, gave suit frock. The plaid gray jersey a successful exhibition of his steamin the oval also announces a silboat on the Thames river. houette so new and different it Most vocal of all the partisans are is sure to intrigue the interest and of John Fitch and the evidence those of every fancy which they submaiden. mit to prove his (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) right to the honor that has been given to Robert Fulton seems to be to establish his Color to the title If in doubt, choose tones of brown right of inventor of for your color lead in assembling a the steamboat. new autumn wardrobe. With brown chronoas a basic color, you will make no Arranged logically, here are mistake. Opening displays put the the steps which emphasis on brown suits, brown establish their dresses, brown fur coats and brown claims: John Fitch furs as trimming on cloth coats. 1785 In April, Fitch, then living The milliner, the jeweler and the in Bucks county, Pa., conceived the in all the maker have joined glove idea of a steamboat and in Novembrown fashion crusade this fall. he presented a drawing of the ber With the beige and biscuit colors you will find thrill- boat, models and tube boiler to the American Philosophical society. ing schemes that call for acces1787 On August 22 his boat, sories in the new browns. The new with a equipped cylinder was is especialtopaz and amber jewelry demonstrated at and ly attractive. It will be very much members of the Philadelphia conConstitutional Brown fall. this the in foreground leather buttons and beltbuekles vention, then in session, witnessed match the new brown gloves and the successful demonstration. 1790 Newspaper advertisements many sports hats are now trimmed prove that Fitch was operating a with brown suede or steamboat successfully and carrying leather. passengers across the Delaware. 1791 Congress voted to grant Sweaters Very Fanciful Fitch a patent on his steamboat. It For Modern School Girl was signed by President George It is the op.nion among enthusi- Washington and is the only one grantthe asts on the knitted theme that a girl ed on August 26, 1791, in which boats Ac by wording "Propelling to should take school along starting is no at least six sweaters. And theres steam &c is used and there record of a similar patent issued on a reason. Sweaters this season cover the entire field of both utilitarian any earlier date than that. and social needs. Then too, not Fitch was unable to interest only is there a sweater for every occasion but the new sweaters are enough people in his invention to simply lriesistible. having taken on capitalize on it and he died in povintriguing detad that is fascinating erty in Bardslown, Ky., July 2, 1798. The You will find the new sweaters In his last years he wrote: made very fanciful with wool fringe day will come when some more powtrimmings, little danglirg yarn ball erful man will get fame and riches treatments. Then there are quilted from my invention; but nobody will effects, wondrously achiecd, and believe that poor John Fitch can do The plaid patternmgs and color contrast anything worthy of attention. with bright okos, sleeves and man who did get fame and riches banded sections. Formal sweaters was Robert Fulton, for he had achave flattering decollette treatments cess to Fitchs drawings and specifications and from them constructed and sparkling embroideries. his Clermont in 1807. Attend 0. 1.T. man-tailore- baek-to-scho- here, it AVIATION TRAINING Ctmo Scott WatiOH (Rtleused by Western Newspaper Union.) will next four or see some of the best all-oscraps the National league has ever known. Tie slightly delirious DodgCardiers and the pennant-manals will be attempting to knock each other out while the Pirates prepare to take advantage of any five weeks hf r ' AV'' r 1 WNU W 3541 Led by Passions A jealous woman believes any- thing her passion suggests. Gay. 12-in- smooth-finishe- Every little girl starting out to join the fall and winter style parade will be wanting a cunning little plaid ensemble that teams a Stuart plaid kilt with a matching plaid tarn oshanter as p.ctured here. The idea of a little jumper skirt that can be worn with a change of blouse each day, will delight mother, for it solves the problem of sending forth little daughter each morning to school looking as fresh as a daisy and quite picturesque too with a wee bit of Scotland injected into her costume. d HOTEL BOISE IDAHO BOISE, Largest and finest hotel in Idaho. Two hundred beautifully appointed rooms. Only fireproof hotel in Boise. Located In heart of civic, governmental and business district. EXCELLENT FOOD MODERATE RATES MANAGEMENT OF VIS Gil G. MC CEI |