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Show I I T"E DULI TIX, BINGHAM CANYON. (fTAIt , , , V" - I C' '' ; " L --jM;nj 0 SODIP1E MAHONEY r'X Jim LASH' SECOND-EW,5EMA- II I f V. 74vlf kTCO ONLY .2SO DURING THE 1048 V "1 ttllnV'i REASON BUT WAS SCCCNO IN HOVE RUN5 J WITH 32 AND TOURTH M THC RBXPCPART- -j NENT WITH 4,- - jyawwr I EARLY DAYS ji JHL rfJVi I OT GOLF WHN A PALL jtx ii WAS APT TO BREAK y' A V) JTA Mil I IN HALF, THE RULE f ) XL --V Mill I to crop a NLv-- ri, vpZwui If joe MecwKx, , I A WHEN WITH THC t ST T ii CACDINALS, LED ' THE N.L. IN RUNS BATTED klj V IN THREE SEASONS IN A 2 "SOW. IN 1936, 1037 AND IQ33 mil n miUif HE KNOCKED IN 156, 154 AND 122 RUNS. KfictuitJ ; i Y:i story; ;1 1 vpnirrjyiLi' ,vAv ;--- r ' r - ' ni" atop his 22--j towering high s Cleveland, 0., e, Charlie Lupica right for himself oy of sustenance ries out a pledge pin the air" ed Cleveland resitting securely jf the American E3p. One support-i- n Philadelphia, (ering "all the tarlie could eat." is hoisted up to bucket. At right, is hoisted up for morning chores. M.jlito WlHlllto0li, H ' ,n. l jj Charlie's self-impos-exile has its advantages. Like a visit from a neigh-bor. Left, 19 -- year -- old Donna Mae Byers is com-ing up to see him. Some say Charlie's in for a long siege, but he's opti-mistic. "It won't be long now," he said. That was a long, long time ago. Below, Charlie utilizes his time in knitting booties for a future Ind-ian fan; a "little stran-ger" is expected in the Lupica household soon. In the meantime, he hopes, the Indians will have battered the Yan-kees and all other rivals into the dust. The Lupi-ca- s have three children Nicolctte, Carl and Peggy. Charlie's perch atop the 22-fo- pole is only four by four feet, but he's not complaining. "It's for a noble cause," ' he declares. Charlie has an American flag, some blankets, books, a radio and a few more comforts to improve the shining (or unshining) hours. s hih till Aii ,v r Chi, tA&fr"-- If s vV m ;fer love has no to endure all -- nd motorists, Q,"f occos.onal in- -i who givr him no p f,rst night they h awake until 4 lne bottom picture :w Charhc gets his le jets cards from r J country, ad-- ;( Charlie Lupica, l,sr. Cleveland, O." . YAu (x :;x X v Xff X'X fc'X s,-- .. S:VV1NG CiaCLE PATTERNS Smartly Styled for Afternoon Yoked Style Combines Fabrics . o . . . . it , ' sV;. 4 j I "Vlde Size Kan II n'V' 31481 TIIIS IIANDSOME daytime frock l! tei- l comes in a wide size range Use goft eye,et for the shaped BBJtlnr,"",iHTlSBCTrLJ yoke and sleeves and edge with Big Favorite tiny ruffling. Or combine lace T OOK pretty and neat in this with a sold tone fabric. " charming afternoon style the ' qimnlf waist it nrrintrrl urith a Pattern No. B453 la new-rit- e pir- - foratrd pattern in ize 32, m. :m. 38, slanted closing finished in seal- - . . " 3. 3V yard of lops. The panelled skirt is a 31Mnch: 1 KOnlri- - favorite with every woman. KKWINO ( llt I F PATTRKN IXTT. ftSII South Well 8t. Chlra 7, III. Pattern No. 8448 Is a new-rit- e per. Fnclose 2S eenti In coin (or ach fnratcd p.'ittrrn In sl?es 12, 14. HI, IB, 20; pattern denlred. 40 and 42. Sie 14, 4t yard of Pattern No. Sir ' Send nn additional twenty-fiv- e cents today for your copy of the Kail and Nam Winter t'ASiUUN-- M p.iue of (mart new Rtyles, spcci.il features fre pattern Addres printed liisulo the book. Keep Posted on Values By Reading the ads FOLEY PILLS Relieve fr Backaches II due to 1 1 Sluggish Kidneys --or DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK MAKES IRONING ijp0b fWi COSTi Moqqs PIP ' Ami im hfi6"Mot?uj Yes, a wing of genuine aluminum metal &XX1 " innde every PEP package! Body of plane tf&yyL f printed in color on outside of package. Put &01T i 'em together ... Z O O Ml Directions on iw, tr' package. Set of 6. Colleet 'em swap 'em! i Jtf& Urge Mom to buy Kellogg's PEP today. tjja fjf ?, Start enjoying crispy, delicious flakes of sjf ? ' whole wheat. Get MODEL JET PLANE ff tl 1J I WITH THE PACKAGE! Hurry! U ff f SPORTLIGHT Years Catch the Fastest Athlete By GRANTLAND RICE law Speed You speak of the speed of Coal-tow- n, or the speed Citation knows. You speak of the speed of the western gale when the young tornado blows. But there's only one speed that matters, wherever the simooms rage, And that is the speed of the flying years that turns youth into age. What Are Reflexes? "Just what," writes L. M. P., 'are the reflexes you and other sporting experts (thanks) write ibout? Are they physical or men-ial? Why should they affect an old-.im-more than a younger fel-ow- ? Why are they so important? ! would think that a veteran would lave better reflexes than a young-:- r fellow." Reflexes are merely team play between mind and muscle. For ex- - amnlp vear nerv I was talking with Jack Dempsey. Jack was then about through. "I know I'm as strong as I used to be," he said. "I know I can hit as hard. I know I still can take a punch as welL But Til tell faster. It doesn't. As you get older nothing travels faster except the years. The only de-tail an athlete picks up as he grows older is experience. When Louis was working, aftei a fashion, against Joe Walcott, ht would stalk the Jersey retreatei and catch up with him. Then di nothing. Ten years ago, he woulc have knocked out Walcott in tht first round, for Louis was a fast, hard puncher. But after his 10 oi 11 years In the ring. Louis' re flexes were shot. He could see his opening but by the time he hac the blow under way, Walcott woulc be out of reach. The same thing happens to ball-players. The hitters can no longer follow the pitch and get the bat working in time. Notice how many veterans are called out on that third strike. Ted Williams has the best set ol reflexes in baseball. Ted can swing a bat on a fifth of a second's notice when the pitch is only 20 or 30 feet away. You don't believe this is true? Ask Bill Dickey, who caught back of Williams for some years. On Being Hungry For several weeks inhabitants of various wayside inns around the world have been telling me this story. It concerns Walter (Good Time Charlie) Friedman, Car-nera'- s original importer. Good Time Charlie's dream is now to locate a seven-foo- t china-man or a seven-foo- t Zulu one oi those who can high jump eight or nine feet. We questioned him aboul it recently and discovered Good Time Charlie feels that he has the answer to the next heavyweight champion. "I'd keep h i m hungry," Charlie says. "I'd get him and starve him. The trouble with fighters today they are too well fed. They have been able to make a good living outside of the ring. They eat too much. "Jack Dempsey was hungry when he was at his best. Tunney needed money when he forced himself to train for Dempsey. Joe Louis was hungry when he broke in. Willard was hungry when he started after Jack Johnson. Hun gry guys are hard to lick. "That's what's the matter with white fighters today," Good Time Charlie continued. "They are fat and overfed. So they have no ambi tion. Most of them can make good money without fighting. "A well-fe- man seems to have nothing to fight for." irantland Kice you what makes ne sore. I see a punch starting. I tnow where it's headed for. Six r seven years ago my chin or my lead would be out of the way in-stinctively. But today too many of hese punches hit me. Even the sucker punches. "There's another angle," Jack said. "Six or seven years ago when spotted an opening, my fist swung in that split second. Today I see an opening it disap-pears by the time my fist gets in notion. It is either blocked or it las moved out of the way. I don't relieve many people know what .his means to a fighter. It is only i matter of a split second. Maybe i fifth of a second. But it happens hat way as you get older. The message from your eye or your nind travels slower to the muscle. Vot much slower. But a fifth of i second means a lot." There probably never was a bet-e- r instinctive puncher or fighter nan Dempsey when he was at his jeak. Or during those days when Jempsey was hungry You might think that as you got older the message from eye or mind to muscle would travel Brooklynese Is a language all its own. Only the residents of Brook-lyn seem to be able to speak it proficiently and are always run-ning up against persons who try to correct their pronunciation. Wit-ness the following dialogue be-tween two men sitting on a park bench. "Chee, de boids choip pretty." "Those aren't 'boids,' they're birds." "No foolin'. Chee, dey choip jusl like boids." Visiting the Potomac River, a condescending Englishman doubted the story of George Wash-ington hurling a silver dollar across the river. His guide explained: "Well, of course I didn't see him do it, but you know a dollar went much further in those days, and I don't think it should be such a feat for a man who threw a crown across the Atlantic Ocean." After viewing Lord Nelson's flagship, Victory, from a distance, an American visitor was invited aboard to inspect it from closer quarters. As the English sailor who was showing the visitor around stopped before a tablet he lifted his cap respectfully and said in a sepulchral whisper, "This his the hexact spot where Lord Nelson fell." "I wouldn't be surprised," re-plied the American. "I barked my shins on the durned thing myself." 30,000-Swedis- h Women Flex Muscles in Gyms STOCKHOLM. Thirty thousand Swedish housewives, from girls of 20 to energetic grannies of 70, now belong to gymnastic groups and look forward to the weekly phys-ical training hour as a relaxation from household work and worries. They pay special attention to exercises for strengthening the back and feet, conditioning the washing-u- p muscles. Next sum-mer 5,000 of these muscular mothers will give a giant demon-stration of physical exercises at Stockholm as part of the great gymnastic display known as the Lingiad. The Swedes are pioneers of physical training. It was Pehr Henrik Ling who, at the start of the last century, invented phys-ical exercises without apparatus, known to our grandfathers as "Swedish drill." T '""V r f rloifW-V-f By Harold Arnett TIE EACtt FOR, SUITCASE MERE'S A SiMPi RACK. MADE OF -- T 'AKD80ACP, WHICH WILL ANSWER i, ry5 THE PROBLEM OP WRINKLED TIES s'? IN SUITCASES. THE NUMfcSER OF , KSff slots vou cot in the stiff j; J rjn A CAROBOARP WILL, OF COURSE I DEPEND ON THE NUMBER OP JJ VV ties vou wish to CAiiB-y- . Ajy W you can make the rack, out vs j ' ' Of plastic or plywood if feT v ' 'A iOO WANT SOMETMIM& MORE PERMANE'H 'SmPlE STEAMER ' Y'! ,F ou WANIT TO STEAM ,r y jv THE wallpaper opf a W'a. Tf 1 WALL WITHOUT RENTING flX'K VV (H - X A STEAMER TO DO SO, VVi;ttl 'v"L' hj; JUST USE A HOUSEHOLD l Zy '1 I;. i RON DAMPEN A CLOTH 0:,?tJ !r-- and pold it inito a pap V' rHErN HOL0 the iROni '' - X- AGA:NST THE PAD TO STEAM THE PAPER LOOSE, .: ' ' 'tP DAMPENING THE PAD L I |