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Show BS Din as UTAH ~Some sBy ROBERT McSHANE Union) the cauliflower game. Down through the years. the rch has been constant for good ters who could land one-punch ckouts. There have been some, Lonnie Stagg made Walter Camp's first All-America team in 1889, just 50 years ago. He started coaching Chicago university in 1892, which happens to be some 47 years ago. far too few to satisfy hungry erican fight fans who demand tional finishes. at's why Al Hostak, ttle middleweight, s greatest ce the of one of cards. Stanley a standout in a Not Ketchell day when the best in the game. the tiddleweight ranks boasted'of such whters as Billy Papke, Mike Gibs, Frank Klaus, Eddie McGoorty others. Lonnie Stagg still thinks that football at Chicago could have been saved. That the game should still have been carried on. I don't Ten tent. tient Fighter ostak is the kind of a fighter waits patiently for an opening. major first 6 7 The tragedy of many marriages is that the wife loses her charm. She becomes a little cold and calculating, too much preoccupied with household cares. By KATHLEEN HATEVER NORRIS else you lose in your married life, try to hold on to charm. Or if you never had any particular to cultivate it. a natural much Charm thing, more charm, try isn't entirely although it comes naturally to some wom- en than to others. Schoolgirls often have charm, especially if they happen to be first in the class, good dancers, prominent in theatricals. Brides almost always have charm, although it may last only for a few weeks or days, or even hours. But this sort of charm doesn't count. To be charming in times of success, flattery or importance, means very little. A really charming woman is always charming, whatever the circumstances, and whether she be 16 or 76. SEATTLE AL HOSTAK at# bashfulness. em A _believe-it-or-not in this era of ring boastfulness. The tragedy of many marriages is that the wife loses her charm. She becomes a little hard, a little e doesn't term every opponent a rimbum,"' and he doesn't promise to angatten him in the first round. s dHe won the middleweight title noftem Freddie chist it to opart of the Krieger year, is laurels cold Steele on July 26, 1938, Solly by and the then stopping latter regained Krieger in te fourth round of a return conmest in Seattle on June 27, 1939. gvhen Hostak accomplished this feat nge did ngas something achieved no middleweight since akack his crown th Ketchell from Papke took in 1908. crowd Pleaser ,Win or lose, Hostak is a popular hter. When he climbs into the g his shyness is shed with his be. He's in there for one purpose 1d that's to tag his opponent as pidly uch as possible. raw as the ring today. ht with Krieger hed the nds He courage last 10 broken, has any as fighter In his 15-round in 1938 he finrounds still with trying both for a 10ckout. The New on, York which Boxing moves in commismysterious vays, has refused to recognize Hosk's claim to the title. It's blessing as been bestowed upon Ceferino arcia of the Philippines and Los The National Boxing asngeles. ciation recognizes Hostak as the The controversy has 1ampion. aused pot widespread cularly wing the addicts shter te on claim is head and Philippine dissension, Pacific coast. that the parMost Seattle shoulders above brawler. _ Eddie Marino is Hostak's manag7, and their relationship calls to mind innumerable magazine fiction It's the ancient tale of the ores manager who discovers an unknown - | d ad, sees his latent possibilities, ains him carefully for months, then prings him on an _ unsuspecting Of "course the unknown orld. ghter gees on to win the world's The story wouldn't ampionship. Y = complete be' That's Hostak. the It without that final touch. story may of Marino be and stereotyped. But the pair Jndoubtedly it is. ipseould serve as blueprint for the aie uch-used plot. It's just luck that ey haven't been sued for plagiarit sm by som. budding author. of r Marino discovered Hostak back in 30. He noticed a kid who slipped dfinto his Tacoma, Wash., gym to He liked the kid, ,@unch the bag. He obtained aw promise in him. ather Hostak's consent and startFor Jed supervising Al's training. ymine months Al did nothing but shadl¥ow box, punch the bag and drill in | sic maneuvers. When Eddie Marino decided his was ready for action he turned im loose. The result is history-a Btory which saw the unknown kid win the world's championship. He kept tthe plot unchanged. background. and calculating, a little of runs. But graciousness, easiness, laughknow her no more. ter, sympathy If her husband comes home in an she mood conversational amiably has small time or interest to spare for him. "If you're going to sit out here, ashtray,"' out an I'll bring Jack, ‘‘Please don't she says dispiritedly. Doctor says put your feet up there. to Jean's teeth will take three years bill straighten; dear knows what his fillI'm going to let my will be! can't chew on ing go; it means I my face, but that doesn't of side that Ma had one of her bilious matter. headaches today and I was sitting with her, so I've just got a pick-up dinner."' into She then sits staring vaguely face space, the expression on her dissatisfied as sad much so not and bored. This is the sort of wife who loses her husband. pages Wives write me pages and They tell me all about the situation. They are models of that they do. they and _ industry; faithfulness That ‘never look at another man." the humilithey can be subjected to afation of having their husbands' much as fections waver amazes as it angers them. deof?" made are men "What a certain wife, such one mands in a luxuIsabel Baker, who lives of district outside suburban rious ‘‘Dick andl have been mar- a quarrel. without 10 years, ried girl of eight We have a boy and a He makes good money; and five. car and bewe own our home and social group. long to a nice little he has fallen Now, quite suddenly, seven years in love with a woman woman divorced a is, he older than in his office years who .worked and has come now back. She ago has broken up two homes already and flattery now is after mine. She puts on with ing, and is always laugha spade, Dick has gotten the habit of dropping in to see her late in the cocktail and a afternoon, to have a late Sometimes he gets home chat. something for dinner, chuckling over I'm not afraid Eve has told him. or anyof his wanting a divorce thing mad it serious; to have a just woman makes of 40, IS me ten high scholarship standard-not only for entrance, but also for remaining in his classic campus surroundings. Chicago's Case. It was certainly a sporting crime this last season to throw the Chicago team against the list of opponents the Maroon squad had to face -Ohio State, Michigan, even Harvard. Dr. Hutchins said once-maybe twice-that he believed in a 10-cent football team. O. K.-so far. But don't let them try to play in a million-dollar league. years older than I am, wrecking my home." There are thousands of cases like this. The wife has been too sure of herself and her husband. Life has been going on the way she likes to have it, and so she feels that it ought to satisfy him, too. Why make herself pretty when he gets home, why be amused, laughing, enthusiastic about what she is doing, or interested in what he is? Why give him an unexpected kiss, or pick him up at the office and take him to lunch, or ask him to tell again, for the benefit of friends, the story that amused her? Loses Charm in Rigidity. He's her husband, isn't he? He owes her fidelity and devotion, doesn't he, without any silly sentimental fuss? Hasn't she borne him two children and given him the best years of her life? Let him walk a chalk line now, or he'll be sorry! And so, in self-righteousness and rigidity, she loses all charm, not only as a wife, but as a woman. There is no more gaiety in his house. Just cleanliness and meals and civility, and a woman opposite him who will do her duty by him, and yielu not an inch more. Laughter is a natural thing to as sociate with charm, and I see that I have used the word more than a Perhaps once in describing it. wise question for certain wives to ask themselves is whether there is house. the in laughter enough Laughter over the small pleasures and the small upsets of every day. when Laughter out at the garage dad is cleaning the car on Sunday morning, and laughter at the tele- phone when he asks if he may bring Men do for dinner. a man home not leave laughing wives. and husbands good when And fathers begin those office flirtations the sly, disastrou so end often that alalmost involved women other in characteristic one have ways ured. good-nat are They common. Mrs. Brooks at the office may be She may have had all 40 or more. Her .domestic her teeth replaced. history may be unfortunate, to say The wreckage of severa. the least. marriages may clutter her past. To, learned to be sweet. she's But flatter with her interested eyes; to to even be terribly sorry for Dick; find kindly, understanding things to say of Dick's wife. It may be all on the surface, but it is charm, and Dick, tired of the impersonal efficiency of the cold little woman at home, reaches hungrily for it, even though he knows he is fooling himself. To out-charm a charmer is game worth any woman's mettle. a I still contend that you can't compete with the leading teams in any conference on this basis. I am not defending proselyting, athletic scholarships or direct payments. I am only saying that any university that abandons this triple-threat hasn't much of a chance against the great majority who follow this path. For it is the winning path. CHARM @ Laughter is a natural thing to associate with charm. @. Men do not leave laughing wives. @. The "other women" always have one characteristic in common. They are good natured. @_ A man sometimes gets tired of the impersonal efficiency of the cold little woman at home, and is flattered by interested eyes, even though he knows he is fooling himself. @. The danger point in the relations of man and wife is when they begin taking each other for granted. When they no longer sense a need or a wish to interest each other, that's when the "other woman" finds easy sailing. too much preoccupied with her household cares and the family finances. She can't relax. If invited to take things a trifle more easily she says nervously that with two children to manage and the house and the meals she'd like to see anyone relax! She is she is just; she capable; is anxious that the family shall be comfortable and well fed; she keeps her hair dressed and her stockings free Chicago. LAUGHTER set So Throughout the United States, more than 450 blind men and women go to school, hold jobs and manage households because educated dogs from the Seeing Eye school at Morristown, N. J., walk by their sides constantly to guide them. Here's how they work: No one can have any quarrel on this point. He had also come = out strongly against b any form of prose‘ lyting, for any athDr. Hutchins letie scholarships, for any form of payment. Es eg almost to the point Te tite: st ig | = believe so-under a Big I don't believe so-in a league President Hutchins of Chicago had doesn't press matters and takes ty of time to size up an op ment. When the stage has been' t he blasts over that deadly right etd | the referee usually counts up ten. HuSeattle Al is a welcome relief .gom the modern school of pugilism "hich fights best over the radio or . g newspaper columns. He is quiet | gid unobtrusive, es pionships. They retired him at Chicago when he was 70, and still in his prime. He has proved that by his record at the College of the Pacific where, at 77, he is still one of the most active coaches and one of to- that division come up with a ger of Hostak's type. Ketchell s a He led the parade in Big Ten chamthe young is drawing days is a difficult assignment to get into a winning football argument with Alonzo A. Stagg, of Yale, Chicago and the College of the Pacific. flush to ca royal way a the Serviee.) ANGELES.-It new eee and (NANA-WNU LOS L' Fé a smart Eo end WW i | HERE's make the tailored coat dress, on classic shirtwaist lines, that you simply can't live without. It's indispensable every season of the year, for home wear and business both. No. 8605 makes up with just the right crispness in wool crepe, flannel or flat crepe. Make it with matching or contrasting collar, a - your choice of long or short sleeves. Patter i for both. oe : This easy pattern is an alluring invitation to beginners. It's so Doctor Hutchins of University Of Chicago Believed in 10Cent Team-but It Played In Million-Dollar League. Service.) a "snbow's 5 By Grantland Rice New Button-Front Tailored, Smart ee Newspaper S RARE as Russian victories in Finland are boxers who can fen opposition with one punch. Mey're the answer to managerial y the pot of gold at the Seeing Kye Dogs Bring Light To America's Legion of Blind CE jJeased by Western Sportlight Women Need a Charm School's Course (Bell Syndicate-WNU ‘BEST FRIEND' A Kathleen Norris Says: a sell per for game which substantial they 8605 Seeing Eye dogs take three months to learn their new job. A typical problem is shown here: Although given the command NE ui "Forward," the dog (above) sees danger, stops, turns his master around, takes him into the street to avoid the manhole (right), back and then on the sidewalk. It takes weeks of patient training to teach the dogs such tricks, but they learn their lessons well. 2 2 I happen to know that the vast majority of college football players on the better-known teams today are rather well taken care of. Most of them have scholarships. Most of them have good jobs provided or they move into financia] arrangements that carry them along. Part of this may be summer jobs from leading alumni who give the athlete enough to go through college. Or they may be allotted 10 or 20 tickets Each class of ten blind students spends four weeks at the school in Morristown, being instructed by sighted tutors under actual traffic conditions. The instructor (left) is showing the girl how to obey her dog's warning "check" upon reaching the curb. If there is any sign of danger, the dog will wait until a clear path is open, then proceed across the street. can amounts. By substantial amounts I mean from $100 to $150 a game, if it happens to be a sell-out. I've seen too many tickets before the lag#t Rose Bowl game sold for $10 a ticket tc do any guessing along this line. Chicago had nothing like this to offer. Chicago had no plan of taking care of its football players. And Chicago had no soft courses where certain young husky athletes could get by who happened to have no particular leaning towards Latin, Greek or higher mathetmatics. Or logic, or advanced English. A Case of ? Restless? Can't sleep? Tire easily? Worried due to female functional disorders? Then try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound famous for over 60 years in helping such weak, rundown, nervous women. Start today! Unhurried Nature Nature never spoils its work being in a hurry. also. all that is written you'd football dominated every in the country. It does on the sporting page. But again I ask-what about the remaining 98 or 99 per cent who don't play football? These don't have any bet- classroom of the football They averages players are not learning in Shown If a football squad of 45 men can that runs an institution dominate from 5,000 to 12,000 students-what can you think of that college or unifor school a training as PRESSES HEART to show. any more the with Buddy II (inset) is Morris S. Frank, vice president this counof the school and the first person to have a guide dog in try. His first dog, Buddy 1, who died recently, was trained in Switzerland in 1928 by Mrs. Harrison Eustis, founder of the Seeing Eye. a special Each graduate is protected from "going blind again" by fund to provide replacements. younger brain? I am willing to admit there is far and scouting high-class too much it when paying and proselyting comes to the football stars of the College schools. ranking higher scouts all over the map are on their trail. The competition among vari- ous colleges and universities has become terrific. I don't think this is any too good for the high school or prep school star. But under our football system today, it is the only way many universities can match the schedules they are forced to face from compet- ing schools. by Can't Eat, Can't Sleep, Awful Gas most than have college. versity The special constable was being shown his first night beat. ‘See that red light in the distance?'' said the sergeant. ‘"‘That's the limit of your beat in that direction..Now go on with it.' The new constable started off. When three o'clock rolled around, he did not come in to report, nor did he show up for duty the following night. Then, along about 4:30 that next morning, he turned up again, weary and limping. ‘‘Where in thunder have you been,'' demanded the sergeant. A feeble response:-‘‘That red light was a long-distance moving van. I came upon it 43 miles out when it stopped because of a flat tire." vour NERVES? this To read think that university ter Duty Called Constable To Go the Utter Limit HOW ARE reason. Football squads are usually 40 or 50 strong out of They be5,000 or 10,000 students. long to a magnificent minority. What are they doing for the 98 per cent? Are they any better students, any more learning they smrarter-are than the football players? I doubt this easy! A few darts and a few gathers-that's practically all the detailing there is to it. The step-bystep sew chart shows. you just what to do! Pattern No. 8605 is designed for sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36 requires 4 yards of 39inch material with short sleeves; 434 yards with long; % yard for collar in contrast. Purchased belt. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) each. Doubt. It may be that Dr. Hutchins of Chicago is right. But in many ways I doubt it. For eS MOAB, I Sula of Sporte- ostak Proves W orthy King of Middleweights TIMES-INDEPENDENT, < Re THE . wane + eee aac > s on mmenn = 0¢ Imperial Roman Army Had Own ‘Maginot Line' ROME.-Imperial Rome once held back the menace of savage German tribesmen with a predecessor of the Maginot line soil, line. The was on what however, and ancient fortified is now German was located con- siderably to the east of the present French defenses. ; The Roman line, known then and since as the Limes Romanus, start- ed at the village of Rheinbrohl on the Rhine, about 20 miles below Coblenz and on the opposite bank of the river. It ran 200 miles over hills and through valleys, with its other end at Eining on the Danube. Thus tory it protected on the the Roman interlacing terri- headwaters. "Gas on my stomach wes so bad I could not eat or sleep. It even seemed to press on my heart. A friend ested Adlerika. The first dose brought me relief. 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