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Show BSIN UINTAH Speaking of Sports DeanThrougli? No One Knows Final Sentence that the g becoming evident By ROBERT McSIIANE not going to are 190 of ,ad:ees (Released by Western Newspaper Union. 1 much league wrecking this TXHEN the four the one and only Dizzy last did as they Dean pitches his last game of JS! fihe first place Joe DiMaggio baseball for the Chicago Cubs and that can well happen in the not too a doubtful quantity for some , distant future it will furnish a field Z, to come. ' means more day for every sports scribe in the d joe DiMaggio than one might nation. Ha Yankees For the incomparable Diz Is the imagine. When you remove a .385 hit- - sole individual cast from that parter, one of the lead- ticular mold. He is "Mr. Baseball punch- to hundreds of thousands of fans ing home-ru- n ers and one of the who can recite pitching records as best of all defensive readily as Junior can tear through tables. outfielders, you are the multiplication Other losing something no men are more important to baseteam can afford to ball. Even the most ardent Dean lose not even the rooter would hesitate before calling him an elevating influence in the Yankees. The odds are that baseball world. But none of them DiMaggio will be as captured the public fancy as did good as ever in a Diz. It was only six years ago that short while, but he will still be a gam-- Dean won 30 games as St. Louis capwounded knee is always a tured the National League pennant and the World Series. Today, the Ask any good trainer. He. pitcher for whom the Chicago Cubs other Angle paid $185,000 in cash probably will be relegated to the permanent role re is another angle one of the of relief pitcher. ;l managers gave out recently. he said, f0r the last four years, me One More Chance its! of os have taken it for granted ieorfieH the Yankees couldn't be P. K. Wrigley, owner of the Cubs, ss n jpped. They were just too good. has given Dizzy a square deaL So f only for this reason too many of has Manager Gabby Hartnett figure t teams were beaten before a Theyve been willing, so far, to mean akee game started. But you get give "just one more chance to a I d of taking too many beatings. headlineI r begin to leave a deeper sting, spectacular, making pitching career. citato, vj season you'll find most of the When Cub officials first discussed te At- os out to beat the Yankees, hns- - the role of reserve moundsman for harder than they ever have their great one, he had started in every fourth game since the openantic, this can make a lot of differ-hav- e ing of the 1940 campaign a pro(, Especially as the Yankees, gram planned to answer once and r the four big years, wont have the for all whether he could be depended antic, ne keenness. They cant have, four nt human nature. r the i remember hearing Ty Cobb ronce that three or four years of I .:ess was about all any ball club This doesnt mean the CAST j carry. But it thj Aees cant win again. mean we should have a real les pr RECORD Fearsome Weapons Produced When Man Seeks to Destroy Old Ticket Honored Finding an unused ticket in travel book purchased 34 years ago on a visit to London, an Australian sent it to the agency with the query What about it? and received a check for $2.60. t Kathleen Norris Says: IFoncii Dodge Thought of Aging Mam inventive genius can also be destructive. Turned to pro ducing weapons of war, it can devise instruments that deal death swiftly, unmercifully. Here are a feto of them: -- (Bell Syndicate WNU Service. 1 0 HOTELS When In RFNO, NEVADA, stop at IN Renos largest and HOTEL GOLDEN most popular hoteL APARTMENT HOTEL from Temple. Reasonable Rates t day week or month. Completely furnished. RICHMOND. 70 E. No. Temple. Balt Lake. Block Instruments, Hospital Supp'tea. Surgical Manufacturers of Abdominal SupTruaaea porters. Elastic Stockings. The Physicians 8upp!y Company Salt Lake City. Utah 46 W 2nd South St OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND USED desks and chairs, files, typewriters, adding inch's, safes, S. L. DESK E., 35 W. Broadway, Salt Lake WASHING MACHINES MAVTAG - APEX - DEXTER I0 MARKING DEVICES Whatever she is when she is oldand to her uihy worry about it? By KATHLEEN NORRIS be one of those to whom only Above: Two versions of the dangerous mine. Drawing shows how Germany's fearsome magnetic mine may be built so that it money and a can be dropped from a airplane. When attracted to a are good digestion important passing ship, it explodes. in life. Dont be one of the millions DONT low-flyin- g 'fGirif and the Dodgers Prjjjtns matter of team spirit brings Vj alongside the Dodgers. I asked MacPhail how he accounted I war 11131 wad ancl wooUy getaway d that J fidSers put on this season. in the t Hustling and spirit, Larry said. think we have 25 per )rrrj ithonestly more spirit than any team in r vas Above: Depth charges being prepared in a British factory. They are dropped over submarines crushing the hull via explosive pressure. Lower left: The torpedo. wball. havent a great team as far playing personnel goes. But we e a hustling We DEAN inish. you know old days Camp Sevier in ts a the Larry enville, "Ive .nued, around quite a !e looking things a (Officer Mac-- 1 around 1917 early 1918, was stationed In the ' lot with Colonel e Lea's 113th. F. A. And he "ens to be one of Colonel Leas k officers, willing to try any-including a Kaiser kidnap- r. d 3, at.l Ive es ! been around quite a continued. "But I any better spirit in ttr basebaU r football than ,l)lilyn bas tb's year. We have a city hack of us, one of the itrst baseball cities in the his-iii- ii n of tbe game. When yon can more Iha1 a million people 1 lcam frying to finish thirfl, lust making it, you can 0. tani ,le type of fans we have ear side. Dont forget that j he, Larry I hen't seen pdern r has 11 fJads w y, Italy mesa g 100 14 1 I .able ;!as wat-- ps S'red t to- void n 7 u ,0- - in Team Spirit 25 per cent more other team carries we have the average ' n fan has 40 per cent more than any other fan. He may a?ainst us 8 little If we start "ng. but why shouldnt he? The 3 hosinesh of a big league ball 15 to win ball games. But if ?Ve 8 cbance no other fan rally as quickly. This season put out $140,000 for talent We from the weather, We ooeded badly. Try to we have than any A T 3 At- - .. 1 the 1 1 P nr tHat break- of nh ('r two best baseball cities Gar- - , in E Oto tis tiy fat trite f ik dy Hr are r pi host art ll " r o " si- - the re roob,yn an,I Detroit. going away. They know 'all, and they love baseball, 1 re well ahead of New York Chicago, whose "topless by nearly 15,000,-I'oplare overshadowed. They if H1Iners, but more important they love an(j gnow the game. this respect they have taken "3y away from Boston, the real e of baseball knowledge and in-- 4 some years ago. There was 6 "hen Boston was the mam Citadel of Swat. Boston 'i 1 great baseball city. But it 1 Brooklyn or a Detroit. tour of some through winter and Ive found that about 70 per f1! the outsiders are pulling froikljn to win the National Pennant and for Boston to T American League pennant at 'd Six rampart. c, 1 1 tour-mont- are atd rfi i (i a In h ,v- t- VM - .'V They explode when wagon is moved. P"M who consider eating and drinking, amusements and parties, flirtations and gay companies, smooth hair and smooth skin the real objects and aims of existence. All these things are fun, in mild doses. But there is only one companion who goes with you to the end, and thats yourself. Find that companion, cultivate her, give her a taste for the things that last, before it is too late. Women dont think enough about this. When they are young they feel that age never will come, and when it does come it finds them utterly unprepared. These ripe years, which ought to be the very best of all, strike them like a thunderbolt Theyve never considered the financial side of them. Theyve never considered the social or domestic side of them. Theyve never considered the moral side of them. Twenty-Fiv- e Years Ago. To be sure, 25 years ago Peggy married gaily enough, leaving her own father and mother alone. And when that mother was widowed, Peggy shed dutiful tears for her lost father and felt quite sorry for mother, who was immediately plunged into money difficulties. But all this doesnt affect Peggy personally at all. SHE never thinks of herself as fifty, and alone. SHE never will be widowed, her one child married, her entire provision for old age a small life insurance policy. When these inevitable conditions arise in her own case Peggy is shocked and despairing. All her plans have included herself as important, attractive, and protected by John. But now her daughter is married and gone, her husband dead, she must give up her home, and in her bitterness and loss she feels that there is nothing left. She very probably sinks into the limbo of those unhappy lonely little women who live only in their childs life complaining, remembering, grieving. Burden on Others. K'rV'r- - tirades against Hartnett were superb. Even Gabby must have been proud of his pitchers originality and forthrightness when he felt he wasnt being given a fair chance to demonstrate his 14 v&Si- i- - - comeback. r 5 ' j . Now Dizzy is close to the twilight of his career in the big leagues. Owner Wrigley has not indicated what disposition he will make of Dean. In fact, he hasnt even indicated that he will get rid of him. But chances are that Diz wont grow old with the Chicago Cubs. ,, I a aj ? '4 K - w Value Received? "With the record hes made I dont know who we could trade him to now, said Wrigley. "Right at this time we haven't any deals Involving Diz under consideration. Whether or not the owner of the Cubs thinks that he received full value for his $185,000 is debatable. But the fact remains that the magic words "Dean to pitch pulled a lot the turnof spectators through stiles at Wrigley field during the past few seasons. ; 1 - Above: French soldier: loading a long distana artillery shell. At left Bombs wired to a wagon in evacuated territory day-to-da- y n .ji Picture -' 2: Hartnett and Manager Dizzy seemingly operate on a basis. When things are going right with the great one. Gabby is the salt of the earth and a joy forever. When no silver lining can be seen peeping through the dark clouds, then Gabby, in Deans opinion, is a second rate manager of a third rate team. For the most part, however. Gabby has looked with philosophical resignation on the outbursts of his moundsman. Deans escapades, adventures and holdout sieges have furnished startling sports (and even front) page copy for many a year. Diz is the only player in existence who has enjoyed the unforgettable experience of being bitten by a teleearly-seaso- - Mr The Vagaries of Diz phone. His forty-fiv- e is old she knows shell hale it. So this season. on this season. In his first start, against St. Louis, he was knocked out in the fifth inning, after yielding five runs and seven hits. The next game saw him beat Cincinnati on five hits. His next start, against St. Louis, saw him head for the showers in the fifth, after allowing five runs and eight hits. In his last game as a regular, every fourth game starter, the Phillies got to him for eight hits and four runs in less than five full innings. That record is a far cry from St. With that Louis Cardinal days. team he won 134 games during his stay of seven years. $10 Rubber Stamps Metal Tags Notary and Bronze Memorial Markers -Corp. Seals Name Plates. UTAH STAMP COMPANY, 118 Weat South Temple 8tM Salt Lake City. be-fie- et DIZZY $20 ROLLS REPAIRING, ALL MAKES HOMER HANSEN MATAG SHOP 42$ So. State, Snlt Lok, City 1:3 ager and a hus--- l bunch of fel-- ! who keep on r toes from start 25A TRUSSES . te PRINTS 16 Roll Developed and 16 prints 25c. 16 Re prints 25c. RF.X PHOTO :$ Ogden Utah. A :ritics FINISHING KODAK if Soldier in lead carries a potat masher grenade, handy for hurling a the enemy. It explodes, sprayin shrapnel. These German soldiers ar purported to be going over the top sf rsfct - r). ll lull t lei' Most fearsome weapon to civilians is the aerial bomb. ' Instead of having that child depend upon her, and half envy mothers independence, freedom, high spirits, Peggy becomes a burden upon the younger family. Her conversation becomes a long dreary recital of what glories and possessions she once had. She cannot sufficiently reiterate the trials, the dismalness of age; when you get to her age, she says, you might as well be dead, and goodness knows she often wishes she were dead. Now, since you know, you women of 25, 30, 40, that this time must come, why not prepare for it, why not defeat it of its horrors? It can be the most serene, the most triumphant period of your whole life. It can be a time of harvest, rather than of famine. Older Women Different. For in tlie years after 45 a woman can be herself, express herself, live her own life as she never can in younger years. No girl is so useless, so defeated and unhappy, as the girl who tries to be independent. In rushing off to Paris, or into some unknown field of endeavor, she only proves to herself that she has thrown away the honest beginnings of life, refused to play the game by rule, and beside making herself ridiculous, has made it practically impossible lo get back to a real start With the older woman it is different. She has served her opprentice- - ELECTRIC MOTORS REPAIRED Batiifictary work guaranteed in minimum time on motors and tranHformera. SCHKAGA ELECTRIC CO., 141 Pierpont. Salt Lako Your Companion Maybe you never stopped to think about it, says Kathleen ,orris, but there really is only one companion that you have throughout your life . YOU. and that is Finding out just what that com panion is hke, what she wants and doesnt want, what she needs and doesnt need is the job every woman should take upon herself. Age creeps up on a person and all the things that seem important to young women arent really that im port ant. Find out what you need to prepare for old age. Prepare yourself for it and it will be the happiest period of your life. Dont prepare and youll live to regret that you didn't. .... ship. She has been daughter, wife, mother, housekeeper for a long quarter of a century. And thes have been happy years, proud years, years full of the joys of trips and frocks, parties and flattery and But they have vanished now. And now comes HER time; the time when she can be most truly and wholly herself. Her small house is a veritable kingdom with Its garden, its dog or its cats, its visits from adored grandchildren, its quieter visits from old friends. In planning trips, in club work and charities, in easy hours and easy dresse ing and games of dominoes or or backgammon with a few tried and true neighbors and friends, are real pleasure. If the companion of her youth is still beside her, all this felicity is doubled. But even if he is not, rich and ripe and useful living is still hers. Tame and Uninteresting. Now, unfortunately, this paradise of the middle years sounds extremely dull, to youth. It sounds tame and uninteresting to the last degree. Youth never will change ideals with age; it hates the thought. Age is no more convinced that it never will be youth than is youth sure it never can grow old. And so many a woman who could be planning now for her later years draws away in repugnance from the thought of them. Whatever she Is when shes old and to her 45 is old she knows shell hate it. So why think about it? Why train her character to desire what is true and lasting; why search Into her own soul and develop its miraculous resources? Why deny herself and the children superfluous luxuries and extravagances now, to gain the superlative comfort of financial security for her old age? Why form a taste for fine books, for language study, for gardening, for any one of a hundred interests and avocations, when today there are movies and beauty parlors and flirtations and night clubs to fill her time? What is the answer? Ask yourself why. Answer Is Apparent. The answer Is that if you knew that in 25 or 30 years you had to move to a strange country, a country in which the eyes you use now could see nothing, in which your present ears could hear nothing, of whose language and customs you know nothing, you would certainly prepare to make that change. You would study the conditions, the limitations and opportunities of the people of that country; master Its language; cultivate a few friends who must make that journey with you. Middle age, old age, can be a long peaceful holiday. A useful holiday not by any means an Idle holiday. But a happy time in which a woman who has done her honest share of living in the younger years can find endless Interest, a thousand absorbing occupations, complete peace of spirit. Thats something worth achicvingl INEXPENSIVE MEALS Tbs best food in Salt Lako U served by The MAYFLOWER CAFE at 154 South Main POPULAR PRICED Luncheons, Dinners and Sandwiches KODAK FINISHING PHOTO-KRAF- T ECONOMY FILM SERVICE Any Roll Developed with - 25c 8 Quality Prints Extra Prints 3c Wrap coin and film carefully ...... SCHRAMM-JOHNSO- DRUGS N 749 Halt Lake City, Utah x USED TRUCKS Carlesons Used Truck Lot 50 26 '34 36 '37 '37 E. Salt Lake 5th So. Internatl Chev. 90.00 Pickup Duel 1 145.00 Chev 1 '2-TDuel Ford 16 -- Ton Pickup Stake Dodge '6-T37 Chev. 1 '2-TDuel 38 Internatl 290.00 325.00 355.00 395.00 Panel $395.00 You read your Home Town Paper so do thousands of other people in hundreds of other hom towns". Advertise to them in their own papers at low cost Write Adv. Mgr., P. O. Box 150, Salt Lake City, Utah crib-bag- FUR STORAGE Send your Fur Coafs and Winter Cloth Coats to Utahs Oldest Fur Store. Refrigerated VAULTS Your Coats are: Stored (PA foriS HUDSONIZING Cleans your Coat and revitalizes the fur. SEND COATS COLLECT TO: HUDSON BAY FUR CO. 240 So. Main St. Salt Lake City, Utah WNU Week No. 4021 SALT LAKE HOTEL BEN LOMOND I 358 Rooms 358 Baths $2 00 to fl 00 S4 0ft Family Rooms for 4 persons Air Cooled Lovn? and Lobby Coffee Shop Grill Room Tap Room Home Rotary Hi wan Is Fseruthee it Ejrhanx Opttmua ' 2U .10 Chamber of Commerce and Ad Dub Hotel Ben Lomond OGDEN. UTAH Coma aa yon are T. K. Fusiretald Mf |