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Show . I 0 ' 0 t rVDPFQ'l. A YTHV min tirnTft 1TTAH win lose two, ;. Not "All Notre- dame thred, footbaU games The - The Story of a Texas . Trail-Blaz- er . . " '8 Aj Tas : ggjytov innnnr toa-on-t- Jr Wcr Three niip" ?y !'w?,-- - Ut-cr- 4 J)s -- ' r, . - -- Fre-jnon- n. I' ?. $V r MCHfJU PAS . . AT I . .Yanks, y - l- ...V; g Service - Ruth Removal 'Aids. XM e y, '' vv ' w - f) Sew .Tork Poit-j-WN- - but IIeyTo.o, - .. moment the reporter UNTIL that was the liff of the party. Hating nothing else. to lookn forward to except a . light dte with some miUionaire spreading ba'bjes, . hiq hosts with themselves appreciation. i VEGA -An, this rnade the. reporter very, VJA roa BAStty iT'cosA . i. v, fpr Poor little lonesbrrie MOBEETI& euiorrot very happy. . Tucumc ' All the way ' I .boys,- he thought vfiv t , -- 4 out there by th'enrtselyes with noRANCH body everi 'close. . Probably it, does I roar them a' lot of good. to have. a huSUMMIT man .being-catcup with them noiy I oughta give them end then. Whyi r notour c'k i she . a break an ., GOODRICH! RANCH' Vft four 'and . . Then he popped the question 'p.srAvroAi. got what many another .guy ..has k gotten. for taking similar liberties. MAhtH . warrnitxsi iiaoc jCharley Ruffing sought the COUH ZYJkkncm M the end ai other the . ter cooler xDALHl roV IVtATW AFORD FORT dugout. Lou 'Gehrig remembered . . WOKjnV ; '. V .that he had Immediate business to T popes to In- the clubhouse. Lefty .attend v crossing' ' Gomes. hi4 behind his ears. Prob- 1 11 . ably no one ever wiU know now hj -- LAVING TRN W'ACO what happened, right after Joe MciOV NO . HoiixrHrAP) T. (UUJJ CROSSING Carthy 'booted' that grauftder in Ut.1. , Steel ton- twenty years ago. A Map of tiie Southwest tKNllMOp So, humming sadly about Just in Goodnights pioneer days, ,one ot those smarties 'who showing the Trails which he breaks tip all- - the. parties, the reAUSTIN blazed. porter dragged himkelf into exilft,. Since then he bars been wondering io HOUSTON about that, question, 'though. All SAN ANTONIO 'he 'asked was: . Gents a. .coilplA peasonS ago CD .there was moren a couplji rumors t to 'the effect that a fat man was overests niniatured in the agate o! as the greatest scientific breeder Charlrt '. your Al( ,)IHurM frtrm BnWa shadowing CiMHlnlrbWfiwmiili and J'lainfiniaA - bank. of range cattle in the-- , world.-Eve- courtMf, the Rockies a.nd' buffaloes and andlives Mifflin Company, Iloughtop horses racing upside down Now f if Goodnight had not V see ii through 'the mirages of the. achieved renown as a cbwman, youre aU sun- h'is e Hesixty-threuntil Staked PJairts. found time death, nearly, , l shine 'again. Just r his .career as a to turn baok frriip the lead of years later, '.he. never would have beftn enoilgh to. givp I of us, would any of two thousand Texas longhorns r him enduring "fame. In jreality, ppoke'of Loving except in utmost to see dove's nests passed over like to chirp as his biogtenderness, I.yoo says 1S45 in the that, career started to' how Babe Ruth-haty thousands of hoofs, and left, year Texas became a state rapher, and hiq- vibrant .voice with ;egp' untouched. He al: .helped elevato when his .mqther and stepfather, mellowed With reverence as he to your present lowed . a Texas cow that eswould, old yon slowly say, my sis'part his older brothbr and' two blithft position?" Babe Rdtb caped 'from his . herd on the ters, left Illinois and started foe ners' and raise his d that hung on the ranch- Peces and But, bo avert woe through Texas in .two .'covered w;agons. waH house ful doings, the- reporter must unfour hundred miles of desert In Texas the bfty thrived amid dertake to supply the answer him- -' and wilderness to die of old .the Later the Goodnight-Lovin- g of pioneer Jife liardships thfe Kftechi range she age upon trail was extended into Colorado sMf, loved. He cursed the fool who . helping his elder brother, support and Undoubtedly Joe Di Baggio, bet Wyoming tincj 300, 0Q0 cattle cut down a lone chittam tree the family by, working for neighrookift of sfcveral i y?arjs. ' has filled ptissed-ovein it 'The and sbryears. ranchers, hunting a dire outfield , need, . Tony .at the. head aof Dry Creek, on boring fishing for food, bringing up a the JA ranch, a fine, useful supplies a shrewd,1 steadying taptured wild colt on a bottle landmark In a country devoid influence: Frankie Crosetti, ljving mount. his first and thus getting of timber. He carried one of 'to predictions that once seerried tip was he he the nineteen time the little Sonoran deer fifty By unlrkely to be' realized, may really decided .that he .'knew Texas' be the spark plug of the team. Lou inileq across his saddle in. pretty well and was About ready front of him, to add .to his But '.enough Gehrig's Hitting west to a newer hi senseless to studies of Wild life In the ran- - to move -farther It things. California. . With- p' countryhandle. caff the roll while Singling out each young companion, and an ox player responsible tpr the.. clubs It ;was. these studies which team and a few. horses, tfiey success. gave him what fame he had, in- started on the. long trek west. d The poinfls that the sufficient though it was, outside But by. Vhe time they had gone ov two of Yanks a border's to state. of For the 'year his. a few hundred miles into West .abopnded with single individuals' of anyone, at all amiliar with the Texas they decided- fhat. .the' far more than average worth: Yet history of the .West, the name of state was large enough (or them. they evr were failing In .the clutch.' Goodnight is- - inseparably linked So Goodnight went baefe to. Talo Npw they are far out In the lead of with the name of . those "great Pinto county . where .he ranched the. American League parade. The creatures once , which widowed moth-shaggy . hjs reason for their success you can, roamecj the plains 'by the miler. During the Civil war he '.OLIVER. LOVING twist it about add also obtain the lions the .buffalo, ilis interest, served with (he Texas Ttangprs; disastrous dope concerning the gold in these animals" began more fighting rpostjy Indians, Mexisecond of the' trails' 'which hft embroidered Red Sox is that' Joe than ,60 years ago, at a time cans and cattle thioves blazed, known as the new Gcod-nigl- ft McCarthy is not milling along with .when they were threatened with was no . After the war, there trail, ran from Fort Sum-n- er a collection Of stars. He is headextinction. He roped a little bull cattle .The .plains market. in New Mexico fo Grenada, ing a tehfn. Old calf,' which he .named swarmed herd, and cattle Colo. and years latex he' Being an old Babe Ruth boy, 1 Sike's,. and carried, him home .could be bought on credit. Good- laid 'o If his.several third from the JA rather hate to admit 'this, but it is to his r&nch for hi$ devote'd wife. saw the necessity 6f. find- . ranch td 'Dodge. City, . Kan. It tha truth. During his two fin's! seaMary Dyer Goodnight, to bring night ing p. western market. So did was 250 miles in.' length and sons with the club, and. even last ' up." Later he' rounded up some some others, but the, young kYioiyn as the Palo more buffalo calves and started year .when the merhory' of his plaiqsman, then (hjrty, differed City trail. .'. mighty deeds still lingered, there d from the cest'.fn that hft was tension, a divided loyalty' In Almost .as romantic as the .to fihd-f- t. Thefp wa al- story of Jiis g is thq clubhoUse and dugout ready. one up fit Abilene, Ka's.',. story of his association- - with the It was a state of. affairs, this conwhere many of the cattlemen Irishman, .John flict between a manager and a George; Adair, took their herds to sell, but in he dominant peykonaHty, 'which- neiof the fadevelopment Goodnight saw a gyeateroppor-(unf- ty mous JA ranch; the first in. the ther tho Babe nor McCarthy could Up In liftw Max;oo, CoTexas Panhandle: . During his handle. 'No doubt both of them sin- . lorado and Wyoming. . eleven years .on (his ranch he cerely' deplored it' and struggled the scheme handled The drawback than 300.000 cattle, for 'some proper mingling 'of teafib was that between the Panhandle with a tctarl loss, during the time spirit But the confliot.spd the inand (his promising territory, lay , of only l.OOP.hoad; and the prop evitable , destruction of .bright a great expanse pf desert 'and er.ty paid an . annual profit 'of. chances oxiste'd just as .urftly as 73 per cent oii .the cipital ina similar tug of purposes still territory inhabited by ComanclTe . OLD BLUE ' Indians ready to pounce, upon in- vested. . , among tho Red Sox and at Ebbets Leader . of Goodnight's Trail Herds vaders npd drive? off the cattle. Field. He .19:9 died in at the age of ... Without heavy protection, no ninety-threNow the ydung.men come alive, still active. vigo,the h'erd of bison on the Palo herd could get through. So when rous and dynamic in .both brain in the dugout They roppd fifst Quro Tange whose fame became Gobdnight . laid .his plan 'before and', body. base, seeking to give extra viflue His some of his neighbors, they fcaw to (heir hits asthey.did. in .the d JA cowboys lowwidespread in this country. only the danger connected with ered his massive casket intbthe palmiest days Jf Murderer-- Row, Mr. Ualey.&ays that Goodventure and declined to havo g.rave, and with tears . night,' whom he calls the Bur, the streaming Heads which formerly were ckxu with it. to with do, only down anything pied d figuring individual .bank of the Open Ranges, first their, leathery, But young Goodnight found; faces, shoveled ia (he Si that averages now are bobbed determin tried the experiment of crossing covered Jiihj up. And there in edly in front of second baseftien the buffalo with Galloway cattle, partner. 'He w'as Oliver cowthe grawyard ?t Goodnight, seeking to complete double plays and shows that he, rather than one of the most experienced ven the pitchers- -: . But per at that The time. Texas Tf?xas, came to rest at, hast .this the renowned Buffalo Jones, men ia haps it would be best to stc; hare deserves credit for that feat. He story. uf how these? two men dominant, driving, restless plainsis also credited with being the blazed the Goodnight - Loving man. . More appropriately,., he in th$ midst of undoubted glad inventor of that essential piece Trail across West Texas and up should lie at the edgft of thftPalo ness. More than likely the Yankees of equipment (certainly esseninto New Mexico to Fort Sum- Duro canyon, which, splashed would with similar tidy lead if lost Juv Oliver the his how colors g of tial to Lming enduring and hungry ner, ages, now were manager and McRuth venture 'with how and verdant in the life that of will grass the open range cowpunchers) the chuckwagon. But more Goodnight brought the body of never be plowed, carves out of Carthy was sitting on his Buffalo important than either of these his partner back to his native the staked plains an everlasting back porch. As one of the most achievements is the remarkable Texas is one of the epics of memorial to the pioneering spirit persistent torchlight bearm in the Bambino procession, 1 think that of Charles Goodnight. Though Goodnight experiments on the JA ranch the West. of they would. which brought him recognition was then thirty-on- e years age, , Vnloa. Wtrn Mlei-noo- jHr-- : V V ' .I p sn IE . B .! Ty tA V': -- ' Iv K - b.e-i- ng -- I rf V! n w V V. trail-blaze- book. . ''if - s back-fraile- - r - Laz-ze- ,.. is. h - pi a e dead-pinne- ago-als- MARY pER - GOODNIGHT . lished recently, by the Houghton' Mifflip company, and this book by a native of the range countiy of west Texas Who is a member of the department pf history at the University of T.exas, not only is one of . the most, important Western biographies . of recent ..years but It. is an inspiring ac' fcount of an American frontiers-- , mair who was unique' among, kind.' In contrast tb so. many men of the border breed whose chief claim to distinction 'seems' to. have teen their spectacular career of destruction, Goodnight-waa cqhstructive force in' the country, in Which he pioneered. True, he had occa$ko now end then to kill but the men whom he disposed .of rustlprs mostly were the hind of citizens which the community .. could1 Spare easily . enough. On the .whole, what' he ..did Srlmost always served' the best .1nteTe.sts' of the region where he lived and qt the same time .it advanced. his own interests. But' thet was' a consideration with secondary him. Agaih in contrast to so many other men of .the frontier, who were noted for only one thing, his was an extraordinarily versatile and many-side- d personality. Again quoting his biographer:. He was filled with vigorous zest for life, nis Observations upon nature ranged, with remarkable freshness, from the prairie dogs of the Palo Duro Plains to the buffalo of from the the Northwest, of the Brazos Valley to grasses the conifers of the Greenhorns. He saw seven-hornesheep grazing with the Navajo flocks along the Pecos, Natures own photograph of a giant cinnamon hear on the mineral bluffs of the Ficketwire, great for-- s d - w-it-h - Duco-Dbdg- e fieter-.mine- trad-blazin- - ' ec-fct- s e, bow-legge- d, gray-heade- s - 'wind-carvt- j hard-workin- t Xapir o Bill Mehihorn U anV Ardent Baseball FaiL Isr my-eye- . '""I . . . w t , Minister! Son Invents - Invisible Ear-Dru- . $he Invisible E,or Drum lnventt-by A. O; Leonard a. son .of the la'o Rev. A'B...Leontrd, D.D., for many , yeahs secretary of the, Board of l( r. elgn Missions .of the Methodist ' qopal Chtfrch, for his. owo relief from' extrepia deafness , and hea l noises, has. so greatly Improved ti-.bearing .that hq can Join in any Cohversatldn; go. to the. theatre Without dlflicvflty; Inexpen. beat and sive and has proved a blessing to many people. Write for booklet to ' A. O. 'Iieonirrd, Inc., Suite 2W, 70 Fifth avfenue, Nety York ) . tii i opl.-npr- y clty.--.Advt- Bill Mehlhpom, the 'golfer, . also a hasebaU fan. When he isnt whaling them off ' the lee or sinking a b I r'd I e, .nothing him' more pleases thin ' to, .watch the national p a s time . Both the Csrds and the Cubs say that Jimmy Ripple, "High .Dignity One of the sublimest things. the world is plain truth; . ' - .a h .. be. of ' assistance would ' . - M' E X - e - ry - CoiildVe Done J.ob : Cen-.tli- t. hoeV-,4,Th- ed H V 4- , in. days the on a farm home county, . prairies. of MadiSona li('le horn boy. was Illhroij, w'ho was destined. to becoinC .pne'ci.-thtrilly' great citizens of Texas even though, urflike some tf.hCFtraditional heroes, outside . he is .biit" little known Lone Star the borders of the state. Bui few of tlioe heroes .had a more Interesting career 'tli'ah litl Charlfs Goodnight. lie rode bareback from Wi-- , jioisto T.exas when he was nine years old, lie .was hunting with . the Qaddo. Indiana beyond the frontier at thirteen, launching .lntpthe cMlle biisiness'qt twen-"t-at guiding Texak Rangers tvcnty-foublazing cattle trails . two thousand miles In length at thirty, .establishing a ranch three ...hundred miles beyond the frontier at forty, and at forty-fiv- e .dominating nearjy twenty million acres of range country in .At sixty the interests . he was recognized as possibly tire greatest scientific breeder of . Tange cattle in the West, and at ninety he was. an active intema-- . tional authorily on the economics of .the Tange Industry. lie always rode .beyond the borderlands, upon ranges of un--' spoiled grass. He knew the West of Jim Bridger,- Kit Carson, Dick Wootlon, St. Vrain and Lucien ..Maxwell. He ranged a country ps vast. a Bridger ranged. lift t, rode with the boldness of . Car-spof the craft guided by The vast and changing countfy over which he moved, the fertility of a mind that quick- ly grasped the significance of climaie and .topography, the Inexhaustible energy of his mind and body, and the long period of time through which he constantly applied , himself to the Western World, operated to' produce in this man an ample nature surpassing many of the more famous characters of frontier his. . Now, a hundred years tory. after his birth, his' massive frame looms strong among the horsemen of the storied West." So writes' J. Evetts Haley In the book Charles Goodnight-Cow- man and Plainsman," pub-1! V V - Brazos. he 1' IOWA Eye n nt VN MARCIJ.2, 1S36, t1,e RePublic of can?f int0 cx 'istcnc'e in the little . the popular idea about the jSe of the hypnotic eye, in making wild hnipnals or any animal my eye,- - pr, in' hgve is all-iplain- language, 'pure, unallovta saS Clyde Beatty, Vtl!, Imown animal trainer in Jjls . Big Cage. Trainers for years liave made a practice of staring straight the eyes,pf the anjmals that they' work .at close rapge, he says I do it myself. ' Tt is. part.'ti the stage Setting, however, . ; J$ has rjo effect on the ariimal. j is just an. effectjve trick of show.' mansfiiff. Im all for shopman- ship. But I want it knoviTi that when I make an animal do- rrv bidding, it isnt bepquse' are looking into his.' t- EY ELMO SCOTJ WATSON . next fall. Nothing particularly wrong with the Irish its the schedule - . . More National League clubs are complaining. bitterly abojit umpiring this season, than at any time within the memory of man . . Mike Jacobs hasan ancritics swer for those three-cewho claimed that ,$lj) .was too much ducat. His for a Schmeling-Loui- s tag statement reveals that he peddled '4,700 of the ducats And only 3,800 of the $3 variety . . Dave feab'b, sensational' young center, forward' of the New Yofk (soccer) Ilahoahs, Is- - the spn . . of a Brooklyn rabbL Even. Vau Mungo arid the Dodgers get ' along .better than Lefty Gr'ove.and' his' Boston teammates . There is a whisper that Al Weill will succeed Tom McArdle as matchmaker for the club occasionally knowp'as the Twentieth... Mike- McTigue will be one of the guesls of Honor when the Claremeas association hfcs its . Al; moonlight 'sail 'dn Juno ft atli been have acting though they banner cfowds to the Burnt Mills Sunday, polo garfies, Princeton's mallet .swingers- have-'tperform That',' is. pnder assumed names because the university, .trustees have blue. law notions. - In J mbre-- far to' the , Giants if he played deeper , . . WITH A fbleman Lieutenant . Colonel 'Abe Hollow,'' Colonel Wideners aide) took the fashion plate title 'away from the glamor- LANTERN .'THIS Is ths Kttlk Colemss a Lantern with the bir . brilliance. V lights Instantly nd is always ready for any lighting job. In any weather. . . . need lor every outdoor bse . . . fishing, outdoor sports. Lur htfntingr, bulge-typ- e Has genome Pyrex porcelain venglobe, tilator top, niekle-plate- d fount, built-i- n pomp. Like Coleman Lampe, It makce And borne Its owl) gee from regolar gasoline, lte big value, with year of dependable lighting eervicefor only $5.95. ' 'SEB YOUR LOCAL DEALER -- or write for t KLE Folder. THE. dOLEMAN UMP STOVE CO. Loe'Angetae, (W; ous Kansas Price' at Aqueduct last week. .Did .it with a bright orange suit , .. . Olympic statisticians no is that it will take 80 Ions of meat arid poultry, 17 tofns of fish, 120 tons of vegetables, AS tons .o flour, IT tons of butter', 34,000 gallons of milk, 280,000 eggs, 32,000 oranges 52,600 grapefruits and i05,200 lemons to feed the athletes during two weeks' of competition.. Tb; lemons, no doubt, will, be.'obtained free of charge . . The only, woman ' jockey fn Japan' had her license revoked 'When the Depdrtirent' of Agriculture ruled that the nixing of sexes. on fhe turf may lead to undesirable results. Some of Cdlooel .Ruftperts 'very good friends insist that tha Yankees, tried to, trade Lefty Gomez several weeks ago . .. . Bookie Tiro. U 'dont read the .damn paper) Mara. sounds like a broken reeord of George Giv ' ot when he lays down the law to. his Tyrf and Gridiron Club .followers. Hadese, dqs.and poor little bookies to death ., ; Before he :took' baseball . erio.usly the Cubs Tex Carleton used. to be a rodeo official down in- Fort Wdrtlv .Was a scorekeeper, setting down' the timqs'and records for calf roping .and similar events,. . ..Just, for the sake of ' argument if . the rule , Concerning . the. . maximum amount of hand bandages had not been, ehforced, . wouldnt Schnjel- -' ing have been- able to- - hit harder, . too? . Crew coachek coiitiriue ihq most hard boiled of, spotting- gents before a 'race apd. the- rhriUest' An usu- -' sqUawkers alterwards at, Yale supplies, thu Leader . . .. Even though' he was quite a foot racer years ago, oblivion seeipz to be catching up with BiU Bingham, .Harvard-- Olympic delegate . ' Note to the boys of the Huron Base--' ball club Sorry, .but your cara did not arrive' in time; Hope Hans Wagner ma'de'a swell, speech . Buddy. Hassett crooned 'fin hand-- ' 'primely at' the birthday party tossed' by Mrs. Jimmy (once Lady Eaves) Jordan for Mi's. Frenchy Rordagv ay that the- - Broadway night clubs again are waving contracts at the ' Brooklyn .'first sacker V. Jazz' once a Baltimore basebqll Rogers;' official,, now runs houSe on Forty-thirStreet, .New York . . . Bobby '(Manhattan F. G.) arid Tommy (Flushing Juniors) .Roberts ran hardly help being soccer stars Their dad was one cf: the worlds best when he played 'nutsid right s for forty years , and 'Torment Potson Ivy Sunburn Chafing -- : soothed -Heamc I TT meht - PHOTOGRAPHY t)c vr loped 1 1 1 size or emallt-r-. ' beautiful enlargements from your roll 2 Ac. Wisconsin Ihotpehop, Vte( Salem, Wl. Roll - 11 ... - AFTER YOU EAT? After you finish a meal can you be sure . of regular,' successful elimination? pet. rid of waste material fhat causes gas, acidity, heada,ches..Take Milnesia Va fers , for quick, pleasant elimination. Each . .wafer equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk of magnesia. 20c, 35c & 60c at drug stores, " ; WNU-W SALT LAKE'S. NEWEST . . What wifp of what celebrated Uunh, her husballplayer said band could pitch as well as she .dresses we certainly, would have won. a lot more .ball games this . A celebrated sports year? . . . now organization, having nnexpegt-- . ed trouble with qeveral other ventures, will bid for the Dodgers U the price, ran be knocked down low . .At least one Hearst enough. A. C. luminary Yeels that the publit has been. milked long enough and that the next big show ulghi very well be run without the charity . nngle. .. Marshall Duffield, former Southern Coliforma quarter back, is a member of the crew of Adore, 6ne of the entrants in the current yacht race from California to Hawaii. . . . Adore is owned by Lee Tracy of the movies. . . . Dolph Camilli, Phillies first baseman, uses three gloves a season. ROSTEtRY Oar lobby is delightful? ftir cooled daring the summer months Barrow-in-Furnes- or so. ago. 6 .,31-3- d Radio, for Every Room 200 Rooma-20- . Bath 1 o 0 nss ' I , i j HOTEL Temple Square . Rates $1.50 to $3.00 bl The Ilotrl Trmpie Sgnart highly drairalilr, friendly will always find it lmin ulate, aunrcmrly romfortabla. and thoroughly agrrealila.Y ou can therefore understand why thia hotel l etmoe-phrre.Y- ou HICHLY RECOMMENDED Too can also appreciate why f fa a mark of distinction to stop of (his beautiful hostelry ERNEST G ROSSITER, Mgr. |