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Show LAYTON' JOVRNAU LAVTOXn Till All, KSY, JINK 30, 1949 SEWINQ CIRCLE Simple Smartly Styled Frock T wosome for d Hours Menticol twins (twin), those rore who ore closer than two (two) carbons of the same letter, are in a fair way to becoming immortalized more or less (less) through the Hollywood Twin club. This organization is either one club with 36 members or two matched sets of 18 each take your choice. Six members of the Twin club and their carbon copies (left) smile noncha- O ikh) look-alik- PATTERNS es Sun-Fille- lantly at the poor photographer. Meetings are held once a month for the sole purpose of getting together to relax and enjoy mutual hobbies. 'Ditto Sisters (ttXKGC MESKDyvKTVj CRN WCHlGAN COXtCtl SHOT RJTTCR,GOT 50 ENTHUSED N HIS EVENT AT A RECENT INDOOR TRACK MEET AT MAROLETTE THAT 1C Fltt.0 TIC 16-t- a BALL RIGHT TT K A CiA.6 BACK- board cn the maroettt gym nxx?. V -- their faces. They have the same taste in clothes, food and frolics, vpIIERE WAS A moment late last March down In St. Petersburg, when Casey Stengel was staring moodily into space. He had sensed the fact that Joe DiMaggio would be out Indefinitely perhaps for a including riding. All members of the club are as versa- tile as they are beautiful, and all are engaged in some phase of theatrical work. Even in Hollyabundance illusions movie on grow -- lots, the W' ' " k ' ' ' - 7n' ' t-'j- J J who perform on skates in West coast ice shows, hold still in a pretty pose long enough for you to get a look at their faces in case you jane and Jean Luther (right), t want to try to tell them apart and what good would that do? The Costellos, Dorothy and Ruth, (below) are ballet dancers and are considered good at it. Here they carry out the twin business with identical dancing poses to match their physical appearance. The girls are both blonde and blue-eye- were both limping. Charlie K e 1 1 e r was without swinging his power. old leave. Then Casey smiled. It means a lot to any manager to have the help of such men, he said. "They don't make mistakes, I might but they wont. The fact is that Casey has made fewer mistakes than any manager I know this season. He has had his team hustling and working overtime. He has picked the right rookies. He has lost the tang his tongue once knew. lie has been sympathetic In place of sarcastic. He hasnt tried to be funny at any mans expense. He has been a member of his own squad, not an outsider. Stengel has done a fine Job. And as he says, he has had the services of one of the best coaching staffs baseball has ever known. Bill Dickey would be a helpful, soothing influence on any squad. Bill knows what It's all about and his advice is a big help. Frank Crosetti is one of the gamest infielders the Yankees ever had. He was always a hustling ball player. He has been a big help. So has Jim winner with the Turner, a old Boston Braves. Turner has turned in his full share. 'So Stengel was right In pinning a wild laurel blossom on each of his aids. It was a nice move by Stengel, a move other managera might not care to make. - Ay Dk Llndell Yankee prospects were about as dark as the mouth of a railroad tunneL Grantland Rice .So far as run. nlng the team Is concerned, Casey said, nothing can happen. I can't be any big bust with thy three coaches Bill Dickey, Frank Crosetti and Jim Turner. Here are three great fellows who know their stuff. I know they are all for me. Ive never seen three men work harder. They are the first on the field and they are the last to An effective routine used by Marion and Martha Neff is this "mirror" illusion. Martha, or maybe it's Marion, holds a hoop in the foreground and Marion, or maybe it's Martha, dupli cates the pose in the background to present a "reflection" that isn't. The Twin club was formed in 1945, starting with five sets. - 4 summer. and Berra y in twins are conceded to be unusual, unique and novel. K SPORT LIGHT .By GRANTLAND horseback where I Casey Keeps Faith With His Team The Pope twins, Jane and Jo (right) have more in common than wood, m carevof THE PIRATES, ATTEMPTED TO STEAL BASES 55 TIMES IN I0C2 AND WAS THROWN OUT ONLY TWICf 20-ga- d. -- RICE. Casey hat known enough team grief to sink two or three managers. But he has never shown any sign of losing faith in a club that has been the best In the league so far. Yankees Sans DiMaggio day or two Bgo, I ran across s smart minor leaguer from other days. Ws began talking about the Yankees without DiMaggio. This reminds me, he said, of something that happened when I was playing ball. We had finished the season before in fourth place. But at the start of the next season we lost our only star. He had a broken leg and was out. So all the papers plastered us down in last place. So we got together. We talked things over. We finally decided that even though this lost player was good, he wasnt the entire club. We decided to go out and prove it. We fought and hustled harder than we ever did before. We moved into first place. The papers all said we wouldnt be there long not with our star missing. That made us hustle all the harder. I can tell you this if wed had our star, we wouldnt have finished third. As it was, we won the pennant. The old ballolayer continued to ramble on. Theres a good chance the Yankee ball clnb, subconsciously anyway, had gotten tired of hearing that Joe DiMaggio was the entire ball club. After all, there were Raschl, Porterfield, Byrne, s there Reynolds and were Kryhoskl and rhllllps at first there were Coleman, Stirnwelss, Rlzutto, Brown and Johnson. There was and is a fellow named Tommy Henrich close to DiMaggio in everything there were Llndell, and Berra, Woodllng and Bauer not even a Cobb or a Ruth could have been the entire ball club with all these fellows on hand. s Most of them are ball must have felt the players. They inside urge to show they could also play some baseball. Heres another thing. As good as Joe DiMaggio and Tommy Hen-ric- h together are they were not as important as the pitchers. Connie Mack once told me that the pitch ers were 70 per cent of any ball club. With or without DiMaggio, the Yankees had a fine pitching staff. A first-clas- fgm-iTi By Tom Gregory t rn-- i&mm Fetern No. 1889 la a sew-r- lt rated pattern for aim 12, 14, 16, 40 and 42. Sira 14, 4 yard of MOLES ANP INDENTATIONS IN LINOLEUMS ARE REPAIRED EASILY BY JUST FILLING- - THEM WITH A iff !?;i IMAmr A HEW USE FOR TIM CAMS SKW1NO CIRCLR Beith Walls St. Enclose 28 rents MO pattern desired. 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