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Show Igfor. NOT IN THE BOX SCORE: football team NOTRE DAMES next will bo Scenes and Persons in the Current News tow. Inca Service Dugan ClaimsYanks Arc in Third League but Picks 1928 Club Jumping Joe wb presides ever a Gotham hot spot with the same seal he once devoted to tho Yankee Stadium hot corner started this. Haring returned from a Sabbath visit to his old playgrounds, having Inspected the cash register and having set up a few on the house, he was talking about the third major league. Greatest team around nowSure, those adays," he was saying. Tigers are good but what happens when the checks are down? Those Yankees Just romp home with the marbles, dont they? Sure they do and they'll continue doing it all season. Theyll win all by themselves. Theres nobody like them. Theyre tops. Theyre a whole league to themselves. Theres no other organization even close to them." A timid customer edged a pound note upon the mahogany. He obtained the same prompt service which It was Mr. Dugans pleasure to provide ten years ago when the lower end of the batting order was up and a rally was needed in the ninth. Then Mr. Dugan continued. Yessir, he said. They're that third major league folks gossip about now and then. Where they're going to get opposition from is more than I JOE DUGAN know. Maybe, another offered customer, tossing a $10 bill down the middle, they could choose up sides and play games among themselves. Mr. Dugan took care of the bill and the suggestion with the same aplomb that used to distinguish him when the bases were loaded and a line drive came whizzing over the third sack. "Yeah, maybe, he agreed. "Or, maybe they could take the pick of the leagueand let them ..play -- the Yankees for a while. That might help for a couple of weeks anyhow. Some of those outfits go pretty good. The reporter had dropped into the Dugan emporium for some inspiration concerning a piece that is done by all baseball scriveners every year. This epic piece always starts out with the information that it is baseball custom for the team that Is leading in July to continue In the same spot up to World Series time. Then, if the scrivener is such a ceaseless searcher after innovations as is your present correspondent, be tries to find some iconoclast who can be quoted as saying the dope la the bunk during the current camail-st- paign. Now, although he had once known Mr. Dugan as a very Independent thinker, the reporter knew that he had come to the wrong spot. Such views as those expressed about the Yankees are merely those of a few million other discerning citizens. And even if he would have liked to know what is due to happen in that entertaining feud being staged by the Giants, Cards, Cubs and Pirates, the reporter hesitated to intrude the name of a rival organization into the talk again. Then be had a happy thought You By the way, he asked. played on some pretty sweet Yankee teams yourself. What do you think would happen if time could be arranged ao that Buth, Meusel and the rest of yon ancients could be slacked up against this present outfit of Yankee paragons? Well. said Mr. Dugan. That would have been power against power and good defense against good defense. The way 1 figure it is that pitching such as Hoyt and Pcnnock and those others used to give us would have enabled us to have an edge over this years Yankees but Joseph, interrupted the reportI see a picture of the 1928 Yankees in bark of the bar there. Take a look at it yourself and quit stalling." Mr. Dugan looked fondly at the Mensels, Ruths, Hoyts, younger Gehrigs and the rest. 1 guess "Why, he said then. yon're right. These present Yankees may be a whole league to themselves, but we coulda licked 'em easy. er. Freddie Lindstrom and Bill Terry will confer with the probable result being that the once greet Giant soon will be playing the Jersey City outfield and assisting Travis Jackson with managerial problems. something pro golf rare ranks. in It Walter came because the serious minded lad spent thirteen hours a day on the lesson tee at Charleston . . . Gene Sarairn plans a trip to the Orient late this year and hopes to enter the Japanese ,C recorded. Among th be found tome of th of eolors. Among 1 cerulean warbler, bov. and white UwLV burnian, with his orange about I eight-thirt- the night y i Carboa x Msaadg, that Wee Willie Winkle notCarbon monoxide g h harmful opens In Hollywood, address lierou. due tonor tnrt audience and a country-wid- e then gyiome to bed without seeing the picture. Shir- ducea oxygen dS the fact C aK y tamUon-lsW- udden saturation bymX.1 fi This ia more of a victory for To -I ley than It is for radio executives. toning serious All their money did not interest Mr. leveLThe medic1 ef profenV and Mrs. Temple, who try to hold that thousands of person, se Shirleys working hours down to a affected to some degree by usk im minimum. But Shirley heard talk Serious, even fatal, eai poT on the studio lot about this player common. and that one going on the radio and she began to wonder why aha Rome at Meric, couldnt do It She begged and Puebla, the capital dty e Mrs. Just Temple Finally begged. State of Puebla, baa often W had to let her do It. referred to aa the Romsgg k lco because of its matty When Carole Lombard insisted cent churches. In the city uc that her new contract with Para- churchea exhibiting elabont, mount include a ic decorations from the early as clause giving her rles. Most conspicuous b Sabo to make permission ful cathedral In sever, elm'' one picture a year c style, with other edifleeadaokj for any other comn. pany she chose, all I Carlyle oa Flctha the little companies re Carlyle said many Bring scurried around id poetry and fiction, for his tv 4 looking for stories type of mind that could not K that might Interest atand persons being at fin tte One picture her. of inventing character nd with a star like tions when history was full Lombard, they figand women; when stmts a ured, would put crowded, and continents venk them In the big peopled under their very boss i theaters, and In the now And has Carole big money. Ivory Carving Delicate fo gone and broken their hearts. She The carving of some smalfr? has signed a contract wtih Selznick of ivory is such delicate toil i to make one picture a year for it can be affected by th ite? him for five years. of traffic. Hence, lays CoLc k has a grand surprise all Weekly, men engaged b fim i on or near busy thoroughhral ready for Irene Dunne. They have found a dizzy, hilarious character many large cities are obliged si much of their work betveesz for her to play in a perfectly-ma- d and dawn. night Is kind loves. the she It comedy the role of a rich, giddy girl who 325,000 Needles sartatlm wants to be a detective and who The needles on a pins tret hr goes around detecting whether anyone wants her to or not. "The Mad been counted and 325,000 etc Is the name, and found on one tree, or a total i C Miss Minton here's hoping It is half as good as square feet of leaf surfact vbdf spread out, would cover toe Boer : everyone expects it to be. 3ft ?.. SS5 miV F 1 With a Russo-Ja- p dispute over the Amur river, crack battalions of the Red army have been held In readiness for possible trouble. 2 Senators Robert M. LaFollette, Jr., left, and Elbert Thomas of the senate civil liberties committee are shown studying photogra phs of the Memorial day riot at the Republic steel plant In South Chicago in which ten pickets were shot down. 3 President Roosevelt in a recent radio salute to Canada exchanged greetings with Governor-Genera- l Lord Tweedsmuir. Windsors Parson on Lecture Tour KING KNUCKLERS Rev. and Mrs. Robert Anderson Jardine, who sprang into the international spotlight when he defied the Church of England's highest dignitaries to perform the wedding ceremony for the Duke of Windsor and the former Wallis Warfield, shown as he arrived in New York recently for a lecture tour of the United States, to aid charities. EDUCATOR RETIRES William Kloss. thirteen, of Greater Canton,. Ohio, grins broadly after being crowned national marble champ after playing off a tie for the title with Andrew Tanana, thirteen, of Throop. Pa. The Canton boy held the best average in the tournament, winning 49 of 57 games. Scientist Puts Old Sol to Work 7 r k twenty-fiv- e ordinary r roomi.-- fe There are a lot of people on the tific American. lot who think that Greta Garbo Is just about the grandest Impediment in Speech Carre person alive and one of them is Many centuries ago a W Charles Boyer. When their current named Demosthenes bad ia in? picture, Countess Walewska was iment In his speech. Ha eooqiH about half finished, he went to the his handicap to such purpoieS director a little worried. He had he became the most famous as discovered that his part was much of hia day and achieved tans'; longer than hers. Breezily the di- ity. rector told him not to give It another thought. Miss Garbo knew Movement af Torndsf all about that before the picture was Tornadoes generally mow started and insisted that no changes southwest to northeast. A be made. The picture must be doesnt last very long; tag I Not all Garbo. good, she said. one place probably less ft k minute. Weary of waiting around the Warner Brothers studio watching song Moral Standards af MuW and dance stars overworked while That the moral standards there was rarely a part for her, kind are ultimately progressing Josephine Hutchinson asked for a due to the revolt of men and w--j release from her contract and got of character against the it. Immediately elements of conventional itaata. signed her for one of the most thrilling roles of the year. She Pepys Diary will play the lead In He Who Gets was wnttenb diary Pepys with Slapped. Spencer Tracy and ton'a of tachygrapiJ. q system Robert Taylor In the cast. , lished iq mi. which ha comp, k language Meanwhile, the same studio that by using foreign varieties of his ywn invent Is making Miss Hutchinson ao happy, Is making Joan Crawford unGraphite in Oldest I g happy. She suspects that the of the oldest rocb , Some department forgets her for beds of bbo vqs contain world months at a stretch and Just pick carboo of out any old story that Is left over as ite. a form a vehicle for her. Rumor has It that once have been part j she would like to break away and organism. go to work for Sam Goldwyn. Maybe she will. And you know what Pack Mules 8MH are a ttP mules Pack grand pictures he makes. j k selected for carrying burd After all, the Bennett sisters, Joan are low down, thick, and Constance, wont play the pic- - mals with strong backs s j1 ture star and the 'T7 duble in the popu Largest Lead Pr8lBC1ta h lar novel, The Bonne Terre-FStand In. Joan Blondell trict In southeastern MwJJj 1 has been borrowed largest lead producing from Warner Breth-er- s United States. and will play both parts. ConAuthority Weihty stance was not keen wlg!lU Authority ia about playing the ty aa every agitator k vicious, calculating trie to take the la star and Joan la " hands. " j tent on going to the Joan Blondell Summer Stock thea-te- r at Dennis on Cape Cod to do some stage acting. Incidentally,' Joan Is said to be the best rumba dancer in all Hollywood. Wouldnt you love it if she would dance in a film? If enough fans wrote and asked her to, she probwould. ably Stars love to get letters that offer suggestions. tv-- er story-findin- Dr. William Low Bryan, who recently retired as president of Indiana university. Dr. Bryan, who speht 53 years on the faculty of the university, was its president for 35 years, holding the record for the longest service among presidents of state universities. The educator is a firm believer in the average student the one who is neither too brilliant nor too dulL seventy-seven-year-ol- d . a.D.r' Carlcof Gree'cy Abbott' secreary of the Smithsonian instltut.on the American Astrophysical observatory at Washington S UP r b1Cr St the Great Lakes ft CWH Position hailed as science's first successful effort to translate solar energy into usable power, would yield a total of 70 000 horsepower on cloudless days, according to Dr. Abbott. Tnn7 Clipper Ship Blazes Atlantic Air Trail Open. There are more actual competitors in dog shows than m any other sport A large show such as the Morris and Essex may have as many as 3,000 competitors; small shows seldom drop below 100. the average is 350 and there are more large shows than small ones. . . . Although he thought he had retired from public life years ago when he served as h member of the state assembly his friends are insisting that Sol Strauss, the eminent 20th Century Sporting Club attorney, should let his name be presented the next' time there ia a vacant judgeship. Taiio Nuvolarl, the little Italiaa. once won a race while driving with his thigh in a piaster cast. Navolarl, generally rated as the greatest daredevil of them all, now chides his younger teammates for taking unnecessary chances. Yon are young and have n long time to Uve, be told Achillea Varsl recently. Yon should not be reckless. I have lived a long time. I can take chances. Navolarl la la his early fsrtles. He ased te carry n copy sf bis will la Us packet wbenver he raced. there er, perWT-confusin- the3J until ed . of all ? il Dame-Minnesot- a l, They are AT LAST Shirley Temples parents have given in and will permit her to speak over that lock, most likeTfi the radio. She will stayup big-tim- e Gul-dah- if By VIRGINIA VALE Louls-Braddoc- k ailm-bipp- xvaulO it XULUY1C S WNU I brtghti,5'-mngmanert- . New York Poet. 'x ? ft.utterme.Tk: They re tiny, better fall than la 1936. More experience and weight and Just as much speed. . . . Lynn Waldorf says be needs a fullback, twe tackles and: a center at Northwestern, bat smiles when be says It , . . Purdue wilt have a swell first eleven but, ss usual, will lack reserves . . . Minnesota Is likely In be close te tops again . . There will be as considerable Improvement at Wisconsin. Friends say jhat la became Harry KtuhW-- f dreber spends too much time reparts cruiting players from fsr-oaad neglects the material around boms . . . There alas Is a rap In for Michigan, , where another Notre Dame alumnus bolds forth as Harry Kipkes chief assistant. The boys insist Honk Andersoa Is great st teaching Individual line play bat Is enable to Impart the principles of teamwork. Hype Igoe, the boxing writer, dotes upon using lead pencils Instead of s typewriter and insists upon traveling in upper berths . . . Jack Dempsey says a big heavyweight fight in New York is worth $40.0000 extra money (ten Gs a night for four nights) to his restaurant . . . Now that Chicago has had Its turn at handling a major sports event Philadelphia and Baltimore no longer can claim first place in the traffic messing league . . . Solly Seaman, the former lightweight, is one of the best Judges of weight in the fight business. A week before the Braddock-Loui- s affair he guessed the ringside weight of each man within a half a pound . . . Would anybody mind my calling attention to the fact that three months ago this space predicted the net gate for the fight would be less than $600,000? . . . Pacific Coast league writers are touting Sacramento's kid shortstop, Joe Orengo, as the best prospect in their circuit . . . Talk about crowds here Minneapolis hotels already are sold out for the Notre football game that wont be played until next fall. Archie San Romani la sure be will crack that mile record before the summer Is out. Glenn Cunningham agrees, with him, as does Don Lash, who recently had hia appendix aiiced out . . Garry LeVan in achieving quick aucress aa a Chicago business man. The once must have quarterback gained at least 30 pounds since those 1935 days when he was leading Princetons Tigers to an nnbeaten football season . . . George Moor-bous- e, who captained the U. 8. F. A. eleven against Chariton Athletic at the Tolo Grounds recently, performed for the famous Bootle St. James Team and was a schoolboy International star long before be decided to transfer hia soccer talents to the United States. The favorite sport of Ralph National Open golf champion, is football . . . Sylva Annen-berthe very pretty lady golfer, is preparing for her third new name . . . Titanic Thompson, the eminent Southwestern plunger, started Ky LafToon on the way to golfing glory. Titanic, who used to astound Broadway with his own golf feats before he decided to remain away from the hot spots more or less permanently, staked Ky to expense money for his early tournament travels . . . The first golf ball ever owned by Walter Hagen was given to him by a Rochester pro. Walter promptly knocked the thing through a window of his father's farmhouse. Just as promptly the elder Hagen retired him from the game for a year. Walter Hagen's favorite beverage now, according to Joe Kirkwood, who is touring the -world with him, is "s barley water. Once debefore Hagen parted from his traditional liquid diet. That was when he drank milk as a press agent stunt . Ilenry Picard once was the victim of a nervous breakdown, Julvu J j In-i- ODDS AD ENDS ij not !ke tht ,tory Ct?ked f or him lt "odd to ood to top hit last ew radio programs of the season. Every. 7 Walter OKeeje Allfn ,hfpare Dane director and scene designers who thM muJi iP clotal numbers for pictures are a hula annoyed because Jeanette MacDonald outdid vuA.J1 hit 3lU - -. ' d , Broadside view of the giant clipper ship in his crew of seven completed in 12 hours and 29 minutes the west to east survey c American and mail route, landing at Foynes Ireland passenger a. L British the ment, Imperial Airways flying boat landed at Botwood. Newfoundland' of the trip, proving the feasibility of commercial (LX ,aroId, trans-AUanti- trans-AUanti- c ' , four-motore- -- After all, End picture As turn. Gry and ,ame m- - British- - e east to west leg ... FdA..lnrtaUlg hr .. . ,Ca"tor demands adding that Virgil MiUer be hireiLas xameraman pictures. Miller has five handsome ont and Eddie still has lot Of um oround tha house. m ' NiwiMpcr Unlo 'sr wr a n shi gin the nil n The ;Tbe my tfu 'T1 ei Ant 1 t ( her hos 1 di fe (he exp Pu We of to Wri t spai omi P01 il oa. |