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Show I' MAGNA TIMES, MAGNA. UTAH NOT IN TIIE BOX SCORE: INFANTS' UTOPIA discussing football Carl Snavely, coach of g Cornell's eleven, could pot Gil Doble ala towels and still run away with any crying contest ,' , . Jack Dempsey has been n most frequent racetrack visitor recently. Can It bo that Jack la taking the sport of kings seriously again after that technical kayo be suffered from his first experience with the gee geesT . . . Owner of Pittsburgh Is quoted ns saying be would rather finish sixth with a fighting bull club than third In the manner of the 1931 Pirates. So It has been predicted there will be various trades this winter with Arky Vaughsn already on the market . . . N. T. U. may not bo the hardest luck eleven of the year. But n what ether team has loot such as Swladon, Savarese, Williams and Bloom In rapid snccesslonf Three generations of Whitney owners, Willism C., Harry Payne and Cornelius V. have cheered while their famous Eton Blue and Brown Cap have been carried to victory in almost every Important American stake and an Epsom Derby. The Colors, which will be retired from the turf after this season, were obtained In England SO years or so ago. 'Those colors are a jinx," the famous English trainer Jack Lambert told William C. Whitney. "You can buy them for a song. . . . Art Rooney will return In the spring for another crack at the ponies. You can take a short price on that, horse players never quit. For instance there was a celebrated English punter, a higher roller than any Rooney, Gates or Chicago O'Brien. He's dead qow but until he ended It all, shortly after being turned down for a fiver, he still had been talking of a comeback. That football return duel between WHEN high-ridin- ' v fc A- Ha ij A, vj Youngsters Play at Will While Students Peek e. lncls fllul f c Wi5 ADVENTURERS CLUB e Kw Turk P.-W- Service. NU There Seems to Be Several Angles in This Football Game r gams etHel football! Bethel eenfaser ceUere, McKenzie, Tens., and Beth-- d ceUege, Ksnsas. Bawling Green Teschere college, Kentucky, and Bawling Greea Normal school, Ohio. Dickinson college, Pennsylvania, and Dickinson Teachers' college, North Dakota. Marquette university, Wisconsin, and Marquette Teachers college, Michigan. Monmouth eoilege, Illinois, and Non-- '' month Normal school, Oregon. Notre Dame gradu Twenty-eigh- t ates coach college teams as com ptTed to, seven from Minnesota. Only two alumni of Carlisle, as tamed on the gridiron 23 years ago as the Irish and Gophers are now, are coaching. They are William Diet at Albright and Gus Welch at American U. Of tbs M or more football players whose last names are the names of colleges only two seem is be competing against their namesakes this year. Dioklnsoa af Delaware played against Dickinssa eoilege and Mar-- I setts of Villa nova bore down None of the against Marquette. athletes seem to be playing on teams bearing their awn names. There is, though, a Furman" at Cornel) and a "Cornell at Califor-ala. Coach Jock Sutherland of Pitt Started hit athletic career as a track and field man at Oberlin academy. At Pitt he played football, tossed the weights, was track captain and filled in hia other idle hours with Fordham Tackle Barbartsky and Pitt End Daddio was a honey . . . Daddlo and the other star Panther end, Frank Souchek. play numbers one and two on the Pitt golf team. Some Chicagoans claim Charley Grimm's Cubs finished second this year because too many wives were interfering in their husbands' business As usual most of the obit writers were wrong when ... Princeton's Vi Irish Were Saved by Hairline Finishes Hairline finishes Elmer Layden's Notre Dame team was saved from defeat in Uio final minute of play in jr three games during 1933. The Irish won from Pitt and Ohio State on last minute ft scores while tying Army In the final second, ( to 6. That year Notre Dame scored 27 points In the last seven s of play in In the games. Layden Ohio State game Aady Pitney scored IS points In the last quarter, 12 of them coming In the last two minutes. In 1906 Cornell beat Oberlin, Hamilton, Bucknell, Bowdoin, Pitt, Holy -- was - Cross and Sworthmore. twice defeated by theTenn Frosh. Coaches whose teams meet the wet's alms mammy this season ... min-ate- sev-Elm- er ut arrived at press headquarters the first guy they asked for was Casey Stengel. Bpth the Yankees and Joe McCarthy are to be congratulated on their new contract. Joe has had plenty to work with. Baseball never has known a more efficient organization than the one shrewd Ed Bar-rohas perfected during his years as business manager. Yet some men squander their own talents as well as the gifts that are offered to them. Joe never has done that. He has made good and full use of every opportunity. Although $35,000 a year probably is beyond the comprehension of most of the fans who pay to make the club richer each sea son there is no doubt but what cash customers are wholeheartedly glad he is getting it Lightweight Champion Lou Ambers rushes from tbe dressing room to the nearest soda emporium after each bout to fill up on cantaloupe and ice cream . . . Two home games In Washington drew within $13,009 of what the Redskins took in A at seven games in Boston British newspaper syndicate paid Tommy Farr $30,000 for his life story sfter the Joe Louis bout . . Bill McKechnie, new manager ot the Cincinnati Reds, formerly managed five of the seven rival pilots in the National league . . . They Include: COACH AND COLLEGE L Morey, Bates 2. Crlsler, Princeton I. Kern, Carnegie Tech 4, Little, Columbia I, Neal, DePauw L McMillan, Indiana - 7. Teager, Iowa State I. Mylin. Lafayette K Croft, Montana State M. Peden, Ohio U. OPPONENT L Dartmouth L Chicago L Pittsburgh L Pena L Wabash I Centre Kansas State 7. I. FTanklin and Marshall I. Utah State U. Illinois Harvard once had five plays from Ibe Holy Cross one yard line (The txtrh chance being due to the being offside) without scoring the touchdown. of Middle Georgia ran back the ope plug kickoffs lor loschdowns in three games one ... Cru-der- s col-fe- Duke plays teams from five different states in its first five games Ibis Season. are Grimm, Frisch, Traynor, Dean Grimes, and Wilson . . Cromwell, track coach at Southern California, iet out a deep groan when Bob Peoples fractured bis wrist in a freshman football game . with Stanford, and no wonder Peoples probably is the best javelin . Byron White ot Colorado tear touchdown runs through i snow against Utah. After these ata of 39, 2S, 89 and 43 yards be threw a 34 yard pass over the goal Hae for a fifth touchdown. . At least two Olympic contestants re playing college football this leason, Hurdlers Forest Towns of Georgia and Frit Pollard, Jr., of North Dakota. The two, Jnciden-tally- , ran a 14 2 dead heat in the British Empire games. la 1938 Guilford college defeated n!y Bridgewater. Bridgewater defeated only Gallaudet. GaUaudet i Teacher. defeated only son Teachers e. prospect in tbe United States. Joe txiuis' Softball teum-haa been touring California cities, asking a guarantee of only $150 a game . . Joe gives ill the receipts to the players . . . A letter addressed "Barney Ross. Somewhere In the U. S. A." was delivered to the wel terweight champion in Chicago a few days ago . . . Dorothy Bundy who eliminated Alice Marble from thia year's national tennis tourna menu is en route to Australia wUi Dorothy Workman. er twenty-two-calib- 1 ihe REASON o HEADACHESu RELIEVED A ( are allowed to conduct themselves la the special nursery of Fordham university's Upper left: Playing with educational toys while observed (without their knowly screen. Upper right: Removing and hanging up their own hats and coats. edge) by students behind Lower left: Ironing the wash, just like mama (the Instructors say little bovs are better at this than little girls). Lower right: Arising fresh from a daily rest period. how youngsters "in child psychology: two to three years food is put before too much nagging The sight of food By WILLIAM C. UTLEY If your daughter insists on play- lng with her dolls so long that she is late for school, let her be late; she'll soon find out she can't got away with it. And if you don't agree with these them. Cause by the parents. has become re- D, suggestions, you're probably not the one. Nevertheless, they are characteristic of the New Deal in child psychology which is being given exhaustive "laboratory tests for the first time in America at Fordham university, New"York citys seat of higher education in the Bronx. Frisch Had the Idea. Fordham, distinguished as the alma mater of Frankie Frisch, is not accustomed to training her young in unorthodox ways. hopefuls Frankie, who used to play a whale of a lot of second base before aging legs forced him to the sidelines as manager of the garrulous Gas House Gang representing St. Louis in the National league, once gave managcrshcart fjjlureby sfidmg into bases head first. All the laws of decency decree that it is far more desirable to slide feet first, so that your spikes may make hamburger of a stubborn baseman, than to come into the bag head first, making it a cinch for the same baseman to plant a hard sphere none to gently in the center of your physiognomy. But Frankie insisted on sliding his own queer way, just like he had been taught at Fordham. and lol, year after year he was discovered to lead the league in stolen bases when the annual statistics were compiled. Now comes the Rev Walter G. Summers, S. J., head of Fordham's department of psychology, with the announcement that the university is testing methods of child training which may appear to the average parent just about as practical as sliding head first appears to the average baseball coach. The experiments are being conducted with teri bright-eyeyoungsters, five boys and five girls aged three to five, sons and daughters of college graduates, and "signed up by their parents for a year's study. For the babies, known at Fordham as the "Control Group for Study, it looks like a pretty slick deal, for they do nothing but have one grand time. The happier they are, the more successful is the course. They are perfect physical and psychological youngsters, normal in every only d respect. Talking harshly to them is strictly taboo. No one will punish them; no one will say. "Ah, ah. mustn't touch!; no one will "mama" them to the Nth degree; no one will hurry them up to eat their meals; no one wiTTnag them, and no one' will make them cry. In short, this is an infants Utopia. Talent In Every Child. nursery Is Fordhams directed and maintained according to the teachings of Dr. Charpre-scho- d Buhler, of Vienna, exponent of child psychology. It is under the immediate direction of Mr. EmiHe D. Schloemer, assisted by Mrs. Anna Blitz. lotte world-fame- when it arrives. Nature varies the pattern of every individual." Students of the course will be able to follow closely, under ideal conditions. the normal development of a child's behavior. Focal points are reaction to language growth, physical development, intellectual emotional reactions and socialization. On the third floor at Keating hall, Fordhams new graduate school building, is a specially constructed Every day at nine the nursery. children arrive and every day at noon they are taken home. So far as the children ever suspect, they are being brought simply to a pleasant nursery where there are lots ot interesting playthings, a place to rest and no oneto rpnil their futr- How to Stop "Gimmes. Byt they are not so isolated as stools they think. On behind a screen, studon's of child psycholi gy watch their actions, unobserved. The onlookers will be able thus to learn first hand why babies erv, why they shouldnt be nagged to eat their food; why they should be encouraged to take off their own hats, coats and rubbers, why they should not be rushed through their meals; why they should be encouraged to return a blow struck intentionally; why they should not be rushed into walking; why pars ents should not be about the early expressions in a child's talk; how to stop a youngster with the "gimmes (one who say "gimme this" and gimme that"). To put it briefly, the observers may learn how to be better mothers and fathers. "After all," says Mrs. Schloemer, who interprets the Buhler theory in the nursery, "you have to live with your children 25 years, and a few common sense applications in bring ing up a youngster might make the difference between a life of happiness and one of regret. Thidocs not mean a few common sense ap plications" on the seat of the pants, either, she says, and she has personally given individual training to 500 children. Parents Are Impatient. Don't hurry your youngster," "Too many says Mrs. Schloemer. mothers rush their children through breakfast, rush them off to school and pepper them with a barrage of donls only an adult could remember. Let your child be late to school once in a while, but show him calmly that he did the wrong thing. The average parent has not enough patience. Any normal child wants to doTHe right thing and will, if he Is given proper directional staRushing children through bility. underfunding. Please do not misunderstand that we advocate hand to hand engagements To children two, three and four It jcir.-- , eld. wurds moan little is action that registers here Naturally, m adults it should be a batI w rds tle to settle a misun- devel-opmen- j one-wa- breakfast results In nervous indigestion, and forcing them to eat cultivates it I have seen children derstanding "Dont over Mama your child. robs h.m There's too much Mama-infrom grandmother sister, aunt and cousg The child's mother should be in. the mother " Keep Promises to Children. She strip's the importance of adults' budding respect through in- tegrity "Don change your mind," she It you promise to take your child fir a walk in the paik do it Don't say. 'I've got to do something else. A child wants to respict vou Before you promise something stop and figure out if you will be able to keep that promise "Don't spank your child it is only on exUtwie- mprtMtre, "Don't give your children trick toys, such as balls that roll back when they should go ahead ot gas balloons tli .t go up when they should come down This is unnatural: a young child cannot urnler-stai it Let him phy with tovs that exemplify such tlongs as roll ing down an incline when pushed, rubber balls that bounce, pr iject blocks that teach formations Let him plav with sand, and with paints he'll figure things out for himself very quickly. "Don t rush your child to walk. As soon as tbe organs are sufficiently strong he will be impelled to walk. A child seven to eight months sits up and starts to roll over, at ten months he'll pull himself up on a crib and shortly after that he'll start to attempt the first steps at locomotion You Can't Know Everything. "Don't rush your child to talk, either. He'll talk when ready. If he pronounces words incorrectly, don't attempt to correct him. Do that in later years. You cant speak a foreign language correctly the first time. You understand What words mean and later on you correct your mistakes in pronunciation. Language development in a child is similar." Mrs, Schloemer declares no ordinary father or mother knows everything about a baby, and advises that a doctor be consulted occasionally, especially in preference to experimenting when there is any doubL "Don't give your children too much money for toys, she continues. Even ten cents a day is too much. A daily contrjbutmnJs jl short cut to creating the 'gimmes in your child. If he gets into tantrums say 'no' and mean it he 11 get over it. Fordham's class was besieged with babies for the special nursery when the tests were being made, but the instructors are still looking for a healthy pair of twins to add tojhe class. In fact, they'll be doubly welcome at Keating hall. warns t ' n e Wetr Nvwxt 'k oft Union, Jimmy Fired at the Elephants Head. It of M Se spon-siu.- Dr Buhler's principles are simple enough Expressed fundamentally, thev are' "Don't force a child's development-let it come naturally. There is talent in every child. Guide it THE REASON BAYER ASPIRIN WORKS SO EAST n Scyar AspMa takM In a IwobUr af watsr. By Nm Sms S kRt Iks WWm, f Sm flM R Is dltlsCnraHm. This spOMl sf SitiaNgraHM IsshlN loo SAYEI Aspirin tablet, is skins bsM of ksadadw and dak lor pats a few miaafe, star taUsp old vomit when LITTLE Johnny Jones next door makes up his mind that your youngsters sled is a prettier red and therefore more desirable than his. own, and proceeds to volt ng "S hen one youngster hits anothappropriate it through the simple expedient of biffing your er, kt him strike back. Up to a youngster in the eye and taking it away from him, dont tell ciit.nn age, all arguments should your boy to turn the other eye and regard his neighbor only be si ttlcd this way. It creates assertion and ultimate with humility. Tell him to biff right back maybe twice, IF nsi MONSTER ELEPHANT WAS CHARGING STRAIGHT FOR THE BOYS! Well, sir, Jimmy says he couldnt believe his eyes. He knew that the human mind can play strange tricks on a fellow, but he knew that this was no trick of the imagination. The elephant was there in flesh and blood, and, as he came tearing through the underbrush gigantic ears flapping and bellowing with rage Jimmy decided that discretion was the better part of valor and ran for his life. "Climb a big tree!" he yelled to his pal. Jimmy says his pal did climb a tree dropped his rifle and went up the trunk like a monkey, and this gave Jimmy a chance to think. He ran for the thickest part of the wood thinking the elephant would Heres clsss great just lineman, Bitty Lea, died. He was not an . end for four years as most of them insisted. He was All America tackle for three years and then, due to an Injured shuolder which forced him to play with his arm strapped to his side all season, he moved out to end the next year. Made the It is as end this time extremely doubtful that the new world record for the mile, set In London last summer by Stan Wood-ersowill be allowed by the International federation. There are two reasons, both sufficient under the rules to prevent acceptance of the mark. One is that the race was with club members. The other is that it was a paced race and he was permitted to have the pole all the way. Empires Eimlie and Byron, once two of the best in the big time, visited the World Series. When they How 1934 Hello everybody: one-wa- Cubs Loss of Pennant Is Blamed on Wives Varsity-wrestling,- -- la 'V key-me- Tms I ' , The difference between pern, verance end obstinacy is that LIVES THE cm HEADLINES FROM often comes from a strong end the other from YOURSELFI a strong , OF PEOPLE LIKE Sport that is sport only fog th onlookers, Is not sport Intimate fellowships uil the M West in Hunt Virginia Elephant of Cave end Take Beta By FLOYD GIBBONS resigned to the inevit. Famous Headline Hunter bit is sometimes an excuse f the yellow streak. T A man never forgets a snub. to club Adventurers of this courtesies the all S. That is the reason it does him n much good, by stirring him into Bring em Back Alive James Brogan of Tompkinsville, action. I., N. Y., for his knockout animal adventure today. Jimmy Brogan didn't really do a Frank Buck in this story at least You're the Smithy he didnt mean to but, by golly, he did bring himself back alive and, You cannot dream yourself lota boys and girls, when youve read Jimmy's experience youll agree that e character; you must hammer that's something. and forge yourself into one. How would yoa like to be out pheasant hunting with a little It would be strange If the tmn a rifle and all of a sudden run smack kilt man keeps didnt know pany at tbe start this beginning. but let's story great big a pal him. and the Great before 28 Jimmy in Depression the.year hijack Impudence is not due to lack of his wenthunting pheasants in a wood' adjacent to a farm of Jimmy s of respect so much as it is to bad had uncle in West Virginia. The boys were having a swell time. They in manners. thoir lunch with them and had bagged a couple of the birds, and as the training sun started to set started back home in great spirits. Jimmy says it was great fun walking through the dense woods and pretending to stalk big game. In their imaginations the hunters were treking through the jungle of Africa the shadow of every tree seemed Of course you wouldn't to hide a tiger or a lion or even an elephant. have much chance with a twenty-twagainst an elephant, but it wa fun anyway, and besides who ever heard of an elephant in West Virginia? Jimmy says he was creeping along Indian fashion when he heard a crashing behind him then his hunting companion let out a scream of terror Jimmy thought it was part of the game a war cry but when he looked around he let out a scream and nearly dropped his trusty rifle so in terror. Ben-swing-er tf Wide Difference A have a hard time following him and looked back. There was his pal safely out of reach of that long trunk, but the boys had not figured on the keen intelligence of the elephant who is one of the smartest as well as the largest of beasts. Jimmy saw the huge monster stop under the tree and look up. Then the next thing the animal did made Jimmy raise his futile little rifle to his shoulder. That elephant calmly took hold of the tree with his powerful trunk and shook it as a man would shake an apple tree! The tree swayed and shuddered under the tons of weight Jimmy was sure no man could hold on under such a shaking Jimmy's pal was all wrapped around the branches, but it looked as though he would come tumbling down any second and be stamped to death beneath those huge feet. Jimmy did the only thing he could do to helpTiispal he fired straight at the elephant's head. It was an easy shot, Jimmy says, the target was so big. And he thinks the shot went true because the elephant let go of the tree and with a challengmg bellow came charging straight at Jimmy. o his feet have-lenwings-tthatumrate, Tie1 cause he turned and ran like a deer. He dodged in and out of the trees and kept as much as possible in the thickest part of the woods. He could hear the infuriated beast behind him as he snapped trees in two and crashed into larger ones. Undoubtedly Jimmy's strategy in keeping to the densest growth saved his life. But Jimmy says he was tiring fast and his heart was beating like a bassdrum. Just as he thought he must fall from exhaustion he came on a farmhouse In a clearing. He screamed a warning and burst In the door of the house. The farmer thought Jimmy was crasy when he cried out elephant, but a few seeonds later the man changed his mind. Wham! Mr. Elephant hit that door and shattered it as though It were paper. But the door was too small to admit his huge bulk. Insane with fury now because he had lost his prey, the beast started in to wreck the farm. Each time he charged the house, Jimmy says. It felt like an earthquake. But the house was strong, and although badly damaged. did not collapse. Baffled the beast smashed up the barn, stamped the life out of chickens and killed two dogs who bravely snapped at him. The farm had no telephone and Jimmy or the farmer did not dare leave the house for help. But help came and plenty of it. A small army of circus employees led by Jimmy's pal and armed with heavy rifles, closed in and a volley of big caliber lead ended his days. Then Jimmy learned why he had encountered a wild elephanLin the woods of West Virginia. The circus animal had suddenly gone berserk as elephants in captivity sometimes do killed his trainer and escaped. The rest we know. Well, boys and girls, it was all over then but the paying for damages, and the circus soon did this, and they gave Jimmy and his pal $50 for their part in the capture -- WNU Service. 'JimTTty-jyrTeanru- st t man-killin- Dogs Ahead of Us probably wagged friendly tails or barked at the first American settlers who landed on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, because, although cattle, horses and other domestic animals were introduced to this continent from Europe, the dog was here ahead of us. comfortably established m many a tepee, asserts a writer in the Washington Star Dogs owned by the Indians were about the size of a small collie; were usually white and had long coats They have virtually disap pea red, and the Mexican hairless and chihuahua are the only native dogs in existence, although they, too, may have been imported. All other dogs known is American nave been produced from experiments with breeds not native to this continent Dogs All people who suffer occasionally from headaches ought to know this way to quick relief. At the first sign of such pain, take two Bayer Aspirin tableU with a half glass of water. Sometimes if the pain is more severe, another dose is necessary later, according to directions. If headaches keep coming back we advise you to see your ows physician. He will look for the. cause in order to correct it The price now is only 15 for twelve tablets or two full dozes for 25 cents -- virtually, only s cent apiece. . Virtually 1 cent a tablet All Serve It brave soul is a thing which itf Smitfl.- -things serve. Alexander A Constipated? What a difference good bowel habits can make! To keep food wastes soft and moving, many doctors recom- mend NujoL I Co- -- . i fil INSIST ON eENUJNEJ'SPi HOTEL BEII LO!.:o:3 Alaska Has Odd Geese A race of wild geese reside m the coastal region of British Columbia and aoutheastern Alaska. Thev are similar in general appearance and size to their bettei known relative, the Canada goose or "honker, but differ in being very much darker. They are known as d the goose. Apart from the difference tn coloration be tween these two races of geese there ere difference In habit also, the most important being that of migration. The Canada goose makes long annual journeys to and from Its nesting grounds; some raise their young on James bay and spend the winter on the Guff of Mexico. -- The goose, on the other hand, may spend the entire year, or even all its lifetime in the same ' region. . 51 rji'- OCDEK, CTA white-cheeke- J twn-I- ' Air Z,m . . M fiail law BH11 tor 4 ' f"1 04 . ' eaw 4 , ow white-cheeke- HOTEL IEN LOMOND M u(l J V |