OCR Text |
Show UTAH MAGNA TIMES. MAGNA. rS peaking of Sports Costume Imoortant Thing lor Foil Triple Champ Ugly Duckling Colt Is Champ who lived In woman dusky Henry Armstrong bss so many ring titles he doesnt knew what t du. When be outd Lou Ambers pointed recently to whs the lightweight crown, ho became the first man In the history of pugilism to hold three established championships ut th same time. He was already featherweight and welterweight champion and now like s brown-hue-d LIKE the old " Fur-Embellish-ed stout-hearte- Of Trotters By GEORGE A. BARCLAY horsemen meet around circuit this summer and fall the case of McClIn, ugly eld duckling among the throe-yetrotters, will he a prime subject of talk. For the smashing victory of this unpromising looking colt In the $38,000 Hambletonian stake race at Goshen, N. T., a while back startled the most unexcltable followers of the track. MeClin'i victory was unique in several ways. Until he flashed past his nine competitors in 2:0214 and 2 02i4, he was what racing folks call a 'maiden. He had yet to win a race. He had started in two races last year and was among the failing In both cases to sate his entrance fee, a term used to describe horses that can't finish among the first four. At that, HcLln had some rather distinguished precedents behind him. Circuit followers remembered the experience of Guy McKinney, winner of the first Hambletonian back in 1926. Guy McKinney had record for failure beaten handily before he raced to fame. He started three times as a and was twice distanced and once displaced. But as a three be was never beaten. year-ol- d Horsemen will tell you that much of the credit for McLin's sensational victory should go to Henry Thomas, the veteran reinsman who hustled the colt into the lead In each heat and kept him there until the WREN Cy Scammony blnd-wee- ADVENTURERS CIIERIE NICHOLAS also-ran- Winning Style Thomas was using the same technique be employed with Shirley Hanover a year ago. In both instances, however. It had to be a super borse that could get in front and stay there for two heats considering the classy competition It faced. One of the remarkable things about Thomas feat with McLIn was that it was the first time he had "55 - Hello three-year-ol- d. turity. He also developed and drove Walter Dear and his sire. Laurel Hall and Walters dam, Blitzie. And speaking of records, Coxs feat of winning first, second, third and fourth money in the 1929 Hambletonian with Walter Dear, Volomite, Sir Guy Mac and Miss Woerner, all developed and trained by him, is likely to be unchallenged for years to come. Another Interesting thing about McLin was the fact that his blood traces bark directly through the three-year-ol- d ld trotters. ony in Amerlc, to season on game. Lj law 5 bade the killing of deer of the year. decwJ Scnro Time With Mock Since!; everybody: know, they eight-year-ol- d s - Fierce Gale Struck Her House. Amy had put her two little girls to bed and was back at her sons bedside, weary and She to had sleep. gone they, worn, for another long nights vigil The hours rolled pn. The wind had begun to rise. At 2 oclock in the morning it was blowing a young to that wind on three gale. The Castaldis house was completely exposed sides. On the other it was protected by a factory, but the gale wasnt blowing from that direction. The wind rose steadily. It whistled and howled In the telephone wires ontside. The whistle rose to a ahriek, and atiU It kept on rising. Then, suddenly, the lights went out in the street. A burst of hailstones rattled against the house. And at almost the same time a window crashed in the front of the dwelling. The house was shaking shaking violently. It was about all Amys frazzled nerves could stand. She let out a scream. The scream woke Night had come on. HENRY ARMSTRONG colossus he bestrides the fight world between the 126 and 147 pound classes. Armstrong has become boss of these three ring divisions within less than 10 months. He started after championship scalps last October 29, when he knocked out Petey Sarron in Madison Square Garden, New York, to win the featherweight title. On May 31 of this year he acquired the welterweight title by decision over Barney a Ross and then added the lightweight championship this August by his win over Ambers. Only Ambers gave the Negro a tough battle. After trailing In the early rounds and suffering two knockdowns en route, he came back with a flurry and came near turning the tables on his foe. When the fight ended, it was Armstrong who was wobbly and Ambers who left the ring strong and vigorous. Awarded the fight by a two to one verdict .by ihe judges Armstrong booed by Irate fans seas jer red-en- d who had been completely won by Ambers courageous last stand. At that the Negro was penalised three rounds for illegal blows. Armstrong freely admitted Ambers had given him the most bewildering 45 minutes he had ever spent in a ring. TLLHM one-HANCOCK, legged athlete, is creating a sensation on Cleveland tennis courts by playing an excellent game on a crutch. Hancock lost his left leg 22 years ago when he was four years old in a streetcar accident. Seven years ago be started playing tennis. Soon he developed what his instructors term an exceptional game. His forehand, backhand, and underhand are said to be enough to beat many tennis players. According to Hancock, his only difficulty is an occasional broken crutch when the game geta close or when he Is plaing a good upon it this is going one of those seasons the highest ambition of a lady of fashion will be to come into the happy possession of a and mtriguingly coat or costume suit. Which is as it should be for if there is one message more important than another now broadcasting via dramatic style prevues throughout leading style centers it is that of the costume for the coming fall and winter. We call your attention to the outfits in the nandsome This trio of voguish cospicture tumes were displayed at a series of style revues held recently by the Style Creators of Chicago in the wholesale district for the edifica tion of buyers who came from all sections of the country to gain first hand news of fashion futures The coat illustrated in the foreground to the right is highly significant as it bespeaks the continued importance of Persian lamb Also it empha-s.zethe tendency to do exciting things in the way of novel fur manipulation. Persian lamb in tall slen-- I dor points follows the many gores if the skirt. Wide bands of the Persian also define the hemline and trim up and down the front. The stylish .tuxedo front . theme and the new sleeve idea are seen worked out in terms of fur in the handsome jacket suit to the left Here the j.uket is vertically banded in skurk. a fur vh'ch is very fash-- . tunable this scasi ti when brown pelts of every type are the rage. Tile importance of the theme was definitely stressed throughout the entire pro gram presented by the Chicago ing touch. Citing general fashion indications stressed in preview showings, we find that skirts for day wear are short, fifteen inches from the Hour S ft being the accepted length. blou-i- d effects to th? slim, straight ami short skirts. In fabnc treatments quilted de signs and appliques .ire widely in use. Softness from dr iping. shirring, tiny tucks and smock ng is very evident. I hr 1900 Influorfle ts seen in dinner and evening fashions Fabrics are often the Lou.s XIV type, most luxurious for formal wear, including brocades, lames, metallized taffetas, vilvets and mmres. tc Western Newspaper Union Hanky Highlights Gay Feathers Chic Note on New Hats If it is decoration a sports felt the newest bright quili so tall as to seem impossible at first You see them on the new glance. suede fedoras and quaker hats with their imposing high Lous Stance is a tail-crow- The little matter of changing his battinr stance back to the old style has snapped Lou Gehrig out of the worst slump of his big league career. When the season opened observing fans noticed Lou had changed his style. His right foot was over toward first base, his body - , half turned to the pitcher. Almost from the start Lou encountered tough going. H began being a soft touch for pitchers h crowns. When it comes to the dressier hat fashions, watch feathers! They will play a big part in the seasons trimming program, especially colorful little ostrich tips. The very new Louis XIV tricornes have wee tips surmounting. Many uses of dainty ribbons are made l v fKf I s. in a prettily feminine man- ner. The new millinery creations may well be called "confections with their daintily frivolous bows and flowers and feathers, embroideries and such. Later on, for winter social activi ties, these wee millinery concoctions will take on a dressy mood in that they will be cunningly adorned with ostrich tips, ribbons and such You can get cunning models in felt for early wear with your fall tailored suit. You will be enchanted with these miniature types, we assure you. so x- - v Fabrics Vogue A noteworthy trend in play clothes is the vogue for elasticized fabrics. Wool and cotton swim suits are elasElastic-be- ticized to insure a smooth fit. Some casual sports frocks are designed with elasticized waistlines. Elasti-cize- t. panty-girdle- s under tennis frocks. Vn often are worn .' When the crutumn evening F 4 Collars Found Smaller breezes become persistent gusts, Collars are noticeably smaller on Burmel's tie newly designed fur coats this LOU GEHRIG year, with tailored iiimy petit point embroidered models often seen on mink, dyed flower around Rumors floated "hanky" ordinarily slugged. your ermine and Japanese weasel oats. around the circuit that Gehrig was head to keep your curls set just A few swaggers are seen with althrough. right. These exquisite head ker- most no collars, while the tuxedo Theu on a recent trip west, he chiefs ccme in a wide range oi front panel is very popular for fall switched back to his old batting so have can one daytime models. you pastels, sty le digging In at the plate, bis for each An ostrich boa gown. right foot a little ahead of his left, as here The Tinkling Dress pictured reflects the ina spring In his knees and his bat of Windsor recently The duchess ol fluence femisoftness and waving with the same motion. As wore a "tinkling dress to one of a consequence his batting average ninity. Below in the picture petit the smart Paris night clubs. The began t tear, his home run total flowers on a cobwebby chiffon sound is produced by paillettes climbed and he became once again hanky highlight a costume of topped with bits of loose metal - the keystone of the Yankee batting attack. C Western Newspaper (Jala. symphonic black and - while- worn for dining under the stars. -- Another important -- which let out a refined jingte when they are in motion. point k j choice of colors and an variety of stitches. Ia fix rangement shown here, nm j and S are made in th da:! color by mt j gathers as in row 8 and thar through the k ing stitches as in row L Bov is a version of plain feather d ing, and row 4 is done ia tie tan stitch. Variations of these stitches and dozens of t ers that will be new to jos I your friends are fully fflustn in Book 2 offered herewith, Are you ready for birthd and the next church bazau? you turn time into money things to sell? Mrs. Spears Set Book 2 has helped thousands, women. It is full of new ideas j things you can make in yourra time. If your home is your you will also want Book ing for the Home Decorator, ce der by number enclosing 2 for each book. If you order K books, a leaflet on crazyps Ititc! quilts with 38 authentic Addn will be included free. Mrs. Spears, 210 S. Desplaines fctt-in- g Style Creators There is this to ob serve in regard to the newer jack ts, they are inclined to drop the bolero trend in favor of boxy hiplengths and many take on the very new dolman sleeve which sty proclaims them of ing. The chubby jacket that you see here is typical of the new trend The material for the ensemble is a green ribbed woolen The frock beneath features the very new sailor yoke. A gold belt adds the climax- s ' viLoj. lid An ns y , t knees t gHiinltttC tfce SUroes row. Much of the beauty rf smocking depends upon the tf ing of the rows. The double m of gathers in the sketch. No. 14 4, are apart Tht tf? between these and th single r should be about inch. Depend opponent. fe- male line to the celebrated Cub Mare, that James Delancey imported from England before the Revolutionary war for his breeding and training farm then located In what Is now the Bowery In New Fork. McLin's dam, Ethelinda, was the offspring of Ethel Volo and Peter the Great, one of the immortals of the track, then past 20 years of age. It was Walter Cox who developed Ethelinda and drove her in 2:034 to win the Kentucky Futurity in 1923, and again a few days later when she set the record for trotters at 2:024 In an exhibition against time. So McLin has fine blood and s tradition of fine training and driving oehind him. But his record as s when be couldnt finish among the first four in the only two races he ran made him an unpredictable performer in the famed Hambletonian stakes at Goshen. Winning the Hambletonian ia getting to be a habit with entries from the Hanover Shoe Farm of Hanover, Pa., with McLin following the winning tradition of last year's victor, Shirley Hanover. The Hambletonl-a- n la the worlds richest stake for ts other kids, burned the pupil of his right eye. He was In constant up the bobbin thread to eaS, never left his beside material. pain, and for two days and nights after that Amy You will note in th sketch 1 until a far worse calamity forced her to. And right on the heels of that accident came the news that an uncle had died inliOuisville, Ky. Amy aoms of the simple hand ifr couldnt go to the funeral' Not with her bey in constant agony. So, on are made over two rows ( care era and the others over 1 1 Saturday night her husband went without her, leaving her to take of her son, and her two young daughters. two-legg- driven the somewhat temperamental colt in public. It was a performance for both driver and horse. Developing winners seems to have become a habit with Walter Cox, who is being given credit for nursing McLIn along to track Immortality for Lawrence B. Sheppard, who owns this remarkable colt. Cox trained and drove McLins dam, Ethelinda, to victory in five out of inten races as a cluding the $14,000 Kentucky Fu- aotedBewr-Massachuset- i By Ruth say troubles never come singly, and IF SMOCKING Wyeth Speu, Jj seems to I know doggone well that is true in at least one case. It s consuming, hereto, the case of Amy Castaldi of Chicago. When fate began pil- that saves hours. ThefirZ1 to shirr the material high. ing up grief on Amys shoulders, she piled it up bya' It was a Friday morning, the second day of July, 1933, when things Loosen the tension sliehtki some stitchin straight-rowwith I out son, playing to wrong. Amys Mbs jgo began Here and There McLIN IN THE HOME STRETCH V Famous Headline Hunter Me-Li- finish. N By FLOYD GIBBONS s, d Had Tragedy Closes In ar .fenltoSJK flowers, thick Uproot wUchlSS resin used In anedic1 CLUB HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSE IF! U d back-stitchin- g Joop-stitch- es C Amy grabbed her children and ran for the back door. up her two little girls, and they came running from their beds. The little boy was already awake. He, poor kid, hadn't slept for two nights. Fled With Her Three Children. Another window broke with a clatter, glass falling to the floor. The kids huddled around Amy, clutching at her dress. One by one the windows crashed, there was a louder crash a shriek of rending wood and a huge piece of sheet metal came TEARING RIGHT THROUGH THE SIDE OF THE HOUSE! The wind had stopped howling now. Instead, it tore by with a loud, steady, hissing roar. The house was deluged with water that came through th broken windows. Now rocks and pieces of lumber came hurtling in and Amy could hear more flying debris battering against the side of the house with a force that was all but tearing it to pieces. "I was about to faint with fright, Amy says. I grabbed my children and ran for the back door. I took hold of the knob and tried to open It. It wouldnt budge. The movement of the house under the force of the storm, had warped it tightly shat. My children were screaming, and their cries gave me strength. I tugged at the door with renewed vigor and finally opened it. But when the door opened, Amy paused and looked out on a scene that looked almost as uninviting as did the inside of her home. Before her was nothing but the blackest of darkness and the terrible hissing roar of the wind. Thunder boomed and a streak of lightning rent the sky. As the flash illuminated the heavens she could see that the air was full of flying debris. More rocks and pieces of sheet metal boards, bricks and everything imaginable. j j ho! -& Chicago, I1L Counfrid Areas of Canada Is not nearly M k South America, in fact ( much bigger than on eoonfir at South America, Brazil Bo1 S. S. S., includes tor in two continents and than either North Amend South America. Canadsi t Just Escaped a Live Wire. square mile; Says she: "My head was reeling. I almost fainted again. A piece 3,694,863 of sheet metal landed near us, barely missing our heads as It feD America, 6,800,000 squats from above. For a minute I wondered il the world were coming to an Brazil, 3,283,319 squar W S. R end, and I began to pray. Then, with what little strength I had left, I Russia, or U. S. A North miles: children close and made for the gate of our back yard. squar gathered my .miles8,000,000 square The wind tore at her, almost sweeping her off her feet. Cling- th U. , ing to all three of her children, she led them acrosa the yard. When she came to where the gate should have been she found It gone and the rest of the fence along with It. Across the street was the factory the nearest solid building and she beaded for that. "We walked and stumbled fell and picked ourselves up again, shs says. "I thought that trip would never come to an end, but finally ws reached the factory. We learned later that we had walked over a live wire that had been blown down and we can only thank God that none ol us stepped on it But once we were inside the building the night watchman came to our rescue. When Amy went back to her house the next morning she found The furniture was water-soakeevery window broken. and broken by flying debris and the whole doggone placed looked well like a cyclone had struck it. which was the truth. "But I didnt care about that, says Amy. "for my children were safe. The next day the papers carried stories about the freak tornado and told about the damage it did. But no newspaper will ever be able to describe the way I felt during those awful moments while it was occurring. ' Copyright. WNU Servlet. d Formed the Wisconsin Dells Some thousands of years ago, when the Wisconsin river began its flow down to the sea, its course was shifted time and time again as it found its way over the flat limestone bed. As it rushed along it cut into-th- e limestone, and ffje passage of the great glacier made other cuts in the rock, forming the weird shapes which are now known at the Dells. The Turk's Head, the Balanced Rock, the Needle and the Devil's Doorway are only a few of the descriptive names given these formations. Just English Expressions as American expressions are peculiar to the English, so ar English expressions to us. Its a pretty middhn affair" is about the strongest superlative the English countryman can find for something tragic' and harrowing Their "not art is far stronger than our "A tidy few" may be "very. many-- a bitol a -- draft.'-' gale, and "a drop too much, a description of absolute intoxication. Threads of Life A man thinks hit own will guides his own life. But th world is full of human lives; a man is bound to blurider Into some ol them, weave his own with them Indissolubly, or touch and drift away and touch again, or narrowly misi touching and maybe never know. The pattern is on the loom. And sometimes, looking back, you aee a part of il A thread weaves in and out and disappears; it is not broken but still weaving somewhere. Is II incidence when it appears again? Unknown or unconscious forces. It's V0aaa3 KlOW In Their 40s Can Attract f Hra' food advto b bus law(mally bw spil fiwbw, .11 sbMS bo sad pwt aarvw frwh ab. OW aon k-- M ' 2. I rfr. .? OSSiH'- TMdnSSKSc mfmitllf ariwiaw. ap phytHMi 'll j rwlwanw, U virMityW jittary awwa i7 aeoomjsBy CnUp oft' WORTH TRYING odd. Cemetery Called Goda Acre The cemetery In the Moravian village of Schoenbrunn In what is now Tuscarawas county, Ohio, was called Gottes Acker God's .Acre, Here are a few of the inscriptions on the tombstones: "Rebecca. Little Daughter of J. Levi and Salome, Died June 17. 1773,. "Felj Asleep, Anna Roslna, Aug. 11, 1775, "Phoebera Widow, Great Sufferer, Passed Over Into the Land of Well Jan. j 17. 1774. Classified Advertising Have ton houTO.oJatU totrsdeorieflfTiy silk classified i only few cents" there are probably 1 lot of folks for just whstertf is you no longer use for. CLASSIC ji |