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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH NOT IN THE BOX SCORE: XT OTRE DAMES football team probably will be better next fall than in 1936. More experience and weight and just as much speed. . . . Lynn Waldorf says he needs a fullback, two tackles and a center at Northwestern, hut smiles when he says it . . . Purdue will have a swell first eleven but, as usual, will lack reserves . . . Minnesota is likely to be close to tops again . . . There will be no considerable improvement at Wisconsin. Friends say that is because Harry spends too much time reparts cruiting players from far-oand neglects the material around home . . . There also is a rap in for New York Post. WNU Service. Michigan, where another Notre Dame alumnus holds forth as Harry Claims Kipkes chief assistant. The boys ;an insist Hunk Anderson is great at teaching individual line play but is League unable to impart the principles of teamwork. 1928 Club Hype Igoe, the boxing dotes upon using lead pencils inwho TOE DUGAN Jumping Joe stead of a typewriter and insists now presides over a Gotham hot upon traveling in upper berths. . . . spot with the same zeal he once de- Jack Dempsey says a big heavyvoted to the Yankee Stadium hot weight fight in New York is worth corner started this. Having re- $40,000 extra money (ten Gs a turned from a Sabbath visit to his night for four nights) to his restaur.old playgrounds, having inspected ant . . . Now that Chicago has had the cash register and having set up its turn at handling a major sports a few on the house, he was talking event Philadelphia and Baltimore no about the third major league. longer can claim first place in the Greatest team around now- traffic messing league . . . Solly adays, he was saying. Sure, those Seaman, the former lightweight, is Tigers are good Jaut what happens one of the best judges of weight in when the checks are down? Those the fight business. A week before affair he guessed Yankees just romp home with the the Braddock-Loui- s do Sure the they dont they? marbles, ringside weight of each man and theyll continue doing it all sea- within a half a pound . . . Would son. Theyll win all by themselves. anybody mind my calling attention A timid customer edged a pound to the fact that three months ago note' upon the mahogany. Hp ob- this space predicted the net gate for tained the same prompt service the fight would be which it was Mr. Dugans pleasure less than $600,000? . . . Pacific to provide ten years ago when the Coast league writers are touting lower end of the hatting order was Sacramentos kid shortstop, Joe e prosup and a rally was needed in the Orengo, as the best ninth. Then Mr. Dugan continued, pect in their circuit . . . Talk about alYessir, he said. Theyre that crowds here Minneapolis hotels Notre out sold for are the folks ready gossip third major league football game. about now and then. Where theyre going Archie San Romani is sure he to get opposition will crack that mile record before from is more than I the summer is out. Glenn Cunningknow. ham agrees with him, as does Don Maybe, offered Lash, who recently had his appendix another customer, sliced out . . . Garry Le Van is tossing a $10 bill achieving quick success as a Chidown the middle, cago business man. The once slimthey could choose hipped quarterback must have up sides and play gained at least 30 pounds since those N games among them-- s 1935 days when he was leading seives Princetons Tigers to an unbeaten e, Mr. Dugan took football season . . . George care of the bill and who captained the U. S. F. A. the suggestion with the same eleven against Charlton Athletic at aplomb that used to distinguish him the Polo Grounds recently, per when the bases were loaded. formed for the famous Bootle St. Or, James Team and was a schoolboy Yeah, maybe, he agreed. maybe they could take the pick of international star long before he the league and let them play the decided to transfer his soccer talYankees for a while. That might ents to the United States. help for a couple of weeks anyhow. l, The favorite sport of Ralph The reporter had dropped into National Open golf chamthe Dugan emporium fqr some in- pion, is football . . Sylva Annen-berthe very pretty lady golfer, spiration concerning a piece that is done by all baseball scriveners ev- is preparing for her third new name . . . Titanic Thompson, the ery year. This epic piece always starts out eminent Southwestern plunger, with the information that it is base- started Ky Laffoon on the way to ball custom for the team that is golfing glory. Titanic, who used to leading in July to continue in the astound Broadway with his own same spot up to World Series time. golf feats before he decided to reThen, if the . scrivener is such a main away from the hot spots more ceaseless searcher after innovations or less permanently, staked Ky to as is your present correspondent, expense money for his early tourhe tries to find some iconoclast who nament travels . . . The first golf can be quoted as saying the dope is ball ever owned by Walter Hagen the bunk during the current cam- was given to him by a Rochester paign. pro. Walter promptly knocked the Now, although he had once known thing through a window of his fathMr. Dugan as a very independent ers farmhouse. Just as promptly thinker, the reporter knew that he the elder Hagen retired him from had come to the wrong spot. Such the game for a yean views as those expressed about the Walter Hagens favorite beverage Yankees are merely those of a few now, according to Joe Kirkwood, citizens. million other discerning who is touring the' And, even if he would have liked to world with him, is in to that know what is due happen water. Once entertaining feud being staged by barley debefore Hagen Pithe Giants, Cards, Cubs and trahis from rates, the reporter hesitated to in- parted ditional liquid diet. trude the name of a rival organiza- That was when he Then he tion into the talk again. milk as a drank had a happy thought. stunt... agent press You By the way, he asked. once Picard , Henry played on some pretty sweet Yankee was the victim of a teams yourself. What do you think nervous breakdown, would happen if time could be arsomething rare 1 n ranged so that Ruth, Meusel and the pro golf ranks. It WalterHagen rest of you ancients could be came because the stacked up against this present out- serious minded lad spent thirteen fit of Yankee paragons? hours a day on the lesson tee at That Charleston ' Gene Sarazen plans Well, said Mr. Dugan. would have been power against a trip to the Orient late this year power and good defense against and hopes to enter the Japanese good defense. The way I figure it Open. is that pitching such as Hoyt and There are more actual competiPennock and those others (used to in dog shows than in any other tors enabled us to would have give us have an edge over this years Yan- sport. A large show such as the Morris and Essex may have as kees but as 3,000 competitors; small the many reportJoseph, interrupted seldom drop below 100, 1 see a picture of the 1928 shows er. is 350 and there are of the the there. average bar back in Yankees Take a look at it yourself ah quit more large shows than small ones. . . . Although he thought he had stalling. Mr. Dugan looked fondly at the retired from public life years ago Meusels, ; Ruths, Hoyts, younger when he served as a member of the state assembly his friends are Gehrigs and the rest. T guess insisting that Sol Strauss, the emiWhy, he said then. Yan- nent 20th Century Sporting Club atThese present youre right. kees may be a whole league to torney, should let his name be prethemselves, but we conlda licked sented the next time " there is a vacant judgeship.' 'em easy. Jj. Stuhl-dreh- er ff Yanks Are in Third but Picks ck big-tim- Dame-Minneso- ta H. Moor-hous- Gul-dah- 1 of abiding are within. No outside well can give us the waters of satisfaction and peace. They have all been tried, and men and women are foolish to try them still. No,' our well of satisfaction must be one that is not endangered by change of circumstances. J. H. Jowett. True taste is forever growing, learning, reading, worshipping, laying its hand upon its mouth because it is astonished, casting its shoes from off its feet because it finds all ground holy. Ruskin. The actress had been very, very lucky. But, naturally, she wouldnt admit that her success was due to anything but her own charm and skill. n A certain playwright had been engaged to write a new play for her, and for weeks she had been pestering the unfortunate man to tell her something about the plot, without, however, any success. Well, you might at least tell me this, said the actress at last. Does my new part give me a chance to please my public? Yes, I should think so, came You die in the the bored reply. first act. well-know- g, fvlW' Quality Rubber at Lower Cost! More Efficient Manufacturing! Lower Distribution Costs! 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