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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH NOT IN THE BOX SCORE: D UMORMONGERS insist Dart-mounow is doing an even more intensive job than Cornell in s the matter of luring football players to the campus . . . Give a hand to little Albany acadd emy. Its not as well as some of the other prep schools but it will be represented on college gridirons this fall by such stars as the Stearns twins at Williams, A1 Hessberg, , Yales flashy halfback, and Johnny Vruwink, who may excel as a Princeton end. Vruwink, incidentally, is the Tiger basketball captain and the best courtman to have worn the Orange and Black high-clas- press-agente- since Ken Fairman. Mrs. Isabel Dodge Sloane, who owned Cavalcade and still is rated as one of the leading ladies of the turf, does not ride and is scared of New York Post. WNU Service. Desire of Athletes for Higher Learning Will Surprise Profs A FAMOUS college basketball coach shortly will be visited by a committee representing his team. They will demand assurances that their scholarships will not be discontinued as soon as their playing days age ended . . . Seems that some athletes do go to college with the hope of getting diplomas after all Folks (bellboys, waiters and such) who provide service for tennis stars say that the court luminaries are the worlds worst tippers . . . John Pesek, the wrestler, breeds greyhounds between bouts . . . Patty-cak- e your pinkies for Charley Berry. The veteran catcher has done a swell job with Connie Macks pitching rookies. Iowa is due to come up with a back who will make the customers forget Oze Simmons. His name is Bush Lamb, and Temple players, who tried to stop him last year, insist that hell be the hottest thing in football before the seasons half over Also, down in the ... ... bull-rush- es theres Frank of Mississippi, Bruiser Kinard, a giant tackle. Unless he has horrible luck he is sure of top rating this fall . . . Dom Fonte and Bernie Pearlman, who played baseball at L. I. U., are scheduled to report to Elmira (N. Although league) next spring most colleges are clamoring for a crack at the big gates to be obtained there, Syracuse will not exhibit its very good basketball team at the Garden this winter. The reason? An alumnus checks in with the explanation that Syracuse wants to act dignified in front of Columbia, Penn, etc., in the hope of being invited to join the Ivy league elect some day. Les Canadiens hockey team, having had good results from a similar experiment last year. Coach Cecil Hart again is sending a group of players to Emile Maupas camp in the Laurentian mountains. After six weeks of such preliminary exercises, the veterans will join the rest of the squad at the Forum for the usual hockey drill . . . Albert Battleship Leduc, former Les Canadiens defense man, and for the past three years managing coach of the Providence Reds, has resigned. His appointment as sales manager for a Montreal distillery keeps him too busy for hockey . . . Lionel Conacher, having announced his retirement from active hockey to take over a Toronto political job, the Maroons are seeking a replacement. Sylvio Mantha, former Capadiens defense star and manager, probably will be signed. ... Y.-P- a. pre-seas- Temple Boys Tell One on Coach Pop Warner Temple students insist that Warner; is wearing the same hat and shoes that he has worn every day since taking up football coaching at the institution in 1933 . . . . Eulace Peacock, the tan tornado from Temple, now runs an apartment house in Newark ; New York racing associations are not making any elaborate plans for the Worlds fair. And why should they? The ... Chicago fair didnt do Illinois courses any good . . Millionaire owners still are trying to sign Hirsch Jacobs but he spurns their offers, preferring to train a band of battered platers for his frau. Many millionaire stables are in real need of a Jacobs, too. ' Frank , Makosky, Yankee rookie pitcher, recommends every detective story he reads to Lefty Gomez, his roomie, during the playing season. But spoils the reading by telling Lefty who committed the murder . . . Harry Gumbert lives only thirty miles from Pittsburgh but never saw Forbes field until he became a member of the Giants pitching staff. horses . . . Charles Dexter, sports expert of the New York Daily Worker, provides the information that there are 70 racetracks in the Soviet Union with proper betting facilities on all of them. He also says that rugby and soccer are the favorite sports over there . . , Chubby Dean and several of his young Athletic mates got so little money that they lived in a suburban trailer camp all season. At least thats the story sworn to by various reputable PhilaEd Kringle, harddelphians Manhattan back, shoots in hitting the low golf seventies and was undefeated in 12 varsity matches. Earl Coombs uses up three fungo hats a year while hitting practice flies to Yankee outfielders . . . One of the most impressive things about the American league is that the players did far less futile bickering with umpires than their National league contemporaries this He wont get many raves year but George Beilby, who performs for .little Hamilton, may prove to be one of the best football players in the East. ... Napoleon Chose Appreciation th 'T'O BE able to appreciate the - best that there is in life is an ideal that every youth should have. There are all sorts of things in life, some of them good, some of them bad, and some neither very good nor very bad. There are hosts of young people who miss the best things, because they have fixed their attentions on lesser things. So the finest things in life they never see. The youth who has learned to look for the best in music, in art, in literature, in his associates and in himself, will get the most out of life. Exile Napoleon Bonaparte might have become a citizen of the United States instead of an exile on the island of St. Helena, letters written by Marquis de Lafayette reveal. The letters were presented to the University of Chicago by descendants of William H. Crawford, early American statesman. In one letter Lafayette wrote of Napoleons brother, Joseph, who did come to America: His senti ments and conduct with respect to the United States have at all times been very popular. He has in this late instance shown more sense than his brother, who, from the day of his abdication to that of his surrender to the British ship, had his choice to go to America and to Colombia hospitality. O ASK ME ANOTHER A Quiz With Answers f Has there ever been an airplane flown around the world? 2. How long does it take to get a telephone call through to London 1. from this country? 3. How many miles of submarine cable are there? ,4. What town is nearest the geographical center of the United States? 5. What is pectin? 6. Why are some tin cans enameled on the inside? Offering Information on Various Subjects Answers There has never been a airplane flight in that such a flight would require girdling the globe at its greatest circumference, either along the equator or along a single degree 1. round-the-wor- ld of longitude. 2. It takes from 10 to 30 minutes, although it rarely takes 30 minutes. It costs $15 for three minutes talk in the daytime, but the rate for Sunday and for night Swank or Modesty of Kipling Undecided John n Shirley-Fothe British portrait painter, makes this contribution to the vast store of Kipling anecdotes: In the early nineties, when Kiplings name was a household word wherever the English language went, some one took him to the British embassy in Paris. On being presented to the ambassador he remarked: You may know my name, Lord Dufferin; I am the son of Mr. Lockwood Kipling of Lahore. Lord Dufferin told my father at the time he thought this reply either the biggest bit of swank or the most modest thing he had ever heard. x, well-know- calls is $10 for three minutes. 3. The earth is encircled with more than 300.000 miles of sub- marine cables, 100,000,000 miles of wires and 5,000,000 telephone miles of telegraph cables. 4. Lebanon, in Eastern Smith county, Kan., is the nearest. 5. It is a substance which appears in many vegetable tissues as a constituent of the sap or cell wall. In making jellies its presence is necessary to cause the (fruit juice to solidify. 6. Red fruits and vegetables bleach in contact with tin plate and foods with sulphur content discolor the can just as a cooked egg discolors a silver spoon. The stain is harmless but uninviting. ... Guldahl Says Success Due to Light Driver Ralph Guldahl, national and west ern open champion, uses a driver that measures 43 inches and weighs Gulounces. dahl, who formerly used heavy irons, last year began to play with irons of 13 medium weight and attributes much of his recent success to the change . . . Theres at least one athlete to whom isnt money Farmers every- thing . . . Charley biy Reboli, was cycle rider, signed to ride one six-da- a day last seasons races for At the end of the first night he ... decided he didnt like his partner of $150 and withdrew from the event Mike Kreevich, White Sox outfielder, drew only $90 a month on his first professional baseball job, which was with the McCook, Neb., club in 1930 . . . When the season ended he went home broke. Sixty-eigof the one hundred and at Wabash college freshmen thirty turned out for football . . . George Halas ' has converted two tackles into guards on his Chicago Bears football club. George Musso, a regular at guard, has played tackle since joining the team several years ago . . . Tay Bell, called Jingle Bells by his mates, was a tackle at Washington State . . . Jack Kearns, former manager of Jack Dempsey, becomes promoter and matchmaker of boxing at the Chicago stadium, succeeding Jim Mullen . . . Kearns, who has enjoyed unusual success as a promoter in Detroit, will present; his first show late hi November Burleigh Grimes, boss of the Dodgers, will be a popular fellow at the winter baseball meetings. He has three pitchers, Mungo, Hamlin, anc: Butcher, on whom other National league clubs have their eyes. The Cardinals are reported to have the inside track on Mungo. Sam Parks, Jr., of Pittsburgh, 1935 national open champion, is one young man who does not intend to rely on professional golf as a lifetime career. Parks, a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, plans to enter Carnegie Tech for a special course in the building trades, one of which will be masonry. Bob Herwig, center on the University of California eleven, married last summer and an Oakland newspaper n has hired his bride to write the on the schools football squac . . . California players have kiddec Herwig no end, but thus far Coach Stub Allison has failed to dissuade Mrs. Herwig from performing her ht ... everywhere know that the Firestone Ground Grip Tire outperforms all other tractor tires. They know its outstanding performance is due to the famous Firestone Ground Grip tread and no other tire can match its performance because this tread is PATENTED. They know also that no other tire can give them so many advantages. important money-savin- g GREATER TRACTION Takes a deeper and broader bite into the soil and has action. positive GREATER STRENGTH to resist the strain of heavy pulling is provided because every fiber of every cord is saturated with liquid rubber by the patented Firestone g process. 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Dorothy Bundy, who eliminated Alice Marble from the national tennis tournament, is not the only athlete in her family. Her brother. Bill, Santa Monica high school guard, is rated one of the best prep football players in Southern mo mmm m 000 00EO) QHI? m 000 mm or 00200 mm OQIOBotiliiil 'OCEB0 iSIieG) Copyright JOT, Firestone Tire A Bubber Oo. |