Southern Oregon News Review, Thursday, June 3, 1948
Washington. Dipesi;
B u ild I t F r o m A P a t t e r n
The p a tte rn offered below lukes
a ll the m y s te ry out o f b u ild in g the
ta b le to any size needed. W hile the
p a tte rn suggests m a k in g It six feet,
it provides com plete, easy to follow ,
d ire ctio n s fo r m a kin g It longer. If
desired. A ll m a te ria ls u s-d In b u ild
ing th is (able are stock size and
re a d ily o b ta in a b le a t lu m b e r yards
everyw here.
President Talks—Everyone
Wants to Get in on the Act
Oust B ow l M en ace
By BACKIIAGE
A m t « 4 n a h » t a n d C o m m e n ta to r
. ,, .
.
..
A L B E R T GOSS, m a ste r of the
N a tio n al Grange, b lu n tly w a rn
ed President T ru m a n the other day
, 1 th a t we are in v itin g another "d u st
WASHINGTON.—The colonel was talking to the general. bow,.. disaster u ^ , , we bcgin r#
It was obvious that the general was as bored as his secretary developing the grasslands of ths
looked, her interrupted dictation on her crossed knee, which west.
she uncrossed as the general’s eye wandered.
|
“ I have ju s t re tu rn e d fro m a trip
The colonel was the a rm y 's No. 1 specialist on the super-gadget
w hich was about to revolutionize w a rfa re , as the colonel could (and
would, i f he got a chance) te ll you. The colonel knew the h is to ry of the
' gadget's develop-
, m ent
fro m
its
; crude semi - gis-
m o stage when,
' p rim itiv e
as
it
I was,
it
caused
I the en tire re -o r
ganization of the
I ta c tic s
of
th e
Ik n ig h ts
under
lO tto
the
great,
( fir s t K ing of the
G e rm a n s .
He
could
trace
its
I evolution d o w n
through the days of delicate in te r
p la y when i t broke up the E m p ire
o f Charlem agne, and on down to
the fa ll o f S talingrad.
The colonel had brought the gen
e ra l about up to the th ird P unic
w a r and the se cre ta ry was w ig
gling.
The general h im s e lf had
begun to fum ble w ith fo rm 2A-
3064-B29. The colonel realized th a t
he was ra p id ly losing his audience.
So he raised his voice so th a t file
clerks in the next o ffice stopped
filin g (th e ir fin g e rn a ils ) and looked
up.
" B y the way, G e n e ra l," he
rem arked
c o n fid e n tia lly ,
" D id
yon know that I ’m w ritin g the
President's next speech? The one
he d e live rs to the In te r-P la n e
ta ry association?"
The general’ s se cre ta ry perked
up . . . the general raised an eye
b ro w . . . the colonel sm iled . . .
A t about the same hour, over
in the M e tro p o litan club, a v e ry
dapper young m an fro m the d iv i
sion of the F a r, N e a r and M iddle
E ast and e xp e rt in econom ic-ethic-
pathology.
was sipping a th in
scotch-and-soda w hich his chief
had ju s t ordered. H is chief was
bored.
" B y the w ay, C h ie f,” he said in
a w hisper so loud th a t even the
w a ite rs stopped looking respectful
and liste n e d: “ I'm
w ritin g the
P resident's next speech at the In te r
p la n e ta ry
association’ s
confer
ence."
In fo u r other places, fo u r other
young experts were te llin g th e ir
bosses the same th in g . A ll were
p e rfe ctly honest, a ll were believed,
and in 20 m inutes o r so, stenog
raphers, clerks, messengers, w a it
ers and cab d riv e rs w ere p o in ting
out "th e guy who w rite s the P re s i
dent’ s speeches.”
AU this has been going on, I
suppose, in w o rld ca p ita ls since
before somebody else thought he
had codified the code of H am
m u ra b i.
P resident T ru m a n got a little
peeved re ce n tly over the same
line of co lu m n a r ch a tte r and be
gan to " le t it be know n” th a t he
could w rite h im se lf. Of course,
a ll presidents get advice, counsel,
assistance and in sp ira tio n fro m
many men of m any m inds. Of
course, there are h u m a n ita ria n s
and g ra m m a ria n s, s ty lis ts and
C a rlyle-ists, lexicographers and
geographers,
economists
and
agronom ists, Russians, Prussians
and Persians upon whom he can
c a ll i f the need arises.
And somehow o r other, each and
a ll, i f they but co n trib u te one jo '
or tittle to the sacred paper, think
they w rote the whole—o r a t leas'
the stenographer who had to tak«
down a ll the s tu ff h o p e fu lly offered
fo r possible p re sid e n tia l use thinks
so, and tells her frie n d s about i t —
co n fid e n tia lly.
The
problem
of
p residential
speeches is m uch to the fore these
days fo r th is reason: Presideni
T ru m a n and his advisers, despite
the rebel yells, the w a ils o f the
defeatists, the triu m p h a n t ro a r oi
the elephant and the om inous hoof
beats o f the polls as they Gallup
dow nhill, s till believe he has a
fig h tin g chance to re tu rn in N ovem
ber to the W hite House, and he
intends to fig h t fo r i t
The P resident is going on a
speaking to u r o f the West — oi
course, i t isn’ t a cam paign, that
w ould be u n d ign ifie d and im m odest
before the convention has asked
He w ill speak under no "p o litic a l
sponsorship.” B u t he w ill speak and
he is going to ad lib , as we say in
the trade. Even i f we hadn’ t had
our ears conditioned fo r 12 long
years by the golden voice thal
breathed over the firesides, the un
o ra to ric a l o ra to ry of H a rry T ru m a n
when he reads a speech, be i t evei
so hum ble, never w ould be m is
taken fo r the vox humana o r the
angels’ chorus.
;
B u t when H a rry T ru m a n gets up
and ta lks, he’s v e ry hum an, ve ry
sensible, and not a ltogether un
persuasive. So fro m now on, he’ s
going to speak extem poraneously,
no m a tte r how m uch pre p a ratio n
it takes.
|
He showed w hat he could do w ith
out notes or m a n u s c rip t (and w ith
out le a rn in g by rote) when he
addressed the newspaper p u blish
ers and the G rid iro n club in A p ril,
and again in M a y when he talked
o ff-th e -cu ff to the n a tio n a l confer
ence on fa m ily life in W ashington.
And since such speeches a ren’ t
w ritte n , nobody can say he w rote
them fo r him .
Invasion of Insects
By Air Poses Threat
Pests, Plant Diseases
Survive Shorter Trips
D anger o f invasion by undesirable
a lie n insects grow s apace in every
to W yom ing and can te ll you that [ N K ricu ltu ra l co u n try o f the w o rld as
a ir tra n sp o rt, w hich is accounting
tile dangers are ve ry re a l," report
ed Goss. "T h e re has been too m uch fo r an e ver increasing share o f tr a f
fic , cuts the tim e o f tra v e l between
plow ing up o f the grasslands we de
( veloped as insurance against future them fro m days to hours, and a>
airplanes take o ver a la rg e r share
( dust sto rm s.”
o f tra ffic .
The grange leader, who Is the
Pests th a t m ig h t not w ith sta n d •
ablest fa rm spokesman in Wash
long sea voyage m a y s u rvive the
ington, explained th a t the high
prices and demand fo r w heat fo r
dom estic and fo re ig n aid were
ch ie fly responsible, since fa rm e rs
d id n 't w ant to m a in ta in pasture
lands when they could tu rn a
quick p ro fit on g ra in crops,
"M o s t people take it fo r granted
th a t we have licked the dust bow)
hazards w h ich caused such tragedy
in the West some years back,”
added Goss.
"H o w e ve r, dust can
blow again, and w ill blow in m y [
opinion w ith in the next few years
unless those grasslands are re
Even toys fro m M exico have
s to re d ."
been known to be c a rrie rs of In
*
•
•
sects, costing large a g ric u ltu ra l
Oil Lobbyists at W ork
losses.
NO. 1 IN D U S T R Y IN T H E CAP
IT A L has become lobbying. Despite shorter a ir rid e In good shape.
the lobbying act, the hotels, the R eaching new lands w here co n d i
co c k ta il lounges, the c o rrid o rs ol tions fa v o r th e ir developm ent they
congress now sw arm w ith m ore ol soon m a y b u ild up a strong colony
these oleaginous back-slappcrs than th a t could become as costly as the
d u rin g the w a r. Standing out above Hessian fly , the E uropean corn
the rest is the o il lo b b y—kin g p in nt borer, the Japanese beetle, tha cod
lin g m oth o r the cotton b oll w e e v il
them a ll.
The o il lobby has ju s t scored one
g reat v ic to ry —Palestine. Now i t ’»
concentrating on perhaps the ric h
est of a ll p rizes—tidelands o il.
Tidelands o il, the g re a t con
tin e n ta l shelf extending under the
w a te r o ff the P a c ific and G u lf
coasts, is estim ated by some as
m ore valuable than A ra b ia and
the o il fie ld s of the U nited States
com bined. Around 100 b illio n b a r
rels lie buried in these under
w a te r o il fie ld s, as ag a inst only
20 b illio n b a rre ls re m a in in g in
the d ry -la n d o il fie ld s of the
U nited States.
"T h e p etroleum resources of the
continental shelf are ours to exploit
w henever to e xp lo it them becomes
w o rth w h ile ," said S tandard O il in a
statem ent to stockholders.
And
since the suprem e co u rt now takes
a c o n tra ry vie w th a t the continental
shelf belongs to the fe d e ra l govern
m ent, not the states, the o il lobby is
focusing a ll its pow er on a b ill in
troduced by Senator M oore o f O kla
homa, h im s e lf an o ilm a n , which
would reverse the suprem e court.
H a vin g reversed the U nited N a
tions on Palestine, the o il lobby
ists quite openly boast th a t they
can put a la w through congress I
re ve rsin g the highest trib u n a l ol j
the land.
The d e p a rtm e n t of a g ric u ltu re ia
charged w ith th is co u n try's defenses
against the e n try o f dangerous fo r
eign insects and p la n t diseases.
Even toys have been found to be
ca rrie rs.
F a rm e rs m ust be sure th a t a ll
m a il and express fro m fo re ig n coun
trie s have been inspected and passed
free o f any insects o r diseases be
fore being p e rm itte d on th e ir land.
Jura Stallions Prove
Good Farm Workers
W hile the Swiss Jura horse, long
recognized as the n a tio n a l breed in
th a t country, has not been ge n e ra lly
recognized in A m e rica , interest has
Send 25c fo r F U L L SIZE P icn ic
T a b le P a tte rn No. 22 to E aal-Blld
P a tte rn C om pany, D e p a rtm e nt
P le a sa n tville , N. Y.
W.,
Constipated? So
Was This Woman
1*1 would go from one Sunday to tha
next, then take a h a rs h p u rg a tiv e .
That'a over now that I eat KELLOGQ’l
ALL-HKAN daily."— Mrs. Katherine
Turner, Indianapolis, I rut.
I l y o u r d ie t
lacks b u lk for nor
mal elimination,
eat an ounce of
KELLOGG *8 ALL
BRAN every day
in r im llk — an d
drink p len ty of
water. If not sat
is fie d a fte r 10
days, send e m p t y __
cartcn to Kellogg Co., Battle Creels
Mich., and get oouhle your money
back . Get kkllocu ’ h all - uuan nowl
38%
BRIGHTER
TEETH
M edal play and m atch play arc
tw o e n tire ly d iffe re n t fo rm s of golf
E sp e cia lly on the psychological
side, which is a big p a rt o f golf.
s till th in k m edal play is the
rougher test, where every stroke
is im p o rta n t. T his isn’t true of
m atch play where you can take a
nine and only one hole.
There is no chance to give your
concentration a vacation in m edal
play. There is in m atch play. In
m edal play you are fig h tin g both
the fie ld and the course. In m atch
play, your opponent is one man.
in
7 days!
I
tke, the Democrat
Sexing of Baby Chicks
Proves Difficult Task
a
■ Fertilizer Won t Solve
Entire
Problem
j
• * »
Capital Chaff
B u ild in g the ta b le o r o ther pieces
o f law n fu rn itu re provides an eco
nom ical solution to y o u r household
equipm ent problem s. In m a n y rases
tw o a rticle s can be m ode fo r less
than one costs ready made. Besides
saving money, w oodw orking pro
vides hours o f com plete re la xa tio n .
Once yo u 've experienced the deep
down sa tisfa ctio n of seeing lu m b e r
tm ii Into a ir e f u l p lrn ii- table or
law n ch a ir, you w ill undoubtedly be
come one of n huge a rm y o f "B u ild
I t y o u rs e lf" enthusiasts.
Medal Play Is Tops
T hree Ju ra fillie s ty p ify the
T H E R E P U B L IC A N S W E R E
Swiss n a tional breed.
R IG H T in c a llin g the tu rn on Gen
e ra l E isenhow er's use o f a rm y p e r been centered in the breed in recent
sonnel a fte r his re tire m e n t from years because o f the fa c t th a t the
‘W ill to Peace'
the a rm y. H ow ever, i t ’s in te re st sta llio n s are suitable fo r a ll types
Find» Expression
in g th a t the m an who called the o f fa rm w o rk.
N ext m onth a "n a tio n a l confer tu rn was Congressman A. L . M ille r
The breed has shown p roper te m
ence fo r the prevention of W orld I o f Nebraska, spearhead of the peram ent, stre n g th and resistance
W ar I I I " w’i ll be held on the cam M a c A rth u r - fo r - P resident m o v e- to disease, and w h ile lig h t in w eight
pus o f G rin n e ll college in Iowa.
m ent. These boys d o n 't lik e Eisen has proven an e xce lle n t d ra ft horse.
The purpose is to present a hower.
I t is e xce p tio n a lly strong, tam e and
“ d e fin ite , concrete w o rk in g plan to
Also i t ’s s ig n ific a n t th a t other docile.
prevent a th ird w orld w a r; methods h ig h -ra n kin g generals and a d m ira ls -
------------------------
w hich can be presented to the two
S
“
V
" S
3
n a tio n a l p o litic a l conventions at X
P h ila d e lp h ia ."
F o r instance. A d m ira l E rn ie K ing,
The ro s te r of speakers w ill in now re tire d , used not only a navy
C hick sexing is d iffic u lt to learn,
clude representatives o f m a n y of o ffice but n a vy c le ric a l personnel
and In o rd e r to become p ro fic ie n t It
the organizations now w o rkin g fo r to w rite a book.
: is necessary to receive e xp e rt in
"O keb, C h ie f," says the lite r
a single sovereign, w o rld o rganiza
And i f a ll the money spent on
s tru c tio n and to have considerable
a ry secretary, and on his way
tion.
Gen. John J. P ershing d u rin g his
p ra c tic e and experience w ith thou
back to his office, he begins
M eanw hile W inston C h u rc h ill is
re tire m e n t were added up it
sands o f chickens.
classifying, according to de p a rt
h a m m e rin g steadily a t his p u r
would to ta l o ver a m illio n . Persh
R e lia b le a u th o ritie s have stated
ments, the people he thinks m ay
pose of b u ild in g a U nited States of
ing, although re tire d fo r years,
th a t a student m u st sex at least 250,-
have the facts o r the people who
E urope, A lthough the A ttlee gov
continues to be the second hig h
000 cockerels before the m ale g enital
w ill know who knows somebody
ern m e n t has not approved the
est paid
g overnm ent o ffic ia l, j em inence can be a c cu ra te ly recog
who has the facts. He e ith e r
idea, the p rim e m in is te r h im se lf
d ra w in g a s a la ry of around $26,-
nized. The e xp e rt sexer appears to
phones o r dictates a b rie f mem o
has spoken words of encourage
000 a year. O nly the P resident ol , be endowed w ith a n a tu ra l a b ility
to these people, requesting not
m ent re g a rd in g the fo rm a tio n of
the U nited States tops h im . In
to recognize and cla ssify the various
m ore than one page fro m each
a real fe d e ra liza tio n of the west
ad d ition , P ershing has a colonel
types
o f g e n ita l em inence to be
on the subjects indicated.
ern union.
as an aide, plus other a rm y per
found in chickens, but accuracy is
H ighly-pleased young
and old
A ttle e even w ent so fa r as to say
sonnel, and fo r years has lived at
obtained o nly b y re g u la r p ra ctice ,
men, on re ce ip t of the m em o o r th a t B rita in was w illin g to sa c rific e
W alter Reed hospital.
In ve stig a tio n o f e rro rs and a lik in g
phone call, begin le a fin g through her so vereignty in p a rt to b rin g It
E isenhow er has a s ta ff o f three ' fo r the Job.
th e ir research lib ra rie s and d ic about, although he q u a lifie d the assigned to h im a t C olum bia—M a j.
ta tin g to th e ir secretaries. In two prom ise by saying the tim e was R obert L . Schulz, an a id e ; WAC I
« m
days, a num ber of la rg e packages not yet rip e fo r such a step.
W a rra n t O ffic e r M a rg a re t Hayes
are delivered to the W hite House
B u t C h u rc h ill wants to s trike
He received considerable
via special messengers. The lit e r now.
a ry secretary curses and sets to support fro m the u n o ffic ia l g ath a ry of $15,751 a year fo r life fro m
M a n y fa rm e rs are In clined to use
w ork b o ilin g down a 24-page thesis e ring in the Hague—a fo ru m , they the a rm y in a d d ition to his sa la ry , fe r tiliz e r as a cru tch by a tte m p tin g
on the progression o f tau-m ute called it — composed o f representa as president of C olum bia univer-
m a ke I t substitute fo r good soil
m anagem ent.
fro m the S anskrit et elia to a sen tives of the M a rs h a ll plan coun sity.
V ita l as fe rtiliz e r is, it cannot do
tence and a h a lf w hich he has his tries, plus exiled leaders.
Note—P ershing, although appoint
C h u rc h ill’ s proposals
and the ed by Woodrow Wilson, is the son- the e n tire Job. I t m u st be backed
stenographer type in to the rough
d ra ft o f the speech w hich the G rin n e ll conference are both p a rt of in-law of the R epublican ch a irm a n up by o th e r p ra ctice s th a t add o r
President has d ictated and sent the trem endous " w ill to peace” th a t of the senate appro p ria tio n s com ganic m a tte r, b u ild soil s tru ctu re and
c u rre n tly is fin d in g expression.
to h im fo r the purpose.
m ittee, the la te F ra n cis E. W arren boost crop yields.
F ra n k lin Roosevelt became an
Perhaps e ventually we w ill learn of W yom ing. The R epublicans now
gered because colum nists persisted
th a t g reat lesson o f h is to ry —to consider E isenhow er a D em ocrat.
in " re v e a lin g " w hich co n fid e n tia l y ie ld the sovereignty th a t causes
adviser w rote the la s t speech he w ars to the kin d o f sovereignty
delivered, w hatever it was, th a t he th a t allow s not only the o ther fre e
One s e rio u s ' cause of bee poison
H E N R Y W A LLA C E is looking
once showed us the a ctu a l d ra ft of doms to the in d iv id u a l but which,
ing has been th a t bees have taken
a speech he had d icta te d and w r it also w ill give h im freedom fro m around fo r a new C harlie Michelson dusts co n ta in in g arsenic and have
ten, and re -w ritte n as was his the F E A R of w a r. Ju st as the to supply h im w ith cam paign m ate stored th is poison in co m bination
custom. In fa ct, the la st-m in u te fe d e ra liza tio n of the separate col ria l. (Some people th in k th a t’ s a w ith pollen In the hives. A rsenic
re visin g of ‘ R oosevelt’ s in te rlin e d onies made the citizen of the state waste of tim e ; H a rry T ru m a n 's do re m a in s p e rm a n e n tly poisonous but
m anuscripts often w ent on w hile of New Y o rk free fro m the fe a r of ing a b e tte r jo b than C harlie M ich e l new er In se cticid a l dusts and sprays,
newshounds growled in the outer w a r w ith the state of Pennsylvania son) . . , D e m o cra tic leaders w ill such at D D T , D N and D .D .D ., are
office and m im eographers stood by —a situation possible because both be amazed when they fin d out that less dangerous to b e n e ficia l insects
to handle the fin a lly-o ka ye d sheets recognize a h ig h e r so ve re ig n ty— Oregon D em ocrats are going to sup as the to x ic effects w ill b re a k down
p o rt H enry K a is e r against T rum an
in "ta k e s ."
i the U nited States governm ent.
g ra d u a lly.
W hat re a lly happens is this:
The P resident calls in one of his
m ore lite ra ry secretaries—a ll of
them are lite ra te , but not a ll lit e r
a ry (some—those whose duties are
conversing w ith p o liticia n s, don’ t
have to be too lite ra te ). The P resi
dent says to the lite ra ry one:
" B ill, in this speech I have to
w rite fo r the In te r-P la n e ta ry con
ference, I ’m going to m ention the
super-gadget, and I w ant to touch
on the cu rre n t economic and social
situation in B e lu ria , also there are
some erosion sta tistics I need, and
some data on the problem s w hich
arose as a result of the W hiskey
R ebellion.”
A S FAR as anyone ra n see now.
* * the m onth of June w ill be a big
one fo r boxing w ith Louis defending
his title against W aleoti
Louis says this w ill be his Inst
fight.
What w ill happen If Louis wins,
and then retires? The heavyw eight
d ivisio n w ill be the way Gene Tun-
n a y le ft It yeurs ago.
Then the
a fte rm a th Included S c h m c l l n g ,
Sharkey, C am era, Baer and H ri^l-
dock.
This was not w hat you’d call
the c re a te *! collection of fig h tin g
flesh ever throw n tocether. On a
general average It was p re tty
so rry stu ff. There w asn’t a top
fig h te r In the lot. Yes, Sehmeling
knocked out Louis, but Itaer
knocked out Sehm eling. And so
did Louis In the re tu rn m atch.
Tunney le ft u so rry bunch of
fig h te rs in his w ake—u n til Louis
came along. Louis made up fo r ths
m e d io c rity of the others th a t pre
ceded him . It was Dempsey, T u n
ney, chaos and Louis.
W hat w ill It be a fte r Louis? Sup
pose Louis wins. T1
w ill leave
chaos again. I f W alcott wins, Jer- 1
sey Joe w ill be the new cham pion. I
No one can rate Jersey Joe a j
g reat chum pion. He has been ju st
another heavyw eight too long; Just
another average fig h te r who hap- j
pened to re m a in in shape when
Louis d id n ’ t.
You can’ t sell a num ber of fight- J
ers, even champions, the Idea that
condition is us Im p o rta n t as th e ir
own n ative s k ill.
Yet condition
happens to be m ore im p o rta n t than
a n ything Louis has—his punch, his
boxing s k ill, his gameness.
Louis as the heavyw eight cham
pion defending his title against J
W alcott was a joke, a tra ve sty on |
tra in in g , on condition. He was a
p u ffy fa t man who couldn’ t move j
out of his tracks.
He returned fro m his e xh ib itio n
to u r in England w eighing at least ;
240 pounds, and then w orked des
p e rately to lose 25 pounds In a few j
weeks.
Louis took on W alcott as a joke, i
I f Louis can w in in the condition I
he has to o ffe r fo r late June, W al
co tt m ust be a Joke. Louis w ill
have to create » m ira c le to be even :
close to the fo rm that made him ,
and kept h im , cham pion so m any
years.
. . .
New Insecticides Are
Non-Poisonous to Bees
The Live llall
I t has rem ained fo r a young
rookie p itch e r to ca ll a check on
y o u r re p o rte r and also enter w hat
is perhaps a well-deserved rebuke.
This rookie p itch e r is s m a rt—and
w hat is m ore im p o rta n t—he also
can pitch. Up to $100,000 was o f
fered fo r his service in the box.
"Y o u w r ite ," he said, " th a t
Johnson, Walsh, A lexander, M a t
ty and others pitched around 406
Innings or m ore.
T h a t’s rig h t.
You also w rite th a t no modern
p itch e r can w ork 300 Innings.
M ost of the good ones are 250-
Inning pitchers. T h a t’s rig h t too.
B u t don’t fo rg e t those old pitchers
were th ro w in g a half-dead b a ll—
a s p it b a ll—a fuzzed-up b a ll—a
logy ball th a t Samson couldn’t h it
out of a bandbox ball p a rk ."
"N o w , check back w ith me.
Hom e-run B aker h it 12 home runs
in one ye a r and p ro m p tly was
labelled ‘H om e-Run’ Baker.
Here
is the kin g of a ll home-run h itters.
He smashes 12 four-baggers in one
season and he is the king. Why to-
day, some of these bums I ’rfl throw -
ing a t m ig h t pile up 12 home runs
in tw o weeks.”
" I ’ m te llin g y o u ," he continued,
" th a t today we are th row ing ex
plosive bombs to the plate. E ve ry
b all we th ro w is loaded w ith dyna
m ite . You can take a broom and
h it one fo r three bases,
"Y o u rem em ber those old Y an
kees headed by R uth and Gehrig?
They set a home-run record that
never would be broken, and they
were sw inging a t a ra b b it ball.
L a s t ye a r the G iants came along
and made those R uth-G ehrig Y a n
kees look like bunters. They were
h a m m e rin g a t a ru b b e r ball, even
fa s te r than the one Babe and Geh
rig swung at.
“ To show the difference, if R uth
were p la yin g in the day of ’Home-
R un’ B aker, his top would have
been 20 home runs fo r the en tire
season."
Which rem inds me that I ran into
L a rr y L a jo ie a few years a fte r he
had q u it and the liv e ly b all had
come into use. L a rr y played in an
o ld -tim e r's game.
“ I'm g la d ," he said, "w e d id n ’t
have th is modern b a ll when
p la ye d ."
I
40
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D oans P ills
4