The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, April 10, 1930, Page 6, Image 6

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    P iig e $
•*
Albie Booth Thrives on Baseball
> A R D work seems to agree w ith Albie Booth o f Yale. T he mighty
little w a rrio r o f the gridiron has served bis days In football
and baaketball, but his activ ity w ill not end until the scholas­
tic year Is finished. H e started baseball, bis third sport, and
by so doing let him self in for a continuous athletic program which
started back on September 13 and w ill run until June 21. T h a t means
more than eight months o f continuous competition.
In spite of the long stretch over which he has been competing he Is
stronger, healthier and heavier. Albie has learned a lot o f things In
his first year as a varsity athlete and as a sophomore, and not the least
Im portant one of these Is how to eat. Albie Is working his way through
college p artia lly by w aiting on tables a t the "Y " dub. T here Is plenty
o f hash fo r the one who slings the hash, and a net gain of between
fifteen and twenty pounds since the football days Is the re s u lt
An Albie Booth w ith a tonnage of merely 137 or 144 pounds, as his
weight was listed In football, was bad enough to the opposition last
f a ll; what w ill opponents do when
he carries 100 pounds or so? T he
good little man may become a good
big man In no time. Such weight
would put Booth out o f the midget
class. T he more Im portant ques­
tion fo r Yale Is w hether Booth a t
160 pounds w ill be the whirling,
dodging, elusive star he was when
he was In the 130s. H is extra
weight did not slow him up the
least b it In basketball. Yale ap­
pears to have no ground fo r wor­
rying about Its heavier Albie Booth.
One peculiar p art of the base­
ball situation this year Is that It
Is the first tim e a t Yale th a t Booth
has not bad to go out and battle
through the first p art o f the sea­
son before having his superiority
recognized. M ai Stevens s'as often
quoted as saying th a t Booth was
not Yale’s best back and every one
knows how Booth was “Just a
back” during the first couple of
Albie Booth.
.
games— until he showed he could
handle the pigskin In a manner th a t delighted the spectators.
In basketball the same thing happened. Booth had trouble In mak­
ing a place on the team. T he many available veterans attracted the
eye of Elm er Ripley, the coach, and Booth was a substitute— but only
fo r a while. When he finally came Into his own, Ripley paid him the
high compliment o f calling him the greatest competitor he ever saw
play basketball.
In baseball it Is d iffe re n t Joe Wood has seen Booth play ball. H e
watched him carefully during his freshman year and Freshman Coach
Clyde Engle told him w hat he didn't find out fo r himself. Booth's base­
ball reputation means something to Wood, and Booth therefore finds
himself already assigned to a regular birth at shortstop.
Sport Mates
Phillies Look Good
People who watch a marathon are
Just as foolish as those who partici­
pate In one.
• • •
In the last 23 years, 400 cities have
been represented In the various minor
leagues In baseball.
• • •
In the last five years the Brooklyn
club has spent $400,000 for players,
according to an official.
• • •
A t the age o f fifty-five Stanislaos
Zbyssko Is seriously considering re­
tiring from the wrestling game.
• • •
T he Beaumont club o f the Texas
league held a rookie school this spring
w ith a total o f 146 boys enrolled.
e e •
Babe R uth accepted only three of
a shipment of six new bats that
reached the Yankee trainin g camp.
e • e
F a t Spears has hefty football mate­
rials at Oregon. I t Is said he can put
a 200-pound team on the field next
fa ll.
e e •
T h e best tim e to pick the w inner
In a state basketball tournament Is
80 minutes a fte r the final game has
been played.
e a e
T h e Yankees probably w ill carry five
southpaw pitchers this year. In addi­
tion to Pennock, Helmach, Zachary
and Wells Is Vernon Gomes, the re­
cruit.
e • e
Tennis by artificial light Is becom­
ing popular In Australia, where It
Is estimated there are more than 2,000
night courts where play la enjoyed
under electric lig h t
e • e
W a lte r F. Carter, new director of
the Brooklyn club, struck out but once
during his entire career at Yale, where
be Is considered the greatest baseball
player who ever attended Ell.
Rely on Frankhouse
c,
B e tte r h itting and better pitching
w ill put the Phils In the first division
o f the National league race this year,
In the opinion of Manager B u rt Shot-
ton.
H e picks Alexander to win a game
a week and sees better hurling from
the younger pitchers who didn't have
the experience last year.
Hurst, he believes, w ill h it up with
O’Doul and Klein, and Stgman, a 1929
recruit, may be one o f the leaders.
T he Phils* Infield Is settled w ith
Hurst a t first, Thompson at second,
Thevenow a t short, and W hitney at
third.
Freight Conductor Made
Coach at Naval Academy
Granted a six-months' leave o f ab­
sence, Freight Conductor E. F. “K id"
Mohler of the Los Angeles division o f
the Southern Pacific railroad, has
gone east again to coach the Unite«]
States N aval academy baseball team
fo r the second year. Before becoming
a railroad man, Mohler was a star
In the Pacific Coast league, perform­
ing w ith the Onkland champions of
1902 and la te r as playing manager of
the San Francisco Seals. Old fans
remember him as the pivot man of
Oakland's famed double-play combina­
tion o f Franks-to-Mohler-to-Strelb.
Mohler's seniority w ith the South­
ern Pacific dates from 1920, but prior
to that he worked for the railroad
Interm ittently from the tim e of his re­
tirem ent from baseball In 1912.
His
friends any he railroads like he used
to play baseball— w ith everytldng he
Red Sox Get Promising
Recruit in Odd Manner
Frankhouse. whose effective
pitching was a big help to the 8 t
U s ila Cardinals last year. Is being re­
lied on to m aterially help the
WRITES NAME ON
ROLL OF HONOR
Tom Oliver, who has a good chance
to hold down the regular center field
berth with the Red Sox. came to the
club In a roundabout way. I-ast year
he was a sensation w ith L ittle llock
o f the Southern league and big league
scouts came bidding for him. Includ­
ing President Bob Quinn's representa­
tive.
L ittle Rock raised the price and all
the scouts moved out, leaving him elig­
ible for the d raft, and Connie Mack
took him. In January Mack decided
he didn't need another outfielder and
asked waivers on him so he could be
sent back to L ittle Rock.
At this point Qulnr, stepped tn again
and got him a t the waiver price, de­
cidedly
ommuxv ikj
Buildxn?
Orval Martin Wins Much
Glory for Purdue.
_
Not alone through its championship
football and basketball teams has
Purdue won glory In the Big Ten d ur­
ing the record breaking season, 1929
*30. The Boilermakers boast another
champion In Orval M artin , long dis
tance runner extraordinary, whose
latest feat was the winning o f mile
and h alf mile events In the same night
a t the conference Indoor meet at the
University o f Minnesota.
The records show that In five meets
In which he has competed since be be­
gan his career as an Intercollegiate
athlete a t Purdue, M artin has won
seven Big Ten championships. This
was made possible by doubling up in
the mile and h a lf m ile runs as he did
a t Minneapolis. A t the 1929 outdoor
meet at Northwestern last June he
won both these events. H e also won
the Individual Big T en cross country
championship In the annual meet at
Ohio State last fall.
The Ideal height o f a heavyweight
fighter la six feet o r an Inch o r so
taller.
There have been shorter ones and
ta lle r ones but they w ere exceptions.
There Is also an Ideal height to r
pitchers. Nearly all o f the great stars
you may mention were six footers.
In fact six feet Is more Im portant
to a baseball pitcher than a heavy­
weight fighter.
A pitcher who can throw them
downgrade w ill have more speed than
one who must make them go straight
ahead.
For that reason scouts are always
looking at the big boys and passing
up those who are under five feet
eleven.
Cornell and Princeton have met
the football field 20 times since the
riv a lry began In 1891, w ith the form er
being victorious on only four occa­
sions.
Four pitchers managed to w in 20
or more games In the m ajor leagues
last season. They w ere Pat Malone
of the Cubs, Bob Grove and George
Earnshaw o f the Athletics and Wes­
ley F arre ll o f the Indians.
Most of the players who will captain
m ajor football teams this year are
centers.
The best three centers of
the East In 1929— Tlcknor of H a r­
vard, Slano of Fordham and Andres
o f Dartm outh, are among the football
captains o f 1930.
Tlcknor of H arvard was almost a
unanimous choice fo r All-American
center last year but give Andres the
same opportunities and he probably
would excel Tlcknor.
T he Harvard
system calls for a roving center, and
a roving center has a vast advantage
over the stationary type of pivot man
such as Andres.
Southpaw Jack Doyle of Albany
demanded promotion so he was sold
to Jersey City.
s e e
this
Thursday, April 10, 1930
THE HERMISTON HERALD
“Gabby” Street, new manager of
the St. Louis Cardinals, suggests an
additional column fo r the baseball box
scores as food fo r thought In the hot
stove league.
“The box scores om it a very Im­
portant column," says S tre e t “and
that Is the E J column— errors of
Judgment.
“Manual errors we expect— every­
body make« them. B ut the real er­
rors are those of judgment, like throw ­
ing to the wrong base, stealing when
the next bag Is occupied, being picked
off a base through carelessness, trying
to steal home w ith the bases filled,
nobody out and your best h itter at
bat.
“This type o f errors ought to be
charged up like manual errors."
Lester Patrick, the Connie Mack of
the Ice hockey game, believes the base­
ball magnates are too set In their
ways.
H e suggests a few new a r ­
rangements in the national game to
make It more profitable.
The best thought he brings out Is
that of lim iting a star like Babe Ruth
to American league territo ry when the
fans of Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and
Brooklyn would like to she him more
often.
O r Hornsby o f the National. How
many times has he been seen In Wash­
ington and Detroit?
Baseball la a staid game. Tn some
ways we like It for th a t reason.
H o m e O w n e r s h ip M a k e s
fo r S u p e r io r C itiz e n sh ip
TOO E X P E N S IV E A P A STIM E
"W hy are you so opposed to youi
daughter working?” asked the bach
elor friend.
“I can't afford to let her work." re­
plied the fam ily man.
“W h at the heck do you mean, can't
afford It?" demanded the B. F.
“ Say, she couldn't even earn the silk
stockings, let alone all the party
dresses she would need to wear to
work,” growled the F. M.
IT SEEMS LARGER
“You think a square yard is three
square feet, eh?”
“O f course It Is.”
“D id you ever try raking all the
rubbish out of one?”
T he lure to own a home Is as Inher­
ent In the mind of the average man
and woman as the desire to live.
A ll down through the ages man has
•ought to create fo r himself and his
fam ily a place of protection against
the elements and danger— w ith the
result that the Idea of home has be­
come so Indelibly fixed In the mind
of the average individual It becomes
a m atter o f pride to own a home.
I t Is this ever-mounting pride of
home that has resulted In the great
changes that take place In our larger
American cities. W e see neighborhoods
once looked upon as beautiful residen­
tial centers. T he style o f the homes
was once the latest. B ut In a few
years we see these sections abandoned
by the original owners, wbo have
moved to other sections, newer and
more modern. T h e older sections are
then filled w ith a citizenship which
has moved from some other sections
perhapa less desirable, and so on. T he
endless desire to own a home which
can be looked upon w ith pride by Its
owner goes on and on.
Statistics prove home ownership
usually leads to more happiness and
better citizenship. F o r it la pointed
out that usually when a man owns
a home he Is p retty dependable and
reliable.
T r e e s H a v e L a r g e P la c e
in T o w n ’s A p p e a r a n c e
Colonel Sherrill Is a lover of trees.
H e believes th a t a tree-adorned city
w ill make for the health and happiness
o f Its citizens. H e Is asking council
to repose authority In him to have
H ero’s A nother
planted and cared for these friends of
In yo ur effusions I can see
T h e clever m inor poet:
life, wherever possible, along the city
B u t tn the m ajors you w ill
streets. No g ift of prevision Iq essen
Some day before you know It.
tla l to the foretelling o f w hat thia
would mean to the city from the pres­
Down to Snail’s P ace
“W h a fs the matter, officer?" de ent year through generations to come.
T o this latitude some o f the noblest
manded the youth as the cop drew
and most beautiful trees In the world
alongside.
"Oh, nothing mach,” snapped the are Indigenous. Those cities far-her-
cop, “except I ’m arresting yon tot aided throughout the world as dries
of charm and beauty are municipali­
speeding, you were going 38.”
“ F o r crying out loud!” exclaimed ties which have resolved tree planting,
the youth, “do you call going a mere care, culture and preservation Into
terms o f scientific practicability.
88 speeding?”
Cincinnati's environs are among the
most beautiful In the world, w ith their
A Modal for Thia M ani
Judge— So you broke In the store prospects o f artistic landscapes, their
Just to get a dime cigar. Then what hills and wooded views, the silver
gleams o f reaching rivers. But a r
were you doing at the safe?
Prisoner— Your honor, I was put­ boreal and other natural lovellnese
need not be restricted to our hills and
ting In the dime.
contiguous urban terrain. W hy should
a city’s -streets remain drab, dusty
Sim ple
desolate o f fresh harmony of whis­
T ra in e r— I have only one friend. pering foliage, the grace and sym­
Yes, only one friend on earth, and
m etry o f swaying branches?— Cincin­
that's my dog.
n ati Enquirer.
Stranger— Why don’t you get anoth­
er dog?
A ir-M arking Towne
Too Mack C om petition
Lady— How come you are a tramp?
Tram p— Crowded out of my profes­
sion. I ’m a sky w rite r from Pittsburgh
— Allston Recorder.
Happy Individual
" I am not thin-skinned. I am the
first to laugh at my own foolishness."
“W hat a merry life you must lead."
—Gutierrez (M adrid).
LOTS OF FUN
T he problem of getting towns air-
marked Is quite ponderous and Impor­
t a n t I t is one that the aeronautics
branch of the Departm ent of Com­
merce has been wrestling with since It
undertook the coordination of commer­
cial aviation enterprise. The energy
devoted to the solution has been far
from wasted. I t has resulted In the
alr-m arklng of several hundred com­
munities.
Cross-country flying, however, has
attained such a volume that It be­
comes obvious th a t the problem w ill
not be fu lly solved until every ham­
let, village, town and city points its
name skyward. Consequently, rein­
forcing the efforts of the Commerce
department branch, other agencies
have thrown th e ir concerted energies
Into the solution o f the problem.
P rop er B uilding Im portant
Bug— Gee, this Is the best ride I've
ever been on and It don’t cost any
thing either.
F air E xchange
When a man proposes
But straightw ay on his shoulder
Her head Is dropped Instead
Ha's apt to loss hla head.
T h é architectural design and strne-
tara i efficiency o f office and factory
buildings as well as homes have an
Im portant bearing on the health of
America, notes the American Archi­
tect, commenting editorially on the re­
cent estimate that the nation's annual
loss from Illness approximates $15,-
000.000,000,
"There are few er greater causes of
sickness than lack o f ventilation, poor
lighting, drafts and other such pre­
ventable toctord," says the magazine,
pointing ont that false economy on
the p art o f owners who Insist on cheap
construction often results In loss of
workers’ tim e o f fa r greater value
than the amount saved by reducing
construction expense.
Bill Roper, Princeton's coach, felt so
Changed W ith Age
bad thnt his team was beaten by Chi­
Fussy lady (w ho has been a tong
cago last fall that he said he was go­
ing to qnlt coaching. T h e 1930 cam­ time tn selecting ber purchase) —
It
paign, be now says, w ill be hts last But I don’t think this la lamb.
N o N eed t e F ear U pkeep
looka to me like mutton.
ns T ig er mentor.
"Upkeep” Is a word often pronounced
Exasperated butcher— I t was lamb
Roper attributes the defeats o f his
with the peculiar solemnity that once
am Inst fa ll to the fac t thnt the when I first showed It to you, madam
belonged to ’'mortgage,” Implying a
preceding spring ha held no spring
mysterious and fearful something. T o
practice, letting his men go In tor
B elieved la H ereafter
track, baseball and the other spring
Bob— Do you believe In the here the Imprudent It bangs over the homes
like an evil spirit. But the fore3'ghted
sports. This year, however. In prepa­ after?
know the truth. They know that It
ration to r his final season he la put­
Babe— W hy—a— yes.
Isn’t upkeep that costs, but failu re te
ting on three weeks of w ork In funda­
Bob— Well, how about a little neck
upkeep.
mentals.
"W e're going to have a Ing? That's what I'm here after.
great team," he s a y * "a young team
Good P i n F irs t Need
and perhaps a starless team."
T he secret o f the successful house,
Annabelle— Mabel hasn't a thought if there is a secret Is in its plan.
W illiam T . Tilden believes he has un­ for anything nowadays except her new
First the plan and then a house. I f a
earthed the future tennis champion of automobile. She's perfectly la love
• Is w ell planned an impressive
the world tn the dlmtnnttve person of w ith IL
exterior In a-.y per" 1 or style desired
twelve-year-old Etienne Van Der Berg,
George (sa d ly )— Another case of can costly be adapted to IL
the son ot the Dutch professional at man being displaced by machinery.
the Hotel California dub.
W hat, C areless?
Tilden was so Impressed w ith the
W h a t II
T he per capita cost of fires In tbs
boy's play that ha has been devoting
“Don't see any more stuff like Spar
nlted States la at least three times
hours dally training him and w ill enter
faces to the G ladiator*.*
hat o f any other country. The aver­
handicap events la the moat Important
•E h r
age annual loos during the last five
tournaments w ith him.
“ What's become of all those fellers years has been well over $300,000,000.
Young Etienne has pldyed Masts
that wrote for the old T h ird Reader T
—Country H o m *
since ha waa ala years old.
N r t ' k k l ' a f A rc h ite c t
8t. M ary ’s church. Maggerston,
London, England, designed by Nash
la 1827, possesses aa abnorm ally lofty,
tower, concerning which tw o amusing
stories are c u rre n t One la to the ef­
fect that the contractor Inquired of
the architect how high he should
carry It, and waa told to go on build­
ing until be waa ordered to atop,
Then Nash w ent off, forgot all about
the m atter, and on returning hoi
some months later, was flabbergasted
to find th a t the tow er had grown to
Its present unnatural h eig h t
The
other Is th a t a local builder, having
n quantity o f spare stone on hand,
told the building committee th a t he
could afford to build them a very
high tow er a t a very low price. T h e
committee dosed w ith the offer; and
the result waa— w hat w s now s e *
“ B ro u g h t Back
M y S tre n g th ’
" M y Hole daughter was bom on a
hoaaestead In northern Alberta. I had
four other children and I worked so
Arc You
Successful?
haid that I suffered a nervous break­
d ow n T h e doctor's tonic did n ot
seem to help me and when a friend
From the day that a
man »tart» out to
young mi
seek his first position to
the end ot Hs
business life. Us
health and per­
sonal appearance
have a world to
do with his suc­
cess. I f you are
not
physically
up to the mark
digestion poor, and
a general sense of incapacity and weak­
ness, take D R . P IE R C E ’S G O L D E N
M E D IC A L D IS C O V E R Y . I t renews
the blood with the vital life-giving red
corpuscles and promotes robust health,
a clear skin, energy, pep. Get “G M D ”
from your druggist in either fluid or
tablets. Ingredients printed on label.
told ma about Lydia E, Plnkhsm’s
Vegetable Compound, J began to
take that instead. I kept o a until I felt I
well again. It brought back my I
strength. Today I can do anything, ]
thanks to the VcgetaMa Compound."
—Mrs. WiUuon Pannt, r-P J
^nd J
Sheet Seotsis, WcuUageo*
Lydia E. Piiikhaiii's
Vegetable Compound
Heila r; Pftiäijp.'.it . i - ’
J i . -.
B aan ty’s W orth It
Contrary to public opinion, moat
beautifying takaa a lo t o f w ork and
a lo t o f courage. Anyone who has
had a permanent wave w ill testify to
thia. And any woman who has re­
duced her weight conscientiously
w ill say “amen.”— W om an’s Home
Companion.
SUFI
FAMILY DOCTOR
LEARNED THIS ABOUT
CONSTIPATION
15-yeasa success ta treating Rectal and
C o k» troubles by the Dr. G J. Dean
NON-SURCICAl. method cm
Q 'C
e
E
S
W
W h ite Rocks, Barred Rocks,
Black Minorca», Black Giants, Whfta
Laghorns— all from carefully super­
vised flocks. Also W .L . Pullets, year­
ling hens and day old turkey* Order
now to insure delivery when wanted.
W rite /o r SJpeoiaf Diecounr.
100% Hve delivery guaranteed. 20
years’ reputation your safeguard.
(Dr. Caldwell loved people. H is
years of practice convinced hint
(MV TOM) QUEEN hatchery
many were ruining their health by
l « l l s f
careless selection of laxatives. He
determined to write a harmless pre­
scription which would get at the
cause of constipation, and correct i t
Today, the prescription he wrote
in 1885 is the world’s most popular
laxative 1 H e prescribed a mixture
of herbs and other pure ingredients
now known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Boschee’s
Pepsin, in thousand*of cases where Irritation
bad breath, coated tongue, gas,
headaches, biliousness and lack of
appetite or energy showed the
bowels of men, women and children
were sluggish. It proved successful
in even the most obstinate cases;
A t «n
old folks liked it for it never gripes;
druggists
children liked its pleasant taste.
All drugstores today have Dr.
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin in bottle* W. N. U., P O R T L A N D , NO. 15-1930.
C»«Ä
STOPS
Boschee’s
S y r u p
S laying Distance
T h e automobile baa taken people
eat Into the country from tw enty to
forty miles away from th e ir places
o f business. T h e airplane w ill en­
large the commuting zone to a t least
”0 miles.—Country Home.
D o n ’t O verdo I t
M r. Van Nagg— Jane, I think you
fib a little occasionally.
M r * V an Nagg— W ell, I th in k It la
a w ife's duty, John.
M r. Van Nagg—A wife's duty?
M r * Van Nagg— Y e * to speak w ell
o f h er husband occasionally.
W h en
B ab ies
CRY
Babies win cry, ^often for no
know w hafs wronfc b u tyon C
always give Caxtort* Thia se
I mmi ytmr little ooc comforted •
not, you
Dm?
‘ “ s i:
intended for the
of adult?! Most of 'those little
upsets are soon soothed away hy
a little of this
gentle-acting childrens
that children like.
It may be the stomach, or may
he the little bowel* Or in t h e ___
of older children, a sluggish, cqn-
stipated condition. Gaston* is still
ailment, sad
i
could by no posti­
bilrty do the youngest ch i« the
__
«lightest harm. So it’s the first
thing, to think o f when a child has
a coated tongue; won’t play, can’t
sleep, is fretful or r • « o f sort*
Get _
it always has
Cha* H .
the
1,