Morvich, the which achieved fame Kentucky Derby, was Napa, Cal, ranch of A, His sire was Runnymede, lish stallion, and his dam was Hymier, out of Doctor Leggo and Georgia Girl Stocky and Short Legged. Morvich and legged, deviating harses, an three-year-old by winning foaled B. Spreckels on short of that he mile. is stocky from u nd sual lines experts believed be cause of labored breathing pot run well over the pointed out that his earlier were in sprint Doc his grand sire, was a ful horse that m the Burns Cal., one train to Los could They SUCCESSES tor Leggo. pow er. events. however, ade history by winning at FE day, traveling An and the handicap umeryville, that day eles i | | i is Nauve of California. From Dr. Leggo, Morvich 18 belleved to have Inherited the stout heart that carried him the and in the Kentucky Derby. Morvich won purses aggregating $162,000, a two-year-old his purses 15,234. Morvict the Hog Kx): the the It mile has list of victories woe stakes at Pimlico Futu R107 Long ran Saratoga stakes, was at Jama that Morvich first race. Sj won reckels him for His pr it © min Block, a Kk Avispa and Morvich, also ar Enst, then sold 4.54060 wner is “We Ain't Batted Yet!” The hasehs a roached » PP LPIPOPEP PPE PPPPESEPPOPIPPIOIP Baseball Notes tching or Raleigh, hard, earth ot hole during a home un. About is a | Kn in of the ger througt Jack Knight Oakland amputation team, Lively runs are lengue these d If world’ Pole ground The lace Hood the passing Outfielder fhag Thompson is Moll Colm 1 », the ne club | on from nbus. Earl Clan of Charleston shoulder in bia. shortstop suffered a broken at Colum- aine Dallas has Tipple to and sold Catche City. aded for Shandling to Pitcher Catcher Dan Lingle Sioux in has the third base Oakland, work with Ted Cather, now place of Marriott been doing stick. on for some fine Manager Kid Elberfeld expresses the opinion that Jimmy Dierkes, sent to Joplin, will yet make a great paseman, * . » Five hits on one day by Ty Cobb after seventeen years shows that In baseball a man may be as old hs his batting average, » » . The Augusta club reports the sign. ing of Pitchei Atwood Gordy, who was with Newark and Baltimore in the International last year, * . . President John A. Heydler, on behalf of the National league, announces that the league will erect a monument over the grave of Cap Anson, . * . Our guess is that Babe Ruth heres barnstorming in December is really worth the agony of grandstanding In May. * . Jimmy Dykes, of the Athletics, be- came a daddy the other day. He celebrated by hitting 867 for the A's that afternoon in the game with Wagh- fngton. { i i i | i Outfieldet on Joplin Grounds Was Up to His Ankles in Water When Game Started. ball £ oO TY FOI Joplin's glope away park has the rain the garden After a rapidly hold water Joe there burst heavy while the quite Tinker te one Joe Tinker. sinh first time } center fielder playing He pau 1 gardener 1 yelled, for the the close and the “Play deeper, Bill' “Deep?” shouted | Pm up to my behind second base, motioned ek. he 21 311, ankles now, “How deep? Three golfers were at Evanston, lil, Sunday. fined 82 each * » - Norwich university Vt., may establish a summer school of horsemanship and polo, ad . » Purdue has named its new president, but the main business of getting a football coach has already been at. tended to, i Jock Hutchison, the British open golf champion, announces he will not defend his title at the coming tourna- ment at Sandwich, - - * Sixteen two-year-old, and eighteen three-year-old trotters have heen en tered in the Junior League of Amateur Drivers’ colt stakes to be raced in Bos- ton, July 11-13, » » - Koji Yamada, the Japanese balk- line billiard expert, Intends to open an academy In Tokyo and will start instructing youthful players for fu. ture international competition, » . - Jimmy Wilde, the flyweight cham- pion, has fully recovered from his re. fall from his saddle horse and | expects to visit America shortly with the idea of fighting Johnny Buff, * » - “Some day,” says our golf friend, “we may have a constitutional amend. ment which will compel every individ. ual to learn the game of golf before he is twelve, and to practice it twice a week until he Is twenty.” | pensnsssasrnnsnrnnannnnns No Hold-Out Players The the world in holdouts holdouts only baseball league In which there are no neces for Quentin The leg eral no cha the San wad is Prison league distinguished for ses rens remarked, time Sign In the mn the and the Cubs. has heen and man ius agers have a soft up their talent, opening games of the Seals play the Oaks entertain the ing RENS Tigers AACR RLRBRRTRBRRBRBRR RRR $rrsssnsrsnansnnnnsnannn wf fesssssssssrsssnnnsannns RAFAEL ALMEIDA WAS VERY TEMPERAMENTAL Only Ball Plavei to Carry Valet Around With Him. ! Insisted That He pected to Play His Best Game Without His Favorite Cigars --Made O'Day Roar. O'Day Reds, i In 1012 | of the « | for his | mental Latin, | Almeida was { the National valet around his in nercenat Hank incinnati third wis and he had in that tempera- Rafael Almeida, Senor the only player in league carried a with him, insisted morning in bed, those Ay rave of ithe basemi ball who and coffee days n on having Manngers the hired over ositions i their fully say men, bi thes an that not sesses the prima tri them poss at Bob o' Links Course, Chicago, Makes Suggestion, Phote by 4 Western Newspaper inion $8 Bob McDonaig, women haven't So the male species has this advantage, nothing of greater physical Yet some inflelders and a few out fielders at critical times, by their heaves into the stands and far from the spot aimed at, indicate that their throwing education 1s imperfect, GRADUATE COACHES FAVORED But One Major Sport at Harvard Su. pervised by Outsider—S8iattery Teaches Baseball. All men In charge of Harvard sports but one now are Crimson graduates, This situation is the result of the re cent appointment of Dr. R. Heber Howe as general supervisor of rowing. The only major sport at Harvard not now so supervised is baseball, the nine being coached by Jack Slattery, of the to say pow er.” SILENCE LAY the silent part in all your joys and sorrows. Let neither ex- you, Control your speech and spirit under nil even when the clanging din around you urges you to trumpet- conditions, When the storms of mischief-mak- ers shake vour house of clay to its very foundations and cause your soul tremble with apprehension, hold le cool and calm and patient, To be is perilous as It invites fresh attacks from those seek- vour destruction, Curb resentment through the snarl- tempest ; lift up your face to the and remember that otherwise clouds, sunlit sky, Indifferent to “Let not Think of be the right well doing. Think of ing you, the pendent on ing in the no Do your heart be the content yours if you course and troubled.” that will ul- hold loyally continue in the eves that loved Ones vou, trusting bility of you nothing, think nothl nothing that will shake you, Or cause to yourself, By AY eine if watch- are are who and ir soul, and their faith faith de believ- ng say in in you lose keeping still In great } the atmosphere er, and your ually lose thelr |} easily suscept Blresses ’ " ny round nf n you tO gra more becomes poCusers reason, Rilence most the un iti magnificent Impressive What of a star vast hill w hat Verse, about silence, fields or forest, or In our own rooms, Is that we get a closer view of our faults and frailties In quite a new and surprising light, frequently daz zling our wondering eyes and changing us for the better, Copyright.) wsmemmmenndl Jame THE CHEERFUL CHERUB I like to go to tens and tek of Art Although I ect ts stupid 2s = goose. Lr 50 Mtr clever epigrnms That [ean store zwiy for vivre vse. RAjecann © EE IDDIES SIX wil M. Maupin RRR RE A PROBLEM WORTH WHILE HE HAS tackled divers questions With assurance great to view, | From preserving our digestions, Up to how big game pursue. He has done work literary With an alr of Sonest pride, And has writ in manner cheery All about race suic.de. WIE \ Of cunals and arbitration, And of income taxes, 100; freight glut situation And the right rourse to pursue To wake rallroads come to cenler, Or to back up “1d Monroe—~ To be brief he is a Mentor Knowing ail that men cap know. limitations ther man. gol situations no humen mortal can, wilt his collar blem great How 10 single dolla Feed and clothe » bunch of eight. (Copyright) sth Forty Kinds of There are fort; buoys sen, as his ke any e some e | Just | can't "Cause If he fa ced the pre make a Used. trpes of which has Buoys different each of Wi. used at { its « Sense . . 4% ENJOY Go MM THE GAME will ries EN who iny goif who hetween ubtliess the + are devol- a gi . and only are many of its : advan sOUr only who cone in wee 7 BA C7 2 o> Po BZ o Ley £5 The Friendly _ Path Fae 1” Rains SEER an * IS always good policy to read clean literature, to consider the advice of those who should know what they are talking or writing about, and to listen to good sermons, Dut no one ever was kept on the right pathway by what he read or heard spoken unless he used his brain, Whether he is happy or unhappy, whether he is successful or unsucCcess- ful, whether he is earning for himself pends on himself. road, but no one can make a human being do what is right if he refuses to do so, Nearly every one remembers that old proverb, “You can take a horse to wa- ter, but you can't mmke him drink” But too often the lesson it Is supposed to teach falls on deaf ears. mob, that class wishes, that sort 1s seldom worth a great deal, | i { ! | seldom found in the midst of the most popular crowd If one's mental is educated ity Is normal, whether or uneducated, he is Hkely to come near the proper goal if he uses his brain. But let stantly depend on the judgment others to direct his footsteps and the chances are ten to one that he'll be headed toward a fall, No one knows as well as oneself what is good for him, except when (li- ness comes and the skill of the physi cian or surgeon the bodily damage. stantly go whining about, seeking ad. vice from their fellows, the while los ing much of their just share of happi ness, he is excusable. But it 18 no excuse for | man or woman of normal mentality blaming downfalls on others, The wisest persons are those who don't think they know it all (Copyright) wnsassisersll Pos Asiatic Peoples, uplands. Half of the Alpine types o the Levantine are still natives of Living nen of Homo Saplens the normal round-heads | found In Afghanistan and Samarkand, nbs or t the cad- man's nn who "anything nes, but happiness | thelr non ns losers. ip in all ings the even to : «+ another irsult gets everything he § yy never of life in of many much very the ure une if you e¢, and wi rid here is enjoy- and lence in life, nt on wine you 8 SUCCESS, entertains his himself, per on to the repast is not worthy of FRESH FISH THE } parts of the country where my be cooked and the same day, there is no more etizing and healthful food. Fish id be cleaned and placed on ice, never leaving it until put into the oven or broiler; then the flavor will be good and the dish appetizing. Pike, bass, pickerel and perch all abound in the fresh waters. There are any number of ways of serving them, Stuffed and baked, the pike and pick. erel are excellent. The perch are usually fried until crisp and brown They should be rolled In seasoned flour before cooking. A meaty fish is very good bolled in acidulated water and served with { cooked spinach and this sauce: — word ish CAuUgn enten appe shou Banana Filling. | Scrape and mash two ripe bananas, add one tablespoonful of lemon julce, two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and one-half cupful candied orange peel. Use on yellow cake, top with | whipped cream, Creole Sauce. Sift one can of tomatoes {a pint). senson well with one reaspoonful of salt, a dash of cayenne. Add one cup { ful of fresh mushrooms that have been | cooked In butter for five mivures. To | thé butter left In the pan add twe of flour; stir until to the sauce and cook i all together until thick. Add wo tea. spoonfuls of onion julce, one green pepper, finely ~hopped. and pour the whole over the boiled fish, NMeaie Moagwat Copyrimbi, 1923 Wesiera Newspsosr Union | tablespoonfuls | smooth, Add
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers