The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, September 25, 1931, Image 3

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THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1931
RETA
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FACKYARD KRONIES
NO OVER
HERE KID WiLL [SRV
YOU RUN AND GET [I
ME A HOT DOG SAND BI
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RO HERES ANOTHER
| DIME GET ONE _
| FOR YOU RSELF |
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HERE MISTER HERES
| YOUR DIME YOUD
| BETTER TRY THE N\
NEXT STOP — jl
THEY ONLY
HAD ONE
LEFT HERE!
@ SPORT GRAPHS
“HORSE” MAHAFFEY
Mahaffey came
to the majors tor
the first time in
1927. He wan
tried out by Pitts
burgh, and by the
way, it strikes me
that quite a few
successful ball
players in the big
time were triea
and rejected by
the Pirates.
He turned up
Mahaffey in Portland in
; 1929 where he ap-
peared in no less than 56 games indi-
cating that he probably pitched about
every other day.
.Connie Mack turned over to Tom
“Turner some fairly good fancy spin-
ach for Mahaffey’s service. Mahaffey
who achieved the sobriquet of “Work
Horse“ on the coast, moved into his
job without the pomp or emotion, ap-
pearing slyly in 383 games last yea:
and winning 9 against 5 lost.
This year the Horse has been start-
ing more regularly, with the results
stated above.
Fifteen won and three muéee pretty
good for a young mai’ +A pitches
only when Grove, Walberg and Earn-
shaw feel like an afternoon of golf.
On the Sidelines
—
Jimmy Wilson, catcher for the St.
Louis Nationals, has worked in more
than 900 baseball games in the eight
years of service in the older loop.
day recently and expects to spend sc-
veral more years behind the bat. =
When Jim Bottomley, of the St.
Louis Nationals cracked out six hits
in one game against Pittsburgh, it was
the second such performance, and if
put him in a tie with Ed Delahunty,
old time star. Delahunty hit for six
hits twice during his career.
Manager Mike McNalley of the
Wilkes-Barre Barons of the New
York Pennsylvanmiy league, is ‘being
mentioned as the possible manager of
the Buffalo team of the International
League for 1932.
At the same time it is reported that
Jack Bently will manage the Elmira
Team of the NYP league, and Jake
Pitler or Glen Killenger will manage
the 1932 Wilkes-Barre team. :
Lefty Grove won his 30th game, and
because of it hope has. been reviv-
ed of his chances to break Joe Wood's
record of 34 victories, made in 1912.
The odds are against Lefty, howev-
er, by mathematical calculation.
Assuming the big lefthander pitches
at three day intervals between gamesy
then he can win two more provided he
He celebrated his thirty-fifth birth- |
; linnings, thereby presenting a chance
to add an extra contest. But the op-
portunity of winning as a relief pit-
ing a game or two.
Grove can be counted to cop at
least 2 out of 3, which is a great av-
erage. He cannot win them all and
shouldn‘t be expected to.
This column guesses he will get -at
least two more, for a season’s total of
32 wins. -
Here's the way the pennant races
would have ‘looked on August 21, if
there were no A‘s or Cards.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
' If it weren’t for the A's and the
Cards, bawls out the irate fan “the
big league gallops would be closer
than Monday and Tuesday. Baseball
would be viewing two red hot scraps
instead of the twin farce.
Is that Hever Its! 3
Five saint protests of fans follow-
ing the 14 clubs in the two major
leaguies that are decidely out in the
cher is balanced by the chance of los- |
Team WW. L.Pet: ls
Washington =u. .cse isan 63 36 .636
New York .......... lai pie 59 40 .600
Cleveland .....:eevevsnvsns 53 44 .546
Chicago «i viisee Ves ls 44 55 .444
St. rTonis, cuisine wisn adaBT 481
Detroit ies vo nsien elvis 42 56 .429
BOSLOR . coon vinnsinisiv ss ovine 34 60 .423
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Team W. > Li Pet.
New YOrk ....coeveeeeeee. 57 39 .59%
Chicago .....ie0evu. ween + DS ALS 586
Brooklyn: er neve cssprsose 54 48 .529
Pittsburgh ...veeeeeeennn. 50 52 .490
BOSON 0... sae ier. ....48 55 .466
Philadelphia «ccvevenn ....46 59 .438 |
Cincinnati RRs dees 41 61 .401
The result is two closely grouped
league races with two clubs carrying
on a hot battle for first place and a
third team in each loop on the edge of
the fight, able to pop into it by a win
or two.
wins all, that would give him a re--
cord of 34 wins.
It isn‘t likely Connie Mack will pit=
ch Grove out of turn, though fié may
employ him with the-Score tied in late
color against the “preponderance of
strength” grouped on the Athletic and
Cardinal rosters, looks like tht old
baloney, sliced thick, until one analy-
ses the pennant races. .
HETHER you live in the wee
house on the moor, or in the
grand manor on the hill has noth-
ing whatever to do with your
charm as a hostess. For the little
white gate may creak the most in-
viting sort of “come in” and the
pink hollyhocks along the flag-
stone path may nod very gaily to
you as you wander up the moor,
while great wrought-iron: gates
have been known to swing open
with a forbidding clang.
It is all a question of the
genuine gladness in the hospi-
tality which awaits you and the
ease with which you are taken,
for a time, into the life of the
household. If it happens to be a
‘warm day in August or early Sep-
tember when you lift the latch on
the gate, wouldn’t it be inviting
to find a table in some shady spot
—rveranda, terrace or courtyard—
and a tray of glasses con-
veniently near some leisurely-
looking chairs?
An ldeal Setting
a A hospess whose tiny English
Home id joyful with blue iris, crim-
son | ips, or trailing yellow roses
in seison, keeps a rustic table in
her courtyard always set, with de-
lightlul homespun linen, cool
gree or yellow pottery and a
bowl of garden flowers. A quick
trip ‘to the refrigerator for some
delidous fruit punch and a tempt-
ing morsel of pastry or sandwich
spread, and presto! refreshments
are served on a wicker tray, the
drinks clinking with ice in color-
ful glasses and the hors d’oeuvre
assortment in separate glass con-
tainers on a round wicker tray.
You stretch out in the awning-
striped chairs sipping something
cool and nibbling something deli-
cious, and you wonder how it was
80 quickly done.
Spilling the Secret
Shall we divulge the secret? An
emergency shelf in the refrig-
erator tells the story. It contains
jars of fruit juices, combined from
left-over syrups from canned
fruits, cans of tomato juice,
orange, grapefruit and pineapple
juices, and several bottles of
charged water to make occasional
“fizzy” drinks. On this same shelf
are tiny cans of sandwich-spreads,
cool and ready to open quickly
and top the “bite-size” wafers
which are kept in a thin box in
the pantry.
Here are some tested recipes for
drinks, devised especially for that
summer thirst:
Four Fruit Fizz: Have the fol-
lowing ingredients very cold: one
cup of orange juice, one-fourth
cup of lemon juice, one cup of
syrup from canned pineapple and
the juice from one No. 3 can of
FOR SUMMER THIRST
#
= =
Gh ¥
_&
fresh prunes. (Save the fruit for
a delicious summer salad.) Mix
all ingredients together and, just
before serving, add two bottles of
charged water and plenty of
cracked ice. This fills sixteen
punch glasses. .
Havana Special: Mix together
one 10-ounce can of grapefruit
juice, one cup of syrup from
canned pineapple; add one-fourth
cup of sugar and one cup of wa-
ter which have been boiled to-
gether and then cooled. Chill, add
one bottle of charged water, and
serve very cold in punch glasses.
Thig fills ten punch glasses.
Cherry Rickey: Boil one-fourth
cup sugar and one cup water, cool
and add the juice from one No. 2
can of pitted sour cherries, one-
fourth cup of maraschino cherry
juice 72d the contents of a 10-
ounce ° can of grapefruit juice.
Chill and add the contents of one
bottle of charged water just be-
fore serving very cold. This fills
twelve punch glasses.
Tomato and Celery Cocktail:
Simmer together for thirty min-
utes three cups. of strained tomato
juice, two cups of water, one cup
of celery (using the outer stalks
and leaves), one bay leaf, one
teaspoon horseradish, one pepper-
corn, one teaspoon of salt and one
slice of onion. Strain and cool.
Serve very cold in cocktail
glasses. Serves eight persons.®
|—but they did not look like High
Let's suppose there weren't any
Philadelphia Athletics or St. Louis
Cardinals. That is, let's discount their
performances against their foes this
season. We do this by substracting
all the games won by the A's and
Cards from, the loss colunm or their
foes and all games lost by the A’s and
Cards from the victory record of tha
other clubs.
Seeking Interest
Of Youth
That Business and Parents
May Co-operate; Not Un-
lawful For Newspapers, If
Sports Belongs To Others
By Richard Lawley :
In these political times, newspapers
that have originated, thrived and blos.
somed on that game have found their
ablest aids in sports. In the old days
editors worked without pay hoping for
some opening to politics, hence, poli-
tics came to sports as well as sports
leaned to politics. It is hard to seper-
ate them and when one becomes re-
miniscent in the newspapers it is mu-
tually beneficial to both the newsdaily
or Sunday as it is to the politicians.
As to the players—well, perhaps most
of them are in polities or business, to-
day. Then, we have the readers.
What do you suppose they think of it?
paid 50 cents or $1.00 to witness a
prize fight or a game in Wilkes-Barre
or vicinity ?
“That is just how they take it.
take it seriously and the promoters
take it as a joke. 3
But, all work hard toward the end.
The boy gets his praise, the editor
his graft and the promoter gets first
whack and the State begs, not too
humbly for part of the gold the boy
made by taking some good punches in
the mouth, bruises to his body or oth-
er hurts received in deadly combat.-
This is so, because we are living in a
money mad stage where ‘politics reigns
supreme—and as conscious as the go-
vernor is, who finds one of. his own
neighbors raided and loaded with
strong drink,
In thinking of some of the old days
of the purely amateur order—and that
is really over 20, years ago—when,
Tom Brislin was on the Times.Leader,
Joe Hefferman was on the Evening
News, Diamond Dust MacCullom was
was on the Independent, with the late
Charley Jones, and we are coming
down to the time when sporting edi-
tors did draw a little pay, jou know
without going farther back — when
they ‘didn’t.
We had to spend a long shift over
In'Y. MC. A park scoring a double-
header between Scranton and Wilkes-
Barre school boys—Highs and Ex-
Highs. In these games the two Scran-
ton teams won. Ray - Shiber,» who
mailed out the Record for years after,
and who resides just beyond the office
of the Post here in Dallas, pitched for
Wilkes-Barre ex-high against St.
Thomas College in the second game,
which began at 5:00 and ended at
7:00. This game traveled only seven
innings, and while the college boys
made 8 errors the ex-high made a
good dozen and Ray was put out in
the 5th. This score was 13 to 4.
These were counted pretty big men
in those days, but wa took a dare and
ran a school game not of High School
age in the Times before these games.
The boys on the ex-high were as pop-
ular on the day of that game as they
are today. Bud Frantz, Nick Thomj-
son, who finished up the game, Ray
Shiber, Howe and McLean, Brown,
Shoemaker and Goff, Rhinehart ana
Hughes, a great athlete, We received
a good calling down for running the
Kingston High School—Monarchs of
Wilkes-Barre game the day after
sending it through. J. R. Davis’ twin
brothers, Wesley and Wendell, Jim- |
mie Nesbitt, Kingston barber, Stanley |
Newitt, Plumber Johnson, editor
Chamberlaines son Roy, Leo Smith,
Arnold, Mush Whitney, - Gates, Bill
Wardin and Lyneh cemprised the team
School men and the editor of the
KATHERINE K
FOUNDATIONS
FITTED BY SPECIALIST
Trained For The Work
Myers Building, Public Square,
Wilkes-Barre 2-1303
Well, where is the one who has not yet |
Times, Chas Chamberlain with editor
Lincoln, both of Kingston knew that
‘they were too young to be taking up
space in the Times!
Then we had a team in Kingston
which we did not count in the class
of the Luzerne Reds, the Stafford and
Trainors, the Kilcoynes, the Pittston
Brothers, the Larksville Clippers, the
Plymouth Reds, the Mayock Brothers,
Plains and a tew more so we played
the aggregation headed by the late
Floyd Hess, attorney of Forty Fort,
and when we won the
ginated the {title of Second Class
Champions and no team in our class
could defeat us.
Bill Covert, Matiser and Murray. Da-
vis is now residing in Dallas. Forty-
Fort had—Booth, Winters,
Culver, Cook, Willis, Lewis Brew, A.
Jones, Burges Boyd and Hess.
was a great game and ended 11 to 12
when Modie and Dy knocked the ball
over the culm bank and our team
scored 8 runs in the 8th inning. Lew-
ie Brew and Boyd were fine pitchers,
£
Lewie, later being Billy Thomas’ star
twirler in the Suburban and Wyoming
leagues. Willis and Winters were, al
so, star players, each being able to
handle any pitcher, but they joine
the benedicts and gave up the ga
when young Hess, (not Harry H
of Nanticoke) once pitched for th
Barons.
Jack Gately was in short trous S
at the time he pitched this game ang
a few years later he played 3rd fi 5
the Reds, as most fans remember.
With the end of the Suburban lea
gue around 1915, came back the Wi
oming league for years then that di
Politicians revived that league when
the new blood got on our newspapers.
The Reds. managed by Billy Thom=
as in‘ the Suburban league, becam
falous through these players: Haley,
Corrigan, Tim Gatley, Jack Gatley,
Billy Jones, Reilley, John McEnrue
Del Higgins, Trevor Jones, Van Bus
kirk, Donohue, Simpson, Reilley, Car
McDade, Brew. and Preston Clark. In
(Continued on Page 7)
game, we ori-
We had—Dy Jones,
Ransom,
This
3
~My Next Car
“Why 3
They :
on the Record and Wendell Richards |,
~will he
ng
A FORD”
WaEN you buy a Ford there are two things you never hive Eo
to worry about. One is reliability. The other is long life.
Here’s an interesting letter from a Ford owner in North
Carolina: 3
. “My Ford was purchased May 8, 1928, and has been run 121,767
miles. It has never stopped on the road for. repairs of any kind what-
soever except punctures. :
“The brakes were refined at 101,000 miles. My gas mileage aver
aged 21 miles to the gallon, and on tires, 19,000 miles per tire. I travel
* over all kinds of road conditions—mountainous and flat.
“I consider this a wonderful record and I assure you my next car
will also be a Ford.”
- This is just one ot many tributes to the reliability and
long life of the Ford. A Ford owner in Towa tells of driving
his Ford 73,000 miles in a single year. Another writes of
120,000 miles of good service,
ree ta
Think ahead when you are considering the purchase of
an automobile and consider what it will be like after thoas
sands of miles of driving. Will you still be satisfied? Will
you still say “it’s a great car”?
If it’s a Ford, you know everything will be 0. K. Tt will
be taking you there and back in good style, just as it has
always done. And you will have saved many important,
worth-while dollars in cost of operation and up-keep and
low yearly depreciation.
FIFTEEN BODY TYPES
xy 4 30: To ‘640
F.0.B. Detroit, plus freight and J Ghters. Bumpers and spare tire
extra at low cost. Economical time payments through the Authorized
Ford Finance Plans of the Unizersyl Credy Company: