Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 31, 1938 Page: 2 of 10
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PAGE a
PALACIOS BEACON, PALACIOS, TEXAS
—Speaking of Sports |
Former Greats
Will Coach in
International |
By GEORGE A. BARCLAY
/^\LD faces will be seen in
V-' new places when the In-
ternational league opens its
1938 season. Names that
made sports’ headlines a dec-
ade ago in the baseball big
show will be on the team
rosters.
You’ll recognize a good many dia-
mond heroes ot yesteryear among
the managers and coaches. Restora-
Uon of an old league rule permitting
each manager to enlist a coach has
opened jobs for some. Vacancies in
the managerial ranks have spelled
opportunity for others.
There’s Jim Bottomley, for In-
stance, who will manage the Syra-
cuse team. A standout when he
played first for the St. Louis Cardi-
nals In the world's championship
Toughest Sports Job Ve«f« /tot
days of the twenties, he finished his
major league career as a coach for
the St. Louis Browns. Now he’s get-
ting his chance as a manager. Bot-
tomley has signed old Hank Seve-
reid as coach.
Vets Get Chance
Over at Newark, Johnny Neun,
old-time Boston Red Sox first base-
man, is getting his managerial try-
out. He succeeds Oscar Vitt, who
moved up to the job of piloting the
Cleveland Indians after producing a
pennant winner. Neun will be aided
by Benny Bengough. Travis Jack-
son's first assistant at Jersey City
will be Alex Gaston. Steve O'Neill
will have George Uhle with him at
Buffalo.
The International league, holder
of the ‘'little world's championship”
and the next step down the flight
from the majors, symbolizes the
way up or the way back for baseball
people. It’s the way up for flashy
young players speeding toward the
American or National league. It’s
the way back for old-time major
leaguers.
Old names revive memories.
When you think of Benny Bengough,
you recall the Yankee stadium and
the late Miller Huggins. Benny was
a handy man behind the plate on
the Yankees’ mighty machine of
l»26-’27 and ’28.
Then there’s Hank Severeid, a
name synonymous with the greatest
team the St. Louis Browns ever pro-
duced, that of 1922. He was the bat-
tery mate of Urban Shocker.
Immortals of ’22
The pair not only made history in
St. Louis that year, along with
George Sisler. Ken Williams, Baby
Doll Jacobson, Wally Gerber and
others, but they were reunited with
the Yankees of 1926 and worked in
the world series.
Steve O'Neill and Travis Jackson
bring to mind old baseball history.
When O’Neill, one of the all-time
greats among catchers, was forced
to resign from his manager's post
for the Cleveland Indians last year,
he caught on with Buffalo, not only
as manager, but business manager
as well. When Travis Jackson's
legs went back on him the year
before last, the Giants placed him
with their farm at Jersey City.
Both O'Neill and Jackson will
have old teammates with them.
Once he was secure as business
manager, Steve signed Uhle as his
assistant. The pair have been bud-
'T'AKE It from a man who has
refereed almost 5,000 prize fights
in the past 12 years—Art Don-
ovan of New York—the toughest of-
ficial job in any sport Is that of
third man in the ring.
Umpiring a ball game, officiating
on the gridiron or being an arbiter
in a basketball or tennis champion-
ship is a soft touch compared with
refereeing a contest in the squared
circle, in Mr. Donovan's opinion.
“In any other sport,” he says,
"the fans never have any doubt
about the result because the score
tells the story. But In a fight there
Is no srore and every fan no matter
where he Is sitting thinks his eye-
sight, Judgment, knowledge of box-
ing and experience arc keener than
those of the man In the ring with
the fighters.
"No two people look at a fight in
the same way. Suppose some Fancy
Dan lands six light taps that
| wouldn't muss a baby's hair on
j the other fellow’s face and the other
! fellow—a rough, tough guy—lands
! a terrific right hook under the
| heart. How would you score the
1 result? In my book the fellow who
does the most damage is the fellow
who wins.
“What I mean is that a man like
Jack Dempsey might almost kill an
| opponent with three solid punches.
He might take a dozen feather duster
1 taps just to get a chance to land
one solid wallop and with that punch
he'd do more damage than he'd
receive from a hundred jabs."
Dodgers’ Renaissance
f\N THE strength of the high
priced purchase of First Base-
man Dolph Camilli from the Phil-
lies recently, Larry McPhail may
yet make something out of the
Brooklyn Dodgers.
The acquisition of a left-hand pull-
hitter like Camilli who should be
a "natural'’ for the Ebbets Field
right field target may rouse the
daffiness boys to a new and amaz-
ing habit of winning some ball
games. But the most astonishing
thing about the whole transaction is
the fact that the Dodgers are said
to have parted with 560,000 in cash
to get Camilli—an unheard of sum
in Flatbush history.
Whether McPhail made a wise
move or not will be apparent in the
turnstiles after the season gets well
under way. The factional battle in
the Brooklyn management disgust-
ed the fans and made them stay
away. Now with McPhail making
gestures of reconstruction, the fans
may be lured back again.
Brooklyn has always been one of
the best franchises in the major
leagues. The fans are rabid and
LITHS YIELD TO POLES
One War Threat Removed ... Mexico Seize* Foreign
Oil Concern* . . Hull Say* We Arm for Peace
Here in confidential conversation are Senator Sherman Minton of Indi-
ana (left), chairman of the senate committee Investigating lobbying, and
Senator Lewis B. Schwellenbach of Washington. The committee’s inquiry
at present is directed particularly to a campaign against the government
reorganization bill and Its activities aroused Publisher Frank Gannett to
demand Its abolition.
General
Smlgly-Rydz
Steve O’Neill
Travis Jackson
dies for years. When Uhle came up
from the Cleveland sandlots to the
Indians in 1919, O’Neill was an es-
tablished catcher on the team.
Jackson will have Freddie Lind-
slrom with him as a player at Jer-
sey City. A veteran in point of base-
ball service, but relatively young in
years, Lindstrom was a buddy ot
Jackson’s on the Giants when John
McGraw was manager.
Dolph Camilli
I loyal. They do not demand a pen-
nant winner. They want a fighting
! ball club. They also like a club that
can go out and twist the noses of
Bill Terry’s Giants once in a while.
If they get that they'll be more
than satisfied.
MacPhail will try to give them
that even if he does make a mis-
take or two.
Here and There—
TOE GORDON, the young man Uie
J Yankees have stationed at sec-
ond base to replace Tony Lazzerl,
has no doubts about his fielding abil-
ity. He says he doesn’t know how
well he'll hit, but believes he’ll
field the position acceptably . . .
' Tommy Henrich, rookie outfielder
of the Yanks, collected $30,000 for
his 1937 services. He pocketed a
$20,000 bonus for signing with Rup-
pert, received a contract estimated
to pay between $5,000 and $6,000 for
(he 1937 season and got a cut of
$5,836 from the World’s series . . .
Approximately $2,000,000 in prizes
have been paid In ABC tourna-
ments . . . Bill Clemenscn, Pitts-
burgh's rookie pitcher, is a cousin
of Larry Doyle, former Giant sec-
ond baseman . . . Barney Ross is
a billiard enthusiast and a better
than average cue wiclder . . . Jim
Tipton, Alabama guard, will be
graduated from the school of aero-
nautical engineering In June and
contemplates a career In the flying
corps . . • The Yankees’ scouting
system is said to cost Jake Itup-
pert $100,000 a year . . . Although
his father was a wealthy merchant,
George Munger, Pennsylvania’s
now football coach, worked his way
through the university doing odd
jobs.
© Western Newspaper Union.
Victory for Poland
/"\NE immediate threat of Euro-
'-r pean war seemed to be dis-
solved when Lithuania yielded to
the demands of Poland for resump-
tion of normal dip-
lomatic and trade
relations and virtu-
ally gave up its
claim to Vilna, for-
mer capital of the
country, which the
Poles seized 18 years
ago. General Smig-
ty-Rydz, chief of the
Polish army and
“strong man” of Po-
land, had mobilized
his troops on the
Lithuanian border,
and Polish warships were cruising
off Memel. So there was nothing
for the Liths to do except give in.
Polish troops that had been concen-
trated in Vilna paraded in celebra-
tion of the bloodless victory, but in
Warsaw the celebration was dis-
torted into a "pogrom” in which ri-
otous throngs attacked all the Jews
they could find, killing several and
wounding scores. Hundreds of Jew-
ish-owned shops were smashed be-
fore the police could restore order.
The mobs were made up largely
of National Democrats, opposed to
the government, who protested that
the settlement with Lithuania was
too lenient. They demanded that
Poland Invade and annex Lithu-
ania.
Col. Joseph Beck, Polish foreign
minister, declared that Poland
would guarantee Lithuania’s inde-
pendence. The Liths, however, were
extremely bitter over the conces-
sions they had been forced to make
to their more powerful neighbor.
Mexican Oil Seizure*
PRESIDENT CARDENAS of Mexl-
*co announced the expropria-
tion of oil properties belonging to
American and British companies
and valued at some $400,000,000.
Wells, refineries and tankers were
seized and workers took control of
all company offices in the repub-
lic. The American and British
employees and their families fled.
For the present the oil industry in
Mexico was paralyzed.
The companies concerned began
legal action attacking the consti-
tutionality of Cardenas’ decree, and
it was said would carry the case
to the highest court. Both the
United States and Great Britain
were expected to challenge the
seizures and similar action threat-
ened in the case of mines as vio-
lation of treaty obligations.
The action of the Mexican gov-
ernment was not entirely unexpect-
ed for It was the culmination of a
long and bitter controversy between
the oil companies and Mexico’s
board of labor conciliation and arbi-
tration over a $7,300,000 wage in-
crease ordered by the board.
Armed Peace: No Alliances
A MERICA must pursue its quest
for World peace, but must fol-
low a policy of arming for protec-
tion of its rights against "interna-
Jonal lawlessness.”
So declared Secre-
tary of State Cordell
Hull in an exposition
of America’s foreign
policy and a discus-
sion of all aspects of
the world situation.
He spoke at the Na-
tional Press club in
Washington and his
address was broad-
cast over the land
and to other nations
by radio.
In brief, he set forth a policy of
peace, no alliances, collaboration
SUMMARIZES THE WORLD’S WEEK
<£ Western Newspaper Union.
with peaceful nations, military pre-
paredness, and opposition to the
"seclusionist” viewpoint.
"It is my considered judgment
that, in the present state of world
affairs, to do less than is now pro-
posed would lay our country open
to unpredictable hazards,” he said,
referring to the naval expansion
program.
“The momentous question.” he
said, "is whether the doctrine of
force shall become enthroned once
more and bring in its wake, inex-
orably, international anarchy and a
relapse into barbarism.”
He did not refer to any nation
by name, but his implication with
regard to legal recognition of Aus-
tria's absorption by Germany and
Japan's expansion in China was
clear when he said:
“The catastrophic developments
of recent years, the startling events
of the past weeks, offer a tragic
demonstration of how quickly the
contagious scourge of treaty-break-
ing and armed violence spreads
from one region to another.”
He disclaimed "the slightest in-
tention to entertain any such notion
as the use of American armed
forces for 'policing the world.’ ”
He specifically opposed the pro-
posal the United States retire from
the Far East.
In the Far East crisis. Hull said,
the United States has "consistently
collaborated with other peace-seek-
ing nations.
The triumph of the ‘‘seclusionist
viewpoint,” he said, "would ines-
capably carry the whole world back
to the conditions of medieval chaos,
conditions toward which some parts
of both the eastern and the western
worlds are already moving."
Row Over Lobby Inquiry
PRANK GANNETT, publisher of
" b chain of newspapers, called on
the senate to abolish its lobbying
investigating committee and to
apologize publicly
for that committee’s
“viciously Illegal
activities.” Gannett
made his demand as
head of the National
Committee to Up-
hold Constitutional
Government whose
executive secretary,
Dr. Edward A.
Rumely, faced a
contempt of the sen-
ate citation for re-
fusing to surrender the organize-
ton’s private records to the lobby
Investigators.
Condemning as "infamous" the
committee formerly headed by Su-
preme Court Justice Hugo L. Black
and now directed by Senator Sher-
man Minton, Democrat, of Indiana,
Gannett charged that its renewed
activities are prompted by a desire
to "smear and Intimidate” his and
other organizations fighting the gov-
I ernment reorganization bill.
Minton, in a radio debate with
i Representative James Wadsworth,
Republican of New York, struck
back at Gannett, declaring that he
directs his “propaganda machine
j from his sunny villa in Florida"
and that "ho hasn’t any more idea
I of saving you and your Constitution
than the Liberty League had.” He
cautioned listeners not to be mis-
led by press dispatches on adminis-
tration activities “since 98 per cent
of all the metropolitan news-
papers are opposed to the adminis-
tration and do not hesitate to mis-
represent it."
Quick work by administration
leaders saved the reorganization bill
from emasculation in the senate.
Six senators shifted and brought
about the defeat of the Wheeler
amendment requiring congressional
approval, by joint resolution, to
make effective all executive orders
transferring, consolidating or abol-
ishing bureaus and independent
agencies.
WHO’S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
Senator Minton By LEMUEL F. PARTON
Manuel
Quezon
House Passes Navy Bill
Yl/TTH only a few votes in oppo-
VV sition, the house passed the ad-
ministration’s billion dollar navy
bill. The measure authorizes con-
struction of the largest battle fleet in
American history by adding 46 com-
bat ships, 22 auxiliaries and 950 air-
planes.
The War department announced
that army and navy officers were
about to study plans for an enlist-
ment program that would put more
than two million men under arms
within four months of a declaration
of war. For this the army would
require 1,250,000 recruits and the
navy 500,000.
The first 300,000, under existing
plans, would be sought as volunteers
in the first month, before selective
draft machinery like that of 1917-' 18
was put into operation. Already
prepared for quick submission to
congress is a draft of a selective
service law.
Sccy. Hull
Morgan Defies F. D. R.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT or-
* dered Chairman Arthur E. Mor-
gan of the Tennessee Valley Au-
thority to recant charges against
his colleagues or face suspension
or ouster, but Mr. Morgan chal-
lenged the President's powers to
remove him and said flatly that he
would not resign.
The chairman asserted:
"I challenge this action by the
President and deny his right to re-
move or suspend me. I stand on
that. If I sum up my altitude I can
say that I do not choose to run
away.”
He then took a train for Yellow
Springs, Ohio, for a visit with
friends.
Morgan told newspaper men he
has obtained legal advice on his
conflict with the President. At the
same time it was learned Mr.
Roosevelt uncovered a law under
which, advisers assured him, he is
empowered to oust the chairman
Would Keep Philippines
pAUL V. McNUTT, high commis
* sioner to the Philippines, has
come to the conclusion that if we
turn the islands entirely free in 1946
they will become
the ground of bloody
f • jt and long continued
warfare. So, with
the apparent ap-
proval of President
Roosevelt, he pro-
M Poscs that the ques-
tion of their fate be
reopened for careful
consideration.
McNutt’s plan was
offered by prear-
rangement with
Manuel Quezon,
president of the Philippine common-
I wealth, and that veteran national-
ist gave it his instant indorsement.
Later he added that there should
be no question about the ultimate
independence of the islands.
Being convinced that the United
States would not undertake protec-
tion of an Independent Philippine
nation from Japan and would not
continue a free trade relationship,
Quezon has been maneuvering for
some time to revise the Independ-
ence grant and obtain a dominion
status.
Seek to Curb Franco
D EPEATED and intense bomb-
l'- ings of Barcelona by Spanish
insurgent planes, that killed hun-
dreds of civilians aroused the Brit-
ish and French governments to pro-
test against what they asserted
was violation of international law
and the principles established by
civilized nations. It was said the
British asked the Vatican to bring
pressure to bear on General Franco
to end the bombing of unfortified
towns.
The great drive of the Insurgent
forces toward the east coast was
brought to a temporary halt 40 miles
from the Mediterranean.
Move by Litvinoff
\\TAR clouds over Europe were
YV growing dense and alarm in-
creased throughout the world. Se-
curities experienced sharp breaks
on the exchanges in
America, London,
Paris and elsewhere
because of the dis-
quieting reports.
Cabinets and diplo- |
mats everywhere i
were trying desper-
ately to find a way
to peace. The dan-
ger seemed to in-
volve at the moment
chiefly Czechoslo-
vakia, the civil war
in Spain and the
possibility of Nazi aggression
against Hungary.
Maxim Litvinoff, wise commissar
for foreign affairs of Soviet Russia,
put forth an Invitation to the great
powers other than Germany, Italy
and Japan to confer on joint action
aimed at "checking further devel-
opment of aggression and eliminat-
ing increased danger of a new world
massacre.” The United States was
asked to participate in this action.
France and Russia formally noti-
fied Czechoslovakia that they would
give that nation armed support
against any aggressive action by
Germany. Great Britain, while not
going so far as this, warned Hitler
that It expected him to observe the
assurances ho had given that he
would not attack the Czechs.
Maxim
Litvinoff
March 31, 1938
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
BEAUTY CULTURE
STorth'whito X w;t.^1nfSCKlorr^vV.*c,S:
BOX MX. SUPERIOR. WISCONSIN.
BABY CHICKS
XTEW YORK.—Among hla com-
Lx panions in barnstorming. Glenn
L. Martin was known as "The
Dude," although his carefully tai-
lored flying suits
Martin Had were always
Get-Up of black, Including
Mortician ‘ h e 1 r claborate
braid trimmings.
His somewhat mortuary get-up and
behavior gave an impression of
great conservatism, and It is not
surprising that he got backing from
the bankers when other aviators
failed.
A few months ago, he said his
Glenn L. Martin company, of Balti-
more, making planes, had a back-
log of $15,500,000.
He told the house naval af-
fairs committee there should be
a 100 per cent Increase In air
armaments, that foreign nations
are spending ten times its much
as the United States. He would
build a 250,000-pound bomber,
carrying 30 men and a 4,000-
pound bomb load 11,000 miles.
In 1912, this writer saw him put
an Inflated inner tube around his
neck, strap a compass on his leg
and take off to sea, at Avalon bay,
Los Angeles, In a flying laundry
wagon on which he had rigged a
single wooden pontoon. He was
bound for Catalina island, 20 miles
away. It looked like suicide.
He not only made it, but picked
up again at Catalina and finished
the round trip,
Round Trip blanking Bleriot,
Sea Flight whose flight over
It Succett the British chan'
nel was a one-way
excursion. He had made the plane
in an abandoned church.
The flight got him world atten-
tion. Then he staged a plane coyote
hunt, dropped a ball into a catcher's
mitt and a bouquet into the arms
of a beauty contest queen.
This air extravaganza did not
last long. In 1913, he built and
sold two model TT war planes
to the army, and has been build-
ing fighting craft ever since,
with the exception of trans-Pa-
cific Clippers.
He grew up In Mackburg, Iowa,
built a pusher plane in his back-
yard and flew it in 1908. He is
fifty-two.
• • •
YI7TLLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN,
v V in his seersucker suit and his
rumpled hat, frequently looked as
if he had been sleeping under a
bridge, especially
Bryan, Jr., in the midst of a
Fatt idiom hard campaign.
About Drett His son- William
Jennings Bryan,
Jr., is fussy about his dress, severe-
ly and fastidiously groomed, with
a jaunty little moustache and a nice
collection of malacca sticks, sports
clothes, and varied haberdashery.
He Is in the news now as he be-
comes collector of customs at the
port of Los Angeles, his first recog-
nition by the California Democracy,
In whose vineyard he has labored
for years.
When hla father laid down his
staff and scrip at Dayton, Tenn.,
be picked from the legacy only
two things—free silver and anti-
evolution. He Is quite unmoved
by oratory, speaking with calm,
legalistic precision, with no gift
for the resounding or oracular.
He has made spirited forays
against this or that, notably Upton
Sinclair’s “Epic"
Will Speak heresy ot 1934, but
Good Word with no such im
for Silver passioned fervor
as that which In-
spired his father. But, when oc-
casion offers, he puts in a word for
silver, or against evolution.
After the Dayton trial and his fa
ther's death, he made a knightly
vow that his lance always should
be leveled against this ignoble the
ory of man's origin. But nobody
seems to be bringing that up now.
The argument Is shifting to where
man is going.
He attended the University of Ne-
braska three years, studied law at
Georgetown university, went to Ari-
zona on account of his wife’s health,
and practiced law, first in Arizona
and then in Los Angeles. He is
fifty years old.
© Consolidated News Features.
WNU Service.
Odd Money
In Chinn cowrie shells, almonds,
cakes of salt, pills of opium, tea.
quicksilver, semi-precious stones,
all these commodities have been
treated as cash at different pe-
riods of her long history. When
China did mint money from the
metals with which she abounds,
forging and counterfeiting be-
came so rife that it caused a
succession of financial crises.
In Tibetan bazaars, cheap tea,
made into bricks, serves as ready
cash. Mongolia, too, and parts of
eastern Russia put tea-bricks to
a similar use.
In Yap, one of the Caroline is-
lands, large blocks of limestone,
shaped by hand like millstones,
are treated as though they were
products of the local mint. The
larger the block the greater
amount of cash (or foi) it rep-
resents. The limestone is brought
all the way from the Pellew is-
lands, 200 miles away.
Fish With Rainbow Hues
A rainbow fish, one of the most
beautiful fishes in the world, was
recently captured off the coast of
Portland, In southern Victoria. Only
two specimens of this rare fish have
been caught in sixty years, both off
the same coast. The rainbow fish
deserves Us name, at least when
alive. It soon loses its brilliant
coloring after death. Rainbow hues
—red, crimson, purple, bright yel-
low and brown-green—seem to glow
on the body, head and fins. Closely
related to the parrot-fishes, the rain-
bow fish is a wrasse, and frequents
reefs. The male, more gaily col-
ored than his mate, is further dis-
tinguished by tall frontal spines.
Does your laxative
make you
SICK
in the
STOMACH?
The first thing you want when you’re
constipated is a good thorough cleaning
out. That's why vou buy a laxative. But
who said you had to take a rough hitter
dose that makes you sick in the stomach?
Taking a laxative can lie just as pleas-
ant as eating a piece of delicious choco-
late—provided you take Ex-Lax. It gets
thorough results-but smoothly, easily,
without throwing your intestinal system
out of whack, without causing nausea,
stomach pains or weakness.
For over 30 years, Ex-Lax has been
America’s favorite family laxative. Now
it is Scientifically Improved. It's actually
better than evert It TASTES BETTER,
ACTS BETTER-and is MORE
GENTLE than ever.
Equally good for children and grown-
ups. lOt and 25t boxes at your druggist.
Now Improved-better than avarl
EX-LAX
THE ORIGINAL CHOCOLATED LAXATIVE
Becoming Honesty
What is becoming is honest, and
whatever is honest must always
be becoming.—Cicero.
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when retiring will relieve sore,
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morning. 50c a jar at drug-
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Gold St., N. Y. City.
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Mrs. J. W. Dismukes and Sons. Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 31, 1938, newspaper, March 31, 1938; Palacios, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth725820/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palacios Library.