N ^OME III. - ISSUE NO. 15 OBSER ver 3?* M s ^py r —n, bE FA ir AND SQUARE, TO T0 r-oURAGE AND SUPPORT THE e bsT lS O U R M O T T O Entered as second-class matter August 2, 1928, at the post-office at Cleveland, Ohio, under the Act of Mareh 3, 1879 CLEVELAND, OHIO, THURSDAY, APRIL lOth, 1930. PRIČE FIVE CENTS Jugoslav Slovene Club Plans Dinner-Oance Club Elects New Officers Always active and always al- |ert to the things that make life j interesting and worth while, the ^ n0 ther magic eye power j members of the Jugoslav Slovene th we nt out 'the door last;Club are departing from their ■eek with Harold Morton vhen ; vvork of making others interest- discovered a lion under his^ed in their own social way, in gd Harold Morton was toki things Slovene by planning for t he human eye holds ter-!?, good time at the Chinese Tem ' for the lion he had an oc-,p'e the scene of their Scenes From the Passion Play try it out when hej Annual HtKU a: ors asion to _ . . , , ame home one evemng to his: vhich wdl be held ome in Chesnyhaba, Africa. He } Mondav April 21. und l e0 under bis bed iand acticed his eye on him, the 3 hegan to growl, vhereupon e Harold Morton precipitous- l e ft the house, a living wit- s that the human eye magic is ,t what it is “cracked” up to m Anti-ciimaxical as it may seem oseph Vranv of Chicago went me to get ready for the next v's work fell off a chair and ied of wounds. Ordinarily rany works as the riviter on ie new skyscrapers in Chicago. The mgrry chase for ali sorts champions of this and that is ill merrily on. In this era of .g-pole sitting, dancing mara- on, coast to coast runners. e Charles Drayo of Leroy, N. , was eating lunch when he lead a news item which pro- ouneed Emile A. Gilbert cham- ion egg-eater having consumed 6 eggs in eight minutes. Charles kavo got mad, ordered 40 eggs roken into glasses and gobbled em in five minutes. $ It may be bad to get on the |$T0f.'rong sde of the Landlord. JHlfhere is one in Waukegan Wis- 'nsin who has a novel way of IH victing tenants \vho do not pay enb Philip Voss is his name. !i! method: burn down the 'Uilding. $ George Hammonds will always »raise the work of cleaning rat ®les. At least he has a reason t 3r doing so. Recently he dhased rat down the hole and poked stick after it and found $100 n the rats nest. v scene of their Second Dinner-Dance party on Easter Yet it will; not be a complete cut from the ideas and the ideals of the Slo¬ vene Club when they stage the partv .for thev are. intent in making the members aequainted wit'h people of other nationall f ’es and shoving others how ac- : tive and how social they can be' v/hen they get together for the purpose. However, the affair will be very much Slovene for the mem¬ bers will make every effort to h a ve ali the members of the Club: knd their friends present so that as large group of Slovenes car vet together and get acquainted with other nationalities who ar? expected to be present. It is in- teresting to note and with some nride that the Jugoslav Slovene Club is so intently interested in their Slovene that they cannot totally forget it even vhen they are being gay. The Dinner-Dance at the Chinese Temple will he semi-formal and will be the sec¬ ond affair of the kind that the Jugoslav Club is holding in it? ex'stance. Final plans and arrangement? were presented at a meeting of the club that was held last Mon- day evening at the Internationa 1 Institute of the Y. W. C. A. The same meeting was doubly interesting because it vas the evening in which the new offi¬ cers vere elected. As a result of the balloting Miss Johanna Gornik was chosen as the nev President; Miss Jeamm Genie- vive Schneller, Vice-president; Miss Frances Knaus, correspond- ing secretary; Miss Olga Gerzel recording Secretary and Miss Frances Okoren, treasurer. Kip Van Winkle up to date is ;he claim that H. William Lord n make. Though he did not l-ee P f° r 20 years as did old Rip e neve rtheless saw more chang- _ s and more progress after four p^J. ears ®an Rip did in twenty. r - Lord was a victim of am H * J es ' a an( l was suddenly avak- , O % was P er Plexed with / e names Lindbergh, Hoover, Uto ReW s * ze curr ency and sev- [f l ra , °tLer things that took plače Ur mg the last four -years while e w as in a daze. u 1 " w ickford,' England, John J 5 rew put an electric blub on ;, e c ^ a i r and forgot it vas er e sat on it and died of fright ' nen tbe bulb vent “pop." Go °cl things come in small ;^ C age t> was the way people L. Ve ex Pressed it. Nov it is q' a little different. Sally aid 'villing to live up to her S. Y. M. C. Prepares For Fourth Annual Celebration Past Entertainments to be Eclipsed by Present One READV10 APPEAR (I [^sme ra gue Wl *ote Ludvik Ocenasek, a mventor, asking him to et' ler to the moon in a rock- F, f a ,^ be invented. “I am five Pcm' a ° Ur ^ ncbes tMG weigh 138 ^a! 1 ? and am a blond ” is the g a j‘la^ ady Gallant expressed her Ye Editor Note: After much pleading and much begging that copy reach us on time, there are news items and notices that must be omitted from the edition of the Cleve¬ land Journal for vhich they are intended. The Staff is blamed for partiality in cases vhereas the copy does not reach the Off¬ ice in time to be set in type. The Editor and the Sports Ed¬ itor are most anxious to co-op- erate and to give ali the atten- tion to every item that may be interesting to any of its readers but it musit be understood that the Cleveland Journal is trying its best to come out on time so that there will be no disappoint- ments. It cannot even consider copy that arrives in the office later than Tuesday evening of the veek for vhich the items are intended. If there is anything that you have to send in for publication kindly send it in as earlv as possible because late copy can¬ not and vili not be considered. Tuesdav evening is the latest time for revision or for typing and editing the items that ar- rive. Please do your bit and ve will do more than our bit to give everyone a break. Local Scouts Get Honors Eight members ol the Silver Fox Tribe, No. 2, sponsored by the St. Clair Merchants Associa- tion and vhich meets in the St. Clair Bath House, spent their Spring vacation at the Boy Scout Camp at Chagrin Falls ali >f last veek. The Scouts cook- their ovn meals, vent on likes ranging from 1 mile to 14 miles round trip, passed tests, played games and took part in the camp fire held each evening. The boys attending vere: H. Allen, Victor Anderson, John Avster, Max Katz, Frank Vad¬ nal, Frank Kosmerl, Frank O- ven and Clarence Wahlers. Each will receive a special remem- brance from the Tribe Gnide, Mr. Felix A. Danton. John Dejak, quartermaster of the Tribe and a lodge leader vas tihe only member fortunate en- ough to receive his Second Class Badge at the special investiture ?eremony held at the Boy Scout Exhibition on last Wednesday night at the Public Auditorium. Scout Dejak also took part in the covboy and rope-spinning event of the Exhibition together vith Arthur Alich, vho besides had a part in the Indian event. Six boys vhose names appear- ed on the list of Honor Roli students of Cleveland Gatholic sdhools vhich is being publish- ed in the Catholic Universe-Bull- etin, vho attended St. Vitus School, are scouts and members of the Tribe. They are: Arthur Alich, John Dejak, Joseph No¬ vak, William Tome and Joseph Zajc. There vili be no meeting of the Tribe on April 18th, Good Friday. This is in accordance vith a tradition of the Tribe. gJosePb G«Pim*. A s? OJUDAS 'S c a/ s/ar HERE’S A PLAČE TO GO! Saturday, April 12th, 1930 Basket-ball carnival at the St. Clair Batih House, at 7 P. M. Sunday, April 13th, 1930 Passion Play presented by the members of Christ the King Lodge, at the Slovene National Auditorium, at 2 P. M. “Miller and his Daughter" play presented by the actors of Dram. Society “Anton Verovsek” at Slovene Work men’s Home. SENIOR SLOVENE SCHOOL LISTENS TO INTERESTING LECTURE ^HYTHM MARKS JUNIOR SLOVENE SCHOOL REHEARSALS Čast and Djrector Work Hard to Make Success Visitors From 8 States to View Passion Premiere Being quiet after the Boxing Shov does not mean that the Slovene Young Men’s Club has! „ . — „ j ■ , ,. • | Ihere is a note of nervous- ceased to be active in the neign- ... borhood. It vas only for Lentlf ess m the air and a llttle that thev ceased activities inl he f e 18 corrected and a little puhlic. Quietly and unassum-1 thmg is su ^ est )' d ever y thing ingly they are busv as proverb-i carr!es about an a5r of tense- ial bees in getting ready for the:“ ess and tbai ' ,ast naoment anx iety in vhich the break of faih i, Mr. B. Jakac Introduces Mem¬ bers to Periods in Art The management of the “Cleveland Journal” an- nounces that Mr. Ludwig Medveshek, secretary of the Slovene Nat’! Home, is authorized to solicit adver- tising, new subseribers and to collect the subseriptions for the “Cleveland Journal” Sixteen members of the Slo¬ vene school vere again given an- other peek at the fairyland of art appreciation vhen Mr. Boži¬ dar Jakac conducted them thru the galleries of the Cleveland Art Museum, last night. The members of the class vere attentive from the time they ar- rived at the Museum until the time vhen thev disbanded after a valk home from the Museum. Mr. Jakac vas very thorough and gave a complete outline of tihe development of art from the earliest Gothic art to the pres¬ ent day and explained his exam- ple vith pictures that hung on the vališ of the galleries. The tapestries and the carved stat- ues that occupy the galler.v of Gotihie art vere especially inter¬ esting because the figures and the style vas explained in the language of the beginner in Art Apppreciation, as ali the mem¬ bers of the Slovene School a i- e. Mr. Jakac also explained tne composition of the pieces and Turn to Page Four “One-tvo-three-four” “Back »ne-tvo-three- four,”, “right, one-two-three-four” tihe count goes on incessantly and accom- paning the count is the rhymatic swaying of youthful bodies and clumsy legs that are villing to master the steps and are doing it little by little. “One - tvo - three - four” the :ount continues and no one seems to notice the time as it passes sviftly and little by lit¬ tle the steps that !have been avk- vard become graceful and some have assumed something of a charm that only the little ones can have. “One - tvo - three - four” the counting and the svaying con¬ tinues but that is forgotten vbile other things are presented to make it interesting to ali. A group of little actors trying to assume the grotesque and the sprightly characteristic of the little voods-inhabitants their ef forts in that dire^ion are praise- vorthy. Ali the members of the čast are busy vith preparations in order to make the presenta- tion of Sunday 27 a success. “One - tvo - three - four” the counting goes merrilv on and the little teacher vhile admiring the vork and the patience of the voungsters vonders hov tihe general Slovene puhlic vili ac» cept the efforts that are made to keep the Slovene lang¬ uage alive in a plače vhere the s i g n s are dis- couraging. There are multitu- dinous vorries of the prepara¬ tions, of the stage equipment of the help that is needed and there are so fev vho realize vhat it means to put on a production that includes any children. Hovever, Mrs. Antionette Simčič is not disappointed or dis- heartened at the size of the vork she is undertaking. When an occasional visitor chances to come in to see the youngsters go thru the scenes and the acts of the play her 'heart trips hur- ridly hoping that some help has arrived and sorneone else vili volunteer in vork that de- mands so much time and so much patience. “One - tvo-tihree - four” vent! her pulse in rapid successionj vvhen someone offered to design. some lanterns for the dvarfs Fourth Annual Dance that takes ) plače on Easter Tuesday of each; ure 15 made ' ^ 0l ' ^ bad tbe b>as ' year " j sion players are vorried about This year vili be no exception '' be -hances of failure but they to the rule and the tradition that | are anx ious to make their pro- they have esta.blished in -thej ducb!on ^ be Slovene pro¬ past years. This yeai’s affair i duction of its kind in America, vili be different from the others ! an outstanding contributipn to in the fact that it vili be bigger j *- ne Drama,ties of the S to veneš in and better than any of tihe pre-! Cleveland and in America. If vious affairs of like nature that l-’uey are nervous and anxious it has been held. Us not because thev feel that The Lover hali of the Slovene j Gnev cannot put it aerošs but National Home vili be a scene I they are anxious to have it so of gav festivities and there vil! | perfectly done that no one can be much that vili interest any-! 0 ^ a i m an V dissatisfaetion. one vho vili take the trouble to come and have a good time. Johnny Gribbon’s and his Or- chestra vili be presiding in the muiical end of the Dance and that to those vho are initiated in the vays of Jo'hnny Gribbons and his orchestra need not be told anything further. They knov that the ensemble that Johnny nov heads is a real or¬ chestra containing some of the finest dance orchestra men in the city. That in itself is a great endorsement for the An- They have no thoughts that they vili equal the performances of Oberamergau but thev are ambitious to have the play so veli presented that the people vili have an opportunitv of say- ing that they have seen a spee- tacle that vas veli vorth the time to see. The members of the čast have been beti vel y rehearsing the play since Christmas and vith a dramatic piece and a master- piece of a famous and experinced author Rev. P’. S. Finžgar one nual Dance that the Young Men! has no hesitation in recommend- are sponsormg. It vould be only a hali’ truth if the orchesti’a vas depended on to do everything on that eve¬ ning for the young men have turned to be hosts men have ence and have demonstrated it on previous occasions. Their Box ing' Shov last February is an example of the \vay they think ing the play most highly. That recommendation vould be on tihe lips of everyone had they a chance to see one of the rehear- sals in actual progress. What the finished thing vili look is not a matter of conjecture or en- thusiastic endorsement but a sincere recommendation. Ali those vho vili be at the per- vhen t'hey go out to do things.: formance on Sunday or at the In the First Dance of vhich the j second performance on Satur- one on April 22 vili be the day April 19, vili endorse it very Pourth they have succeeded inj hi_ghly, and marvel that a group entertaining more than 600 peo- of amateurs are able to do anv- ple. In the succeeding years they have attraeted similar numbers to be gay vith them in the larg- est social event of their calan- der. There are not many things that the Young Men undertake and that is their policy that those that they do undertake are a pleasure for themselves as veli as for ali the people vho come. “Do only a fev things but do them WELL” seems to* be the way the Young Men express themselves vithout saying a vord about it. and it kept going fast vhen some one else promised to look up the mušic incidental to the plav “The Snov-drop and the Dvarfs. And yet one feels that there is so lit¬ tle that vili brlng a smile of gratitude to the face in thanks for any help offered and anv suggestion given. There vili be much to look for on that night thing so big or so painstaking. The group of men vho are backing the vhole affair are nothing more than plain and or- dinary people vho do their days vork in the daytime and vho are so interested in the Slovene dramaties that they devote much of their time to rehearsals and to perfection of the great- est dramatic event that vili take plače among the Slovenes of Cleveland. Actively interested in, the vhole Passion Play is the KSKJ lodge Christ the King. At or- dinary glance or mention only another lodge of a national or- ganization. But casual look at the personelle of the lodge and the Passion Play alone vili con- vince that-the lodge contains some of the most active men of the communitv. That is one of the reasons that the Passion Play vas thought of and the reason that sueh a large under- for the children have caught the špirit of their teacher in patience) taking planned. They have been and determination to make the thoughtful enough and farsee- play a success. “One - tvo - three - four” the count goes incessently on and the bodies and the legs of the youngsters sving in a much more graceful! way as the count continues. There is a feeling and a hope that the count “one- tvo-three-four vili not be the sum total of tihe people vho vili \ Turn to Page Four ing enough that they secured the costumes and the scener.y; to secure ali members of the čast; been business like enough to plan and to arrange every- thing in sueh a manner that nothing been left undone that vould mean failure or that vould be the occasion for failure. The magnitude of the undertaking Turn to Page Four CLEVELAND JOURNAL J age April loti- “dteiislattii fmmtal >■> Published every Thursday by Tise American. - Jugoslav Prin ting and Pubiishing Company 6418 St Clair Ave.— Cleveland Ohio instead of leaving such things to the last minute and have no opportunity of planning and arranging a pro¬ gram that will appeal, or have a chance to be advertised and talked about. It is wiser to make a plan ahead of time and make it successful rather than to go into it in a hurry and fail and cheerfully blame the public for its disinterestedness and lack of support rather than aceuse ones self because they were not given a half a chance to succeed. i £•» ♦♦♦♦♦* ‘fr *** ****** ^ II 9 ® Fiattc "to Gel Go£n.£ It’s time to get gomg' Days are getting longer and the cool nights are fol- lowed by beautiful days of sunshine and warmth that makes one feel and think of the days that are to follow in the spring and the summer. The air is full of nervousnesh and anxiety to have a motion from the lethargy that seemsto follow the slow season of snow and cold. The spring sun e ven now is'a good invitation to take a walk and to get away from the grind of everyday work. Evervone fetiš that there is a change coming and that the summer days are the days that are most enjoyed and the clays that slip by so fast that one fraction of the things that were planned are accomplished when the leaves turn red and brown and Autumn and Winter are at h and. Summer is the culmination of ali thoughts of the year and the time of the year when • most activitv takes plače. Listless and unplanned activity lose irnieh of their zest when the summer season is in full blast. The Slovenc youth is ho d.ifferent from others and there is in their hearts the same feeling for an outbursč of activity as there is in any other youth. It is time and now to plan what they are going to do during the summer and now is the time to start planning for everything that wili take plače during the summer. Hasty plans usually lead to grand failures that do not invite repetition irres pective of how good the whole propošition may be. Many jk-r an excursion to some out of town plače is a failure bc cause it was enthusiastically endorsed at the latest po Škis IJJbia«-) Conducted by the St. Clair Bfar.cn Public hib: Leaves From Nature BY JAMS On a delightful trip thru the.pace after y° ur voodlands I found a few small plants of Mertensia, or Virginia cowsIip. The leaves now are but two -inches high ; the leaves have a peculiar blueish tint to them nov/. In form the leaves ovate and strongly veined, ! tablished. In actual v. however, the wire carr • ^ charge from the anodN is nected to the gird *° ti % plifying Circuit: th: at| c ath, are rary. Great Books Dr. TIenry Guppy, Librarian of the John Rylar,ds Library of Manchester, England, in his book “The Art of, Reading,” has given us an excellent measure \vhereby ve may judge our read¬ ing. He defines great books as follows: other book. but a new book. J tke stem is smooth and errect | and later on may even be branch- -1 cd. When fully grovvn the plant stands from one foot to two feet tali with light violet-blue flowers ! 1 inch long. Th color of the j but will! cause very disagreeable pains and I suppose that’s why the doctors ufe it in some of their medicines. . ing con nected to tha fn which of ‘ - a course incre?^ NEW USES FOR PHOTO- electric CELL Who v/ould think that the heart of the television, the photo electric celi, could be utilized to extinguish fires, count people, or pass objects of any size, auto- cunent produced by +> energy and makes it T, for practical use. Va 'la| Where arduous task ing have hereto% e Ss of If we are to establish the in-j flower is most delightful and it|matically sort materiala accord- tercourse betv/een the author : cecomes one ot the prettiest of to their imperfections, or t and ourselves, to vhiclh refer- ;our■ springtime woodlarid flow- ence has been: made a‘lready, \v “A great book owes its great- ness to the greatriess of the per- sonality which gave it life. What we call genius is only another name for freshness and origin- ality of outlook upon-the-v/or!d tbought. The book is a great book in 'that it' has sbmething f-resh and original to say, and that it says it in a f-resih and or- hrinal way. It is the utterancc •of one who ha,s himself been Ta 'e to those aspects of life ’ ich he speaks, and who has must listen attentively to what he h,as to teli us, and do our best to enter sympathetically into his tbought and feeling. We must note carefully hov/ he looked at life, what he found it, and what he -brought away from it. We must observe how the v/orld of era. As a rule, if you are loolc- ing. for the cowslip. you v/ill find t along river banks or in mea- dows. Besides fihcllng Mertensia I jbserved that the Mandrake or Mav Apple have buds gtarted. f'rom the robtstock buds an inch r two long are in their way to pehdent upon the easil^ 611 human eye, a mechanic"?' cess may now be sub J thus releasing many Work ^ ? ess monotonous tasks ^ '-ccurate than the the photo-electric celi s.jualiv v/ell, day or ^ bot or,cold weather. 801 An example of th?s; a light is made to fall on spot «si anj AP : til y ,,,t > P ed> c P e ° ir 1*;.. U ah 1 h fe? ; 4».ft experience impressed him, and j the surface of the ground and in how it is interpreted through his personality. In this wav v/e ge t to know tihe man as the man re- veals himself in what he has written. The reiations between litera¬ ture and life are very vital. It is by means of this personal inter- eourse that we are made par- artisfs vronderful fhcultv of takers of. a life v/hich is larger. aking us see and feel with him. Milton expresses the idea sible moment when planning was not possible and when * hst b «““ se ' « «H|» w richer, and more varied than w /e ourselves can ever know of our own individual knowledge and it v week or so v/ill be breaking into t-he sunlight. It is remark- able .for its. large leaves and be- •tuše of these it is at limes cfelled Umbrella Leaf. In the htter part of April and during the first days of May a 'hand- some v’Th’te f lov/er. abod/t the size of the almost-extinct silver dollar is borne beneath the two leaves. It is a peculiar flower inasmuch as it has no nectar to attract insects to cross-poll- enate it, yet the early bees and bumble-bees fertilize it with the rovide safety against explo- j face under exa-mination ai! uons in gas and oil fumaces ? j flected from the surf ace ‘' t j be ] amrt " s -1! m * Yet it can, and has done these things and could do many more of the same nature, that is, of any such character as to provide the slightest variation of light intensit.v. 'hoto-electric package s of supposedly u ^ ^ character are aiitomati«. moved past this spot of" • one of them is without igaiiiP''" 1 -m a lai v.?« Eil' or otherwise defective, it "1 lS2 L - , , - „ . l uomat-icallv thrown mit ' 1 ' The photo-electric celi is tha A device _ |W part of the apparatus wmch j ^ the J. # » changBS the energv ot the hgh* , . £ j vvaves to electric \energy. 'First J ■ Cl s ^ r faees sucS pi fi na there is a glass tube, usuallv al- an organized plan was neccesarv to make a success of the , . .. , , iLevoncl th° ninched meavre hu- Mi— r "*'7 'Ti , ° 1 J blood of a master špirit embalm- Le - yollu Ln ^ pmcnea, meagre mi j nollen sticking to their coats. It Jinaertaking. ■ L/! an( i treasured up for a life! ' m aMity of our every day round. Now is the time for ali fonvard looking organizations , bevond life.” The--preliminarv' to plan- a program of activity for the summer in a well;Mm to ali profitable reading- is rounded program of activities that is not too ambitious ' to th-row open our-whole : nature but will be successful from every angle. ■ gmckehing^ influence of Amusement parks in and out of town are \villing C r1 h a ™ aster ST>int ’ anc! a1 ^ w , . , . . ji i j i • i u i i hm. life blood to flovv freely thru and anxious to ffive concessions that are untninkable i „ ... . . ^ • iV 81 P.S. Oarlvle urpes us to during the amusement park seasons. They are mlling to 1 siMinguish bet.ween the genuine cooperate in securing ehartered 'pašsage to di|fefent T- 0 g es aTU j the mere echoes, be- points at greatly lowered rates. Not only that' a : welljtv/een the men who sbeak for of activities has a chance of success j F-omselves and those v/ho speak i n-n]-g ' ait' tha 'TADArf r)-f othcrS.. Charlotte planned program because of the time that .activities can be advertised and Mg 7 on the report made successful because of the publicity that can be di- „ doe ® he-mean? : Brente Ih a,d. caught .Carl vi e s reetea. . 'meaning when she wrote of Ceo, It will be v/ell for fraternal organizations as well as u Giry Lewe on th _ ^ ! s’s “Ranthorpe,” that ali other groups to plan at this time '6i the ycs.t . on the sho- had read a new book, not a activities that will take plače' during the summer time . repfint, not a reflection of any , is even said to fertilize its own existence into contact with thej stigma ag in aoTne cases the an - tfre-shk strong, and magnetic per~i therg reach out to the tir) of the sonahties, who have enshrined, stigma _ When the petals are themselves in the world’s great ' ljf0ne the fruit gT0WS and is a books. Schoolroom Answers When the fruit ; lemon-yellow fruit ripening v/ell | into the summer. One sees j tibousands of these plants in one ‘The teetih iare the grind or¬ gan. district and thev means unattraetive most spherical in shape. that m* ccated on the inside vitli sd- ver, v/hich is nof, photo-el-ectri- cally sensitive'. A small unsil- vered aperture is left in the side of the tube to admit light. A pkvJnum for other suitable met¬ al) cathode is placed in the cen¬ ter of the tube, perpendieular to tl? o path of light v/hich v/i).l rcne through the sma.il uncoat- j eri surface of the coli wall. This 1 cathode is coated with con- densed- potasium vapor. The light admitted through the ‘win- dov/’ strikes the alkalinmeathodc its energy causing the cathode fo emit electrons which fl.ow to the positively charged anode, the mirrored surface of the tube. This surface serves tv/o nurposes; it excludes the light metal sheets that should b e 'jaiocknig' ' t!h< i, ■< paliat Cl uniform character, or i n gej ing paper for defects, color s to match fabries, ffL d ^ Ali «. „ ^ ^ ky the eye but the electrical, presents a more scientific, pie-ce methodf It is expeci that it vili be much used ia GioV£S - :Ilire. ing earne “Ohio State Engim ou ^ * (jgg /vi? en Pallat in A young girl in the trolleri P eater w vain!y tried to cover her kj credit for with an abbreviated skiiMitlg^g p an . old toper, seated aeross f Eddie’s “Nicotine is such a deadly poi- son that a drop of it on a dog’s ta.il would kili a man.” “Geometry teaches us hov/ to bisect angels.” “The purpose of the skeleton is/to hitch meat unto.” The multi- pl.ieity of this species is rather plain; they spread both bv means of the fruit and by means of an underground root and in- cidentlv. if you are tempted to are by- no from the interior of the celi. i. e., reflects it and its con dueti ve property allovs it to carry av/ay the charge 'imparted to it by the nega.tively charged electrons. The varying light ijfitensities cause a proportional inerease or taste the root, it vere not to dčercase in the minfber of elec- your advantage as the root isjtrons emitted, this in turn caus- poisonous. It ‘is not poisonous, ing a proportional iricrea.se or enough to vrite requiescat .in decrease in the current thus es- aisle reffiarked, “Tha’s ali r lady, my veakness is Komor,” % * Scientists sav that a 20 man on the earth pvould weil 5000 Tbs. on the sun. 'He’d| a prettj- big cinder. Beyo h A doetor can burv hi? i takes* but mistakes will buryj doetor. « ^ v “I’ve rung Ihis doofhellj hours and my girl ansver.” “Make a noise like an* man. Sl&brt Mis4o3?y &£ Slo- veaae Literat si^e Bij F. T. SUHADOLNIK Trubar and three national hyrjjns, the Christmas, tMo Easter and the- hymnal. The lattef are not accepted as thev appear in the Protestant but are edited ac- cording to the original before the Protestants revisecl them for their own use. Three other hymns that ap- pear in the appendix are met for the first time the.y are a Christmas hymn and two in honor of ihe Bless- ed Virgin. S. Era kfter ’ th6‘TMrty Years’ War The depression caused by the constant drain on the resources of the people of Europe in the constant beligerent activities that the people vere slov/ in re- cuperation and. post-var reconstruction. After a time, hovever, the people of Europe and of Slovenia avoke as from a fcad drsam and begari to be slowly ac- tive in the cultural affairs. The first name that is met in this era is that of John Ludvig Schoenk-ben, a son of the mayor of Ljub¬ ljana, vas highlv educated priest. He served as a dea- eon at The Gathedral at Ljubljana and as archdeacon at Ribnica. In his latter days he devoted himself. ex- ciusiveiy to books and to studv. He vas responsibie for the authorship of 83 books that v/ere printed dur¬ ing his, lifetime. The most impertant vas the long needed transiatic.i of the Gospeh? and Epistks v/hich v/:u: : 3 sued in 1672 in Jr s “E vangelllev inu lystov”.. • The Gcspels and tire Epistles vasi the >on’y book that he published - in • Slovenc and therefere has the greatest importance in this ]iterary history. The otfcefs v,-bile interesting in historical content are not impor- tant injiterarv sense. The gospels and the espistles are the revision of Hren’s effort in the same line. Sehoenleben, hovever, corrected some of the things and he added to the .purging of the language ; by the substitiition of Slovene vords instead of the foreign e.xpression of Trubar and Dalmatin. Interesting also is the additional of a catechism Of the most impertant pray.ers and the -most important dogmas and the appendiic of '“CathoMshee! peiffmi. katere fe po Navadi pred Pridige imajo, peiti” The hvmnal coritains four songa that vere airead;/ met in the Protestant hj-mkti: the Ten Commandmcnts of Interested as a man in literature v/as.Mathev/ Kastelic a comtemppfary of Sehoenleben. Kastelic Vas 'bera at Kilovcalh in 1820 and 'later. as pastor at Toplice after vihich he vas appointed the cSnon at the Society of the Brothers of the Ho!y Rosary af Novo Mesto, v/here he died in 1688. As the Periect Kastelic published the manual of the scciet;/,' “Bratovfke buguice ■ S. Roshenkranza. The boo-: -cor.taiiis the--instnictions of the honor and the use cc the Rosafy, the'indulgences connected with the use of the rcsary and similar things. The second part of the publication is devoted to the hymns, med¬ ita tion, 'and Latin hymns. Some of the hymns are accompfi.Med v/ith the notation. of the songs vbile others are unaccompanied' v/hich snpws-th -. t thev vere knovn and no notes vere necessary. The books con- tain man v hymns v/hich vere gathered from ali the various sourccs of that time. Of- twenty poems that appear 11 are addpted from the last eiition of the Protestant Hymnal. Seven of them are those of Dal¬ matin, two are Krelj’s and one of Trubar and one of Kumprecht. The remaining are compolsitions of songe after tihe style .of the early vriters or they follov the prccepts of Latin v I eršificatidn. Some of the songs to the Bicssed Virgin show this early influence as also the “Pohravite Chriftufove Rane.” The others are a cpriglomeration of poetical ideas vhich are neitner ryhmed in any set form. The Ryhme consists mostly in assonance othervise thev do not follov/ any rules. The book vaš issued in a nev/ edition four years later. Besides- the manual of the society Kastelic was responsibie for some other publications that appeared at the ti hi e. “Nebefhki zyl” appeared in 1684 and “Na- vijk christianski” in 1688. The -latter -is an expos : tion ef the catholic religion in the for mof a dialogue be- tvecn father and son. The historian Valvasor enum- erated other books vhich, hovever, did not appear in the printed form. In these is included a nev edition of the Bible—an examination of the contents shov that it is npthjng more than the revision of the Bibič of Dalmatin. Kastelic is also responsibie for the pub¬ lication of the Imitation of Christ of Thomas Kempis. In style and in content the language of Kastelic is characterMic of the interior of Slovenia and the coll- oquialisms are a clear 'indication of the ofigin of the man himself. In purity of diet,ion, the vfit/ngs do not approach the “Gospels and the Epistles” hovever, the agreement of the-parts of sentences are isome- times very good. Kastelic’s “Nebefhki zyl” appeared as a reprint in 1768. 4. Monastlc Authors : Sehoenleben and Kastelic are the tvo names con¬ nected w : th the post Thirty. Ye?r’s War revi val of cecicstical literature. Tov/ard the end. of the 17th century other men took an interesi in literary work and -several poete make their appearan-ce. The Mar¬ ij n m'Franjo Krsto Frankopan, -a Croatian,' made use jf Slovene poems in his “Gartlic za časa kratiti” an nnthologv of poems. He vas actively interested in the dr-amatic vorks- of Moliere. “Gdorge Dandin” vas rende-reri in prose. The work ’was terminated with the ddath of Frankopan and only three scenes of the play vere eompleied. Others vho have an active interesi in poetrv of this are Zizenceli v.fno vrote the in- trodučtory poems to the historical works of Valvasor “Die lEhre des Herzogthmus Orain”. iThough theje k no Slovene literature connected v/iht ‘the vorks of Valvasor he. deserves mentio nin any lit¬ erature of Slovenia. Baron John Vaj kard Valvasor v/as born in Ljubljana and interested himself and sacri- ficed to have his vvork “Die Ehredes des Hertzogth- mus Crain” published, The vvork vas vri-tten in Ger¬ man but its subject matter is an extensive and ex- haustive hištory of the S-lovenea and -a deseription of the culture and the social conditions of the Slovenes of the 17th century. It is -the- source book for ali un- derstanding of the conditions under vhich the Slovenes labored during. the eri tičal times. of a national exis- tance. Tine impulse to better and improve the standing of the Slovenes of the era at the close c !7th and the beginnirig of the 18th centuries- wasi resuit of the intense interest that vas taken by| leligioOs orders among v/hom the most active Gapuchins. Okicsanding in the literary"renaisange of' ; 0C! as. John the .Baptist of the Holy Crossnee He was bo ™ at ,Hbiy Gross in Vipava. His 1 ^ ere vei y v/eil to do and had connest-ions ar?stocracy of the tirne. His father vas a V® u.c.chani ano his mother vas a royaiies of the h - u ' ri ' 1 V • IT s mother vas a Slovene so tivM credi ted"that language to himself. i®| , 178 ' ae 9 me acquainted vith the Ttalian ari - schools he vas taught 'the Latin and the other ■ guages. About 1680 hd entered the GaP uC ^| Iris native town vhere he v/as priest and vas the preacher of the Stajsri^ 1 T* 1 ,* 1 P 10 ritme. He v/as activelv engaged in n r,ne province, in Trieste, Ljubljana and vhere h e died in 1714, - , „ . Jv - aM 0£ bbe Aoly Cross vas a,very educa-t®^ . .■ V A ~* Cl * y s P ea ker carrying .evervthing on f f ,s orat °ry. The populaee from far and nf ?■) o, piesent at his sermons. Many had to Kc inc ‘-^‘Uches because they could o , ' n l Summer time he preacihed un^er t ie J eav f n and had manv follovers. His serm 0 « 5 him-? Ular t f. 1 the time that others of the cier ? i j, °_Pu dsh his sermon notes or at least al L r]gl k alS S0 that could copy them U i " _ ‘" s a ^ult of the frequent requ eSl ' ‘ i to 1 707 " °I ames . tbe vork betveen the Y • ‘ ^he first tv/o volumes 'vere P ubl whn , 6 a " d the remaining three in Ljubija^ tuarium” leS a ^ eared u nder the title “Sacn lR1 fainst E at Some. H ha: p star S forint meh seric d in ra, He red n ang thi he fee «er ; štor: has h: Sdd: 0’Cor a fi) 'i Rts. ir i been Si, e\’' leai P®* E n 1 is fc e . IS ot Seul ! riiiiv, ‘eh 'bo, ■ k 5 % ■Vr . % N 'Uh 'h fo Alt (To b continued) m 0|1 t> -> Or) 1 J lOth. I 9 ” 0 - CLEVELAND JOURNAL Page 3 ŠPORT -By HEINIE MARTIN-- ,,..,,,,., —- I ■ ciKCOiiiBaiBiciiiii l•■aaa■Raaaaa■l laaaaaaaaBaaBaaaai Battle Returns to f^ie Simms, who up until P me that he was mcapa- ,e rated as the best .' Jr'hea-vyweight in Ohio, Ifjtep into the ring at the to 1L Hall Annex, Monday, ' P " in his prestige among the F a fans . Though his injured G prevented him from mak- “his appearance regularly i ing the past vvinter, he is : t« £ r thel# much respected and i Jed upon as the uncrowned atorr >ati, :^J he annua! Plain Dealer ^ 2 ell Gloves Tournament in usedjj Eddie Simms lost a ques- Hij Jhleverdict in the finals to ,|bolored giant Leroy Li-vant,, ho is no\v Professional. Le- 0niati 'l | had' an easy mark for the > sjji final bout, vvhile Eddie had 7#l ;t0 fight his way to the finals by )riI >Si ^ K hmg out Jack Pallat; and ,s ’ ail | p e the opponent that' Leroy| '■' CS ’ l )!i baffied, conditions would ha ve \ no "i keen reversed. dectricaj 1 . « ietitifjj, I WliO is Pallat: is Pallat today is the Golden gloves Champion of 1930, hav- earned that title by knock- Herb Rebrnan. So you Slovene Rali Players Purchased Eddie Zupanič Sold to Wlliams- port; Ray Zorman to Wheeling ' i EngiB & oU ■ ivhen Simms knocked out (Bat in 1929, he really did | 3 ter work than hc was given :dit for. nuns Lost Battle with Young ddis’s last battle was fought nst Ernie Young on Vebru • Jr 5. at the Slovenian National pne. He managed to whip the j (h 2 jo negro handily, aftdr a rather | ou ]d«a slovv start. After the serap iti ,, p ips found that his band wns in uch serious condition that it re-1 Bred iiistant medical atten-; rv )jj ; fcn. He has been resting the Anj-i injured mit; a,t the same time! pg thru light Vvorkouts un-i phe feels ready to box. His j i 0 o’t a S S ca ’2 er i Charley 0’Connell, has! f j r j been stormed with offers v/hich he. has had to re.ject; but now| : ke a«,! ■ ^die pronouneed ihimself; it 0’Connell lost no time ?n| |'-®g a fight. In fact, he ar- j [ped fights on two successive i The first card is being the o® r mote d by Frankie Van, who! Foregrourid: Carl Sprenak, First Row; -Metz (Matt Cetinskv) manager and fonvard; Rudolph 'tain and center; Mike Zivcic, 'fonvard ; John Malovic, center; forward; John Anslow forward ; j guard; John -Barbič, . business Lisch, coaeh;,Jack Gibbons, Cap- J guard; Second Row; Dan Pavlic, John Badovinac, scorer. close« ies« ken t ictive »re a fisticuffer of some repate j* a us PeT in' past davs. This datoj j 1 ?been set for the 14th. The! feraent is a highly ballyhooed gčfinatti Champion. On the! Simms draws anothevj ?b lea.ther pusher, Joe Illich, England Champion. This j. ji is being presented b.v Char- fMarotta and will also feature Scu!ly, the P. D. Gloves jPeweight Champion, against Steeve, a collecian from Chic- T CRELS WIN CITY WIDE TITLE The Orel Juniors defeated the ! i beriv Caps two straight games to win the Class “D” City Wide Ghampionship. The Caps were defeated the first game by four points 21 to 17. Ed Zgonc stared ! v/it h nine points. Sam Zamec | held the Caps scoring act Butch | Fisher to -one foul goul. The j scere The Amreican Croatian Pio¬ neers Basktball team did not win any medals, cups or titles but they did play with aest and in sportsman like manner thru- out the campaign. The Pioneers first'- 'venture in organized bas- ketball was not a spectacular one an no one but an hyperbal- ist could demand a team of tit¬ ula r caliber in its initial year. » , , . I The team consisted of inspir- ot the second game was . , . , , , - i0fl on m , r , i mg material agregated from 29 to 20. Tony and Frank Za- , i, . • , , . . . ,, - vvitlun the ranks of the Amen- krajsek were the stars of the „ - . iri . „ . • , ican Croatian Pioneers lodge No. game scoring 12 and 8 points for! n , , I. , ^ , p,, , „ . . ou3 of the Croatian Fraternal i the Orca. Shorty Bogov,c and The earnest an;i onel .. i Ed Zgonc plaved a swe!l defen-i ,. . „ • „„ rpu i f n, ?" n- spini; of the Pioneers that sive game. The rest of the ... „ ,, . I , . , . , . : hailed the populanty of the bas- championship squad mcludes SPRING' TRAINING WITH THE' AMA.TEURS Chr.ck Zadnik, Tiny Jene, I.-nddie Žnidaršič Orel- Juniors and Eddie Simms Basketball Note: The All-Star- Inter Frat quin- tet met with a reverse at the hands of Lorain’s ex Hi basket- er led the Hocal girls wsth 6 cards shape up as of eham- i points while 0’Leary piled up 14 Univei 'sity. Al is j-^r^ ^' es c ba.mpion of Chicago. n 0 H SI ^ A nnex ^ J°Np -calibre^ aiid the fight: markers for the winners. % no doubt will flock to the--- pf^. see the cream of the . Jm ^ss S q Uare 0 ff Golden !'eers by the score of 19-15. Slap- j Eddie Zgonc, rf. ! A. Zakrajšek, lf. , T '\ Zakrajšek, c. j A. Samec, rg. I F. Bogovič, Ig. JLiberty Caps J Fisher, rf. Perhavic, lf. Sedusky, c. Rosman, rg. . STiofield, Ig. Raskowsky, c: Horrigan, Ig. k-.iball team in the Inter-lodge league last year coritinued in — S,J - VITTJS JUNIORS WIN J: i: St V'+ . •;* vl 'Us was vietorious in the f j’ < fcS-T »attl- * Slov ene Heipis Defeat St. Louis Brov/ns 20, ,six points ga ve way for encour- ?ement. , Sam Zamec former Cathedralj Latin star is to be credited vgith. j the succes? of the Orels in ath- slon in the elimination tourn; letidls. Teddy Miljeno vic pitching ace of the Baker Sweeties, has tak- e:a over the management of the Bakar-Tabor’s indoor bali team vvhich will be entered in class “A.” He had his large squad go through its first practice session at the Sterling Play- giounds Sunday morning. The Bakers of 19S0 will carry many new faces. Teddy pl-ans on break- ing-"lip the old combination and rebuilding a new team. Among j the plavers who have alreadv j p!ayed “A” bali and who are ex-1 peeted to wear a Baker uniform! are: Frank and Ed Jerse, Leftj r | 1-T.bian, Schellcr and Kale, hold- j overa from the Bakers of the j past seasons, Austin, Kickel 1 brothers, Brauer and Kubilus. Tony Milavec, former Gornik and Loyalitp star, is out to earn a fcerth. in the outfield. Budan and Russell are also a pair of bromising youngsters who play- ed with Ted Sports, and are out to make a job for themselves and who will make the veterana hustle to keep them from break- ing into the line-up. ■M. Grdina and Sons Class “C” ase bali team hacl its initial vovkout at Gordon Park Satur- layf Manager Gihbbons had his' sharges play a five inning game m which he cautioned his plav¬ ers to work easy to prevent any ) M -i- ' ' ■ A H ”P 3s t the St. Francis auin-, ”j; K tune of 26/tofb 'Zap | Kuhel, star. first baseman for the Kansas City Blues n the American Association pcf v/as vietorious in to 'th.e Lo- cveland Ali star teams. helped to win a bali game n-zith t mely hits to defeat 8 star ;m d leading the St Louis Brovvns. . maker of the game reg-! X 10 ;Points. He- was;| G-' folsoived by Klopčič and i % r Kube! has been in great lemand 'by major leag/ue ^ ;;r: eQ ny K10 . PC1C auu j t bali clubs, but the Kansas |ečtively. a:nd 5 P01nt3 reS "|| City management wOUld not $ The qj.' part with him. It asked for % tus b0ys lead by ;l a figure far in excess cf " ^^in. ! d , ° gether ,ike a rea t that paid 'for minor - lea- made the guers. However, Kuhel ^ p4f Gd 'T th S0We bn \t Sltould prove his worth this tl?v ep ,,' s ’ n -g mterceptmg and , a N TO ORGANIZE GIRLS LEAGUE Prominent officials are be- possible Injury. He ,was \Veli alling into tjhe, third divi- pleased v/ith the showing of the team., 'oarticularlv with his new find, Howy ’ Berndt. ^he Pioneers eason and come under the Hi ^,r h f 0t . in ^ The s:amft was i| big top nest year. hind a movement to organize a ■ris’ indoor bali lopp. This lor/p may consis-t of eigiht clubs. Blepps, the champions of the . ity, the Geihs' and Richmans, have already expressed their wil!ibgness to enter a leam. The unbeatable Blepp outfit may be broken up and the players clis tribufed to other clubs to equul- ize the league. Among the playeirs on the Richman outfit are Marie Mar¬ io ell assurecl of the' top bertlh at the close, Winning three games in a rov/ the boys received a break, when in a discontented mood would be called a bad one, dropped the fourth to the Moose in the most esciting and tense game of the entire season with a 17 to 16 score. . In the trnek of the campaign; John Barbič, the' Pioneers busi- ness manager dislocated a leg bone in, a practice game with So kol s (Nova Vlast). Barbies abllity and' aggressiveness' thru- out the entire, game made him the outstanding player. He is p, i, hard fighting type and minus hi BiJly jSculIy minus the Services of Eddie Ko¬ vačič. * jk ’ * Nemeth will hold down first base for, the White Motors. Er¬ nie Zupančič will play the out¬ field.. * h Sil ti ■ ' . i" m Ji".U m r __ "ft" Tisovec Sports will be repre- sented with a baseball team in class “C”. Joseph Strohen is the manager and pitcher. the- St. Clair Baih Ai tine&, Mmme Kogoj/ :ind. the Si-, . ,, ,. , nresence m the lineup handi- 4 . kol basketeers Gasparec andl Bill Holevah had his Mlinar Slveets go th.ru the paces at Gor¬ don Park Saturdav. The next v/orkout wiU be held Saturdaj/ at Gordon' Park. Anv class “D” plavers wishing a tryout are asked to report. T $ t Ffahkie Makovec, former Gor¬ nik. moundsmnn, wi!l wear a Telling’š Ice Cream uniform this year. j± It is rumored that Jim Ken- nedy and Vince Coleman, Latti- mer Morrison pitcher and first baseball, resnectivelv have, sign- ed v/ith the Rothbarfs last year ? s \ « A ” | E/idie Simms to Turn Pro % in the event that Eddie’s hands- v/ithstand the heavv 'mpact of his hammering mio n his next two oppon- ents, and lf he comes out g vietorious in these fights g vvhieh areicarded for April |j 14 and 15 at the Public § Hall Annex, he will turu § Professional, accouhling to ® h's manager. (»j ® Tickets for above fights Two local bali diamond heroes trave advanced in professional ranks. Third baseman Eddie Zupanič was sold by Wheeling to i Williamsport in the New York Petina League; while strangely cnough, Ray Zorman, who was with the Hanover in the Blue Ridge Circuit, was sold to Wheel- ing, the club that Eddie played wit!h last year. Ray however, v/ill have Frank Dbljack as his sidekick, who played with the Wheeling outfit last year. The Wheeling manager, Bob Prysock, was very jubilant over Zorman’s purchase and express- cd high praise for Rav. Quot- ing him tih.ru the Wheeling news- papers: “Zorman is the greatest outfielder I ever saw in the minors.” Ray had a great season smack- ing out twenty-one doubles, one homer and pilfered twenty-seven sacks. He leads off, bats left handed, and is a very hard man to pitch to. This. was proven when he drew eigiht-se-ven pass- es. He is fleet of foot and puliš down swats that are marked for extra bases. While in Cleveland, he played with the Fairplays and Tellings. He was also one of the best. basket bali players that romped the courts of John Carroll Uni- versity cage team. Eddie Županje has Great Year Zupanič has been a member of the Wheeling nine for two years. Previous to that, he had been with Sagina,w which is now ex- tinct and also with Texas in the Lone Star loop, Hov/ever, last year he enjoyed the most sue- cessful season in his entire ca- -reer. He batted in tihe clean- up position and was the second best hitter on the team. His average of .336 placed him with- in the first twelve in the league. Eddies’ fielding average was .974. Eddie was a favorite with the Wheeling fans because of his long swats. Last year he poled out eight homers. thirty-two df-ildes and seven triples. He endeared himself to the fans in the very first game by poling one over the fence. Cleveland fans wi!l remember Eddie as having played with tihe Public Service Tires in “AAAT Rosenblum champs in “B”; Tog- gerys in “C”; Jakes Billards in “D”; Camera A. C. and St. An- thonv Cadets in “E”. He got his first start, with the Cadets in 1920. Is a Holdout The Williamsport club feent, a ! telegram notifving Zupanič of j the transfer and requesting that jhe report at once. Hovever, Ea- ] clie is of the opinion that his i good work last year merits hira | a substantial raise in salarv. He wired the officials informing them that unless his demand/ are met he will refuse to re¬ port. ! Blatnik. Turn to Page Four r Basketball Note: , , ri .. , In a hard fought battle the ® are on šale at Gornik s Ha- ®; T • . -ivr,™ ® . . . . ,, ©-Inter Vrat coaches, came -tiom © s,ci‘dashery and at the r ,- , , .. .. Sibehmd m tne second ha.lt to © BimnPs home at 1265 Nor- Si . ,, .. ,, T , - T „ / r , s _ , g;down the St. Clair Merchants ass’ “A." baseball champions. ® " U ' u 0 ^i 21-15. Zaletel registered 9 points The Rothbarts this year will be ©‘T®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®® f or vietors. TO 4 CLEVELAND JOURNAL SLOVENE SENIOR SCHOOL VISIT (From page one) told of the ideas that are be-' hind composition and w:hat made them what they are. He dem- anstrated the change in art -fash- ions and the transition from one era to another in the art world. “Old things are apt to cause laughter and cause smiles, but that is the nature of the per¬ iod in which the art pieces were created. If you should see dress styles of the nineties you would be apt to burst out in laughter but you must learn to respect the ideas of other ages and other times because thev are the expression of that par- ticular age and that particular time and thev were not laughing matters in the days that they were tries. Everything that bas been tried was nothing more than an expression of the age in which the things' were crea¬ ted.” was the way Mr. Jakac expressed it. The Glasš visited ali the gall- eries and the most important works were discussed and ex- plained. Mr. Jakac promised that he would conduct another tour next month and explain some parti¬ cular things that he did not ! have ■an opportunity to touch upon last night. PASSION PLAY SLOVENE JUNIOR SCHOOL REHEARSALS ' (From page one) attend the performance. “One - two - three - four”, “Right, One-two-three-four” the count goes. merrily and the counting continues long after one has left the scene of the re- hearsals. “One-two-three-four” “One-two-three-' , Gre *■*?». Sons. Invalid e;:r and a uto s prvh»r> Funeral direetors HEnderson 2088 A MO.DER L INSTITUT 10 N Dependable and Reasonable MEN’S SUITS EXPERTLY CLEANED 1 AND PRESSED («) If ive coli and deliver, add 25c S ©e (From page one) would believe the statement that. ali the work is the v/ork of people who are not a stock com- pany that does the work pro- fessionally but a group of men who are interested enough to sacrifice time and money and to expend much effort to make it a spectacle worth ali the time and the effort that has been put ihto it. Mr. Pluth is its president and one of the most interested mem bers baving seen the opportuni- ty that .such a proposition would be credit to the lodge and to ali the members as well as to the -vhole community. The officers of the Christ the King lodge K. S. K. J. No. 226 have been conscious of th possi- bilities of the Passion play and they have had it in their mind “or several years but they have felt that up to this year they sv ere not able to measure to its iemands. The first among them vas Anton Pluth the President of the lodge and one of the spir- its responsible for the under- taking. Other officers of the V>dgo are Joseph Grdina, vice- President, Frank Hočevar, Trea- surer and Frank Kosten, sec- retary. Tickets may stili bq obtained at Kushlan’s Kandy Kitchen in the Slovene National Home (they v/ere there ali the time but slie has previously not been mentioned) and at Mr. Joseph Grdina’s Book store on St. Clair at East 62nd street. PERSONAL During the absence of Mr. Leo Kushlan, Mr. A. R. Kushlan will be at the office and attend to any business that anyone has to transact. Mr. Leo Kushlan was unex- pectedly called to*Ohicago on ur- gent business and will be de- tained for 2 weeks. HOODOO TRAILS SIMMS fore long that he is definitely matched. In the meantime, Frankie is going thru his workouts regu- larly to keep in trim, and to be ready at a short notice. There is a possibility that his many Cle¬ veland admirers may see him in action again very shortly. COMRADES BEAT PROGRESSIVES CLEANERS — DYERS 5921 Bonna Ave. Open evenings until 8, P. M. Phone: HEnderson 7123. ® ®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®@®®®®®®®S®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®©®®®®®$®® SLAPNIK BROS. FLORLSTS — Flovvers for ali oceasions. 6113 St. Clair Aveirne ■ JRandoinh 1126 One Store Oni v! Frankie, Simms, prominent heavyweight, has been meeting with ill lučk since his last fight. in which he decisioned Emmett Rocco. First he was matched with Angus Snyder at Wiehita Kansas; but he had to call off the match because he was troub led with a boil and the doetor advised against his battling. Wichita has been anxious to see Frankie mainly on Dempsey’s recommendation. So at a later date his manager, C'harley 0’- Connell, received another offer to have Simms 'battle Geo. Hoff¬ man from New York. The match had been tentatively arranged nending the Commission OKay, when it was found that Hoff¬ man was under suspension by the National Boxing Association. This again put Frankie out. However, the promoters in Widh- ita are very anxious to show Frankie in (their town and it wouldn’t surprise us to hear be- The Progressives were defeat ed by the Comrade boys team- with a score of 19 to 20. The preliminary game was jplayed by the Progressive girls bali team with the Comrade girls. The Progressives ivere vietorious in a close battle with 13 to 12. The Progressives claim the Girls SNPJ title. TOO BAD, LINDY Lindy Kotnik and Stanlev Yaeger, who were to put on a three round shindig of their own as a semi-final to the Ed Simms serap, will have to nurse their grudge along for a while.longer. According to Lindy, his doetor nrolliibits him from doing any actual hard wosrk such as he would be up against in tackling Yaeger. Unless Lindv forget - Doc’s orders he will not appear. —Too bad. BOAVLERS, NOTICE! r RM 9 Z***2 > K*\*'>Z**2> FRANK BUTALA 6410 ST. CLAIR AVENIJE The Plače to Buy Fine Footwear for the Entire Family at a Saving Priče. . * r t i s t' t i T T * t > 1 **« **♦ **♦ «£♦ «$» o*« «£» «£* <£♦ ^ ^ **♦ ^ **♦ •»t* ^ 'V* > t*"*’* < ^ MAEN DRY CLEANING GO. PRESSING, REPAIRING, REMODELING AND DYEING 6511 St. Clair Avehue ENdicott 2940 Serving Ali Religious Faiths C/.EV ELA NI) 'S ■ElffEST EUNEKAL ■HOME I Completc j Funeral Service r Wlth Couch Canket !V» E.i Crein i oou«*ln UaiAKef — „ 4 SFSEntSl Others, $150 to $10,000 DEUTSCH Funeral . Jrlorne ; i'' . .» ■- f -vf A y.iI ^ and Grem ato ry Wade Park and Crav/ford Road O ur Tel ejihohe Nev er Sleeps Cedar, 6580-6581 fiasto* JPhotog iplis „,'2, n/ lIRESH verdure, miki winds, warm skies, new bc:i v— and photographs? Of course; in tb.e fresh, new Eastcr dress. JOHN BUKOVNIK Photographer 6405 ST. CLAIR AVENUE In Slovenion National Home Buildinrj ®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®(!X!)®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®@®®®®®®®®®®® The averages of Inter Lodge League bowlers wil appear in next week’s issue. Office of “Carniola Tent” Lodge No. 1288 of the Maccabees IMPORTANT FOR THE MACCABEES MEMBERS Members of the above men¬ tioned society, who are in need, on' account of sickness or unern- ployment, and cannot pay their dues should not drop out of the lodge because of it. In such cases the Maccabees organiza- tion is prepared to help its mem¬ bers. The Maccabees organization gives loans on the insurance pol- iciels to ali members who ibe- long to this organization for three years. Those who are members since 1922 of the Mac¬ cabees organization, and for some reason or other, they wish to drop out, receive the full am- ount of money, which they have paid into the organization. Ali such members are request- ed to come to tihe lodge office at the Slov. Nat’l Home, old bldg., for full information. The office is open everv Tuesday, Thurs- day and Saturday from 6:30 to 8:00 P. M. Fraternally yours, Felix Strumbelj, assistant sec- retary of the Carniola Tent 1288. COLLINWOOD WHISPERS “The Correspondent” The Progressive basket bali team will leave for Detroit Mich. this evening. They will embark for Detroit where they will play the Young Američana for the Eastern Division SNPJ title. The game is sciheduled to take plače on Friday and the winners will then meet the Stal- warts of Kenosha, Wisconsin. The winner of the tilt at Ken¬ osha will be awarded the Na¬ tional Cup. PIONEER’S BASKETBALL ('From page three) capped the Kapid development, the team had begun. Carl Spret- nak, hampered by tbe effective cold attacks at the latter part of the season was finally order- ed to quit by his physician. Carl was second high scorer on the team with 72 points with only Barbič topping him with 85. His rival s at no time have outscored him and he fitted ablv into any style of playing. Had Spret- nalc been able to finish the com- plete sciheduie the Pioneers would have without doubt land- sd in the lead of the division. John Anslow is not what his name may suggest him to be (slow) but on the contrarv the snappiest little fellow on the team. Always calm and steady. Despite ihis small stature he was able to hold down bis opponent thru thick and thin. He was the only man on the team to play in every game. Dan Pavlic well known for his ability in plaving baseball has proven to be likewise adaptable for basketfaall. After a bad start and unaccustomed to play with the new team m ate s he did bare down only to end up the season in bangup form. He has proven himself an invaluable player when Barbič and Spret- nak dropped from the lineup. Jack Gribbons, oaptain and cen¬ ter was well suited for his po- sitipn on account of his built. Not only was he a good center but at times he would out smart the opponents in favorable man- ner. His experience in basket- ball could well be observed. Metz, well known to many in the Inter Lodge league basket- ball is credited as the best guard on the team. The Denhert of the Pioneer basketball team martered the pivot play with al- most uncanny accuracy. At in- tervals he would outshine the complete outfit wit!h 'his twist- ing, sguirming action. Mike Zi- vic proved to be a greater for- ward than a guard, when he was shifted in the fina! game be¬ cause of necessary changes. The third sacker was a veritable flash when he was given the op- portunitjr. He did not score many points but when he shot they invariably would go into the net or mighty close. , The most useful man on the _ April ^ l| team was none ot/her than t M alovic, who played the m 1 man. Playing center, f' Q 11 -"rd was not un Usua ? at ‘ He played ali th e f °' Earnest^' or guard was not un UsUflI John. He playe J ” - tions creditably. his playing at ali times ^ the team was losing or • 1 Thus ended the season American iCroatian Pion e °!' t,,! basketball witlh hopes to * S S into a loop next campaJ”^ better form thus being a L, n ' ^ čope a title or medal or 6, ? !f ' ‘t* * t* *l* *l* 'l* *l* »*♦♦♦♦ ,♦« ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ v v*H William A. Vidmar! Attorney-at-Law * 212-14 Engineers RU Office liours g, “ 9:00 A. M. 1 o 0:00 P \ r MAin 1195 'i Jlesidmce : KEnmore 2307-M I 18735 Chapman Av 'e, 4 ARE CLASST They keep the shape and color, and have become very popular PORliS For the Easter holidays we will have a special priče $5.06 FRANK BELA) 8205 St. Clair Ave. Cleveland, 0. fflRiST THE KIS LCDCE K. S. K. J. No. 226 presents a čast of 120 Mr. Joseph Grdina and Mr. Louis Oblak, direetors; Mr. Ivan Zorman, mušic direetor m Rev. F. S. Finzgar’s PASSION PLAY SATURDAY, APRIL 13th at 2. P. M. Sharp SUNDAY, APRIL 19th SLOVENE NATIONAL ME 6417 St. Clair Avenue at 7. P. M. Sharp tickets 13.00, $2.00, $1.50, $1.00 and 73 ( .. J. GRDINA, 6121 St n • a m.kushlan, n«,., Box Office. I