! HggggSSZZZz-- I T0 BE FAIR AND SQUARE, TO enCOURAGE AND SUPPORT THE 1 B eST, IS O U R M OTTO CLEVELAND JOURNAL A Weekly for American Slovenes THE FIRST AND THE O N L Y AMERICAN - SLOVENE N E \7 S PAPER PRINTED IN THE ENGLI3H LANGUAGE VOLUME ni- — ISSUE NO. 4 Entered as second-class matter August 2, 1928, at the post-office at Cleveland, Ohio, under the Act of Mareh 3, 1879 CLEVELANdTohIo, THURSDAY, JANUARY 23rd,~193o7~ PRIČE FIVE CENTS OBSER VER U. 10 BALKANS PERFORM walnut mr Campaign for Fimds Be- gan Yesterday Souveniir hunters are causing much damage to famous collec- tion of art exhibit that is housed in the galleries of Fontainbleau. The building has 200 rocms and' only twelve guards who cannot ade- quately watch every visitor that comes to examine the vvorid fam- 'ous collection. Money or rather the lack of it is blamed for the condition that now exists. The pocketknife has been disasterous to the table on vvhich Napoleon dgned his abdication, pieces are cut out of it by the curio collect- or:-. Wall tapestries have suffer- ed the itch to gather some famous imperative need of the University After ati unselfish Service of ah most a half a century and not a word of complaint from the Jesuit Fathers themselves is the : ervice record of that educational institu- tion John Carroll University. Now however it has become imperative that larger quarters be acquired so that the city of Cleveland can retain it position among the cities of Anierica. 1 he Universty of John Carroll has launched its cam¬ paign yesterday arid is appealing to the people of Cleveland to help it get out to the property it has acquired some years ago. 7 he need of new buildings is an PIayers Coached for Feud PIay pieces of art exhibits. The palače clocks are suffering from neglect of being wound. Formerly a man took čare of the little work at the exhorbitant priče of $20 per year. Now he has been discharged be- cause such a luxury cannot be af- forded by the depleted treasury. f + Impressionistic art has broken the tradition that has been kept at the Louvre. Three rooms will be devoted to the exhibit of the master of the new school of art. Three new rooms that will house the paintings will cause the chang- ing of ali the art pieces that have been acquired by the Louvre dur- ing the last 50 years. Ali the later paintings vvill have to be regroup- ed including the collection that was transferred from Luxemburg. The Louvre approval must be a consolation to the fiery and Pro¬ gressive art movement that was led by Mhnet, Degas, Monet, Sis- leyvand Reonir. The old masters will turn over in their graves when they learn of the approval. Bravery is of various tints and testures; sometimes its shadings are not easy to assay. But there is no doubt about the gallantry of Leut. Joviče of the Jugoslav First Infantry Regiment, who will henceforth wear his right sleeve pinned to his tunic. Leut. Joviče was lecturing to a class of recruits on hand grenades. The vveapons pin fell out. While the rookies flung themselves to the ground the subaltern ran to the Ivindovv. No help there; tthe barrack yard was filled vvith soldiers. So he timed the grenade—and waited. c Boa coosijrictor: are jresolute repitles. In the Cincinnatti Zoo Many Slovene Alumni of the school vvill be willing to verify that fact. Many of the Slovene Professional who claims the institu tion as his Alrna Mater and he vvili be able to teli that even in the years past there was a need that sometbing be done about the con- ditions that are the čase at the antiquited buildings on the West Side. Now more than ever is there i need to get into new quartes when the increasing num- ber ofcollege students have long overcevvded the buildings that vvere jitended to accommodate half ne number that a! len d. But the Jesuits themselves are not ctnplaining as far as they are persoally concerned and they are willir( to stay in the plače that they iow have but the demands on th( school have grown so great that is necessary to find new I quarirs to accommodate ali that make yearly applications to at¬ tend. No restricting the membership of th school to boys of only one faithhe John Carroll University is apealin.g to ali Clevelanders and d the population of Northern Ohiojo help make a dream of a greatf institution a reality. Laoratories where Science is taugh is overcrovvded with the stud^ts that must be accommo- datee the library of 35,00 books is aringed into closely arranged stackj that does not alow it the use [at ali those books can offer Schoi rooms are used continually by t? boys and it is a problem of tiffic to juggle the hours so that II the courses of instruction TVith nothing- more than a Walmit Tree vvhich has become the center of a feud betvveen tvvo families vvhose estates adjoin witb that tree on the lot line, the play “Zaradi Oreha” the presentation of, the ' Dramatic Club “Balkan” vvill have an opportunity of portraying ali the loves and the hates and the personal affairs that take plače on fhe two estates. Interest in the youngsters love af- fair and the bate of the older people and the convincing- conclusion will tax the members of the čast to the ut- most when they appear at the- Work- mens’ Home on Prince Avenue on Jan 26. But the members are not worrying- about the task before them they have rehearsed and perfected the parts to such a degree that they will be very convincing- to ali \vho come to see the play. To dispel ali the dovvnheartedness | A Plače to 1 ! Go Saturday, January 25th Lake Shore post No. 293. Dance at Mervar’s Hall. Sunday, January 2Sth Slov. 'Dramatic Society Ivan Cu nkar that. may come as a result of the play the Balkans have provided to a ! ,t,- Performance aft- ernoon and evening at" Slov. National Home. Slov. Dramatic Society “Bal¬ kan!”, Performance at ' Slovi* Labor Auditorium, E. 109 St- and Prince i Avenue. Loyalites Annual' Show Fes¬ tival, at Slov. Home, on Holmes avenue. Girls’ Bovvling Tournament at 2:30 P, M*. at Del Young’s Bovvling Alleys, E. 123rd St., and St. Clair Avenue. Thursday, January 30th have a dance after the performance Novelty Dance by Arcadian vvith the Verovsek 'Orchestra per forming. .. The Play and the Orchestra will be of first class and with those two the third—the, refreshments - will be of the same quality. January will be well spent if it is spent under the management of the Balkans. Arcadians Prepare for Club Dance Thttrsday, is their Big Night Taking into concideration the number of tickets sold up to the present time, and the cbuntless promises made, the Arcadian Club is looking forvvard to enter taining one of the largest crovvds that have attended a dance at the Slovenian National Home at E. 65th and St. Clair Avenue. The date —January 30th, 1930. This is to be a novedty dance, and to the multitude of expected patrons the novelties will be a distinct surprise. The, members of this organization are leaving no stones unturned to make this one of those evenings that are rare. The, Arcadian Melody Pilots will render the tantalizing fox- trots and s.weet vvaltzes in their ov/n inimitable way, and they are preparing a special program 1 for that evening. So again they invite their friends and at the same time warn that it will be to their advantage to make arrangements to be pres- can e given. The shortage ofjent January 30th 1929 at the Slo- tate ing rooij has in the last year necessi- the use of class rooms dur- ie noon hour where classes are .ught when a part of the stu- denbody is at lunch. These con- a 24 foot jungle exhibit at pigeon . , , , • 1 & ditns are real and can be veri ration and got a blanket as vvell. Both hord and the vvollen square vVere swallowed. Attendants could not persude the snake to riedby any of the Slovene stu- den who now attend the Univer- discard the blanket, not even with hooks and a tug of war pulling. Ali they could do was pour a hali gallon of oil after it. - v An artificial lake to hold 220,- 000,000 cubic meters of water, in the northern part of the Eiffel region is Germany’s latest, plan for Hydro manufaeturing develop rnent. Its cost is estimated at 50- 000,000 marks. Since Holland is to defive some henefit from the Project, effort is being made to induce the Dutch government to assist. -i * , t If you were chilled to the bone with Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Murders of the Rue Morgue” it may interest you sity bw much the city of Cleve- lan appreciates the education Caijll gives Cleveland at a tui- tioihat is almost one half of that at ther institutions will be an- swed at the close of the present capaign. OOD LUČK DANCE venion National Home at E. 65th and St. Clair avenue. Club, Slov. Nat’l Home St. Clair Avenue. VVVVVVVV Vera Candon Comes Home After Accident Recovery Permitted Trip From Columbus “Be it ever so humble there is no plače like home” is stili true for many people and it was par- ticulary true for Miss Vera Can¬ don. Late last Sunday night pr maybe it was very early Monday morning and Vera has had the thrill of seeing the inside of the house she calls home for the first time since Thanksgiving. And vvere she asked vvhether she would prefer to stay home or re- main on the cot at the Columbus hospital she vvould be ready to he ladies of Lodge No. 2 SDZ vvigive a chance to locate lučk tcany and ali who will attend thr big Good Lučk Dance. The dee will be held at the Slov. Nktional Home St. Clair Ave„ oSaturday, February 1 st. Big LOYALITES SNOW DANCE The jury on the l.oyalites’ Enter- tainment Committee has chosen the 26th day of January for their an- nual Snow Festival. On that day ali the neighboring' lodges, near and far, are cordially invited to attend this monstrous af- fair. The committee in charge has promised to leave nothing undone in order to give you ali a run for your money. The Arcadian Melody Pilofs, \vith- out whom a Loyalite Dance would not be a Loyalite Dance, vvill, as us~ ual in past. years, again this year be with us, more popular and -peppy than ever. January 26th, 1930, in the Slove¬ nian Hall on Holmes Ave., at 8:00 P. M. The more that attend, the merrer! C. 0. F. LODGE Slavic Lodges Combine in Large Initiation One Slovene court of the Cath- olic order of Foresters and three other Slav cburts have United a joint initiatiorl of the new mem¬ bers. I_a:t Sunday was the day in which the new members have become .aequainfed with the, nevv ritual of the Foresters. The vvhole initiation class con- sisted of more than one hundred candidates fifteen of vvhirn wbre Slovenes, belonging to the Little Flower Club of 'Newburg. After the ceremonies the old members and the new were en- tertained at a show and vvere served with refreshments. The Slovene court, The Little Flovver has been organized only a few months -ago and in the meantime has succeeded in enroll- ing 62 members on its books. Tl^ey jhave ; j won first p!rize for gaing the most members in a membership campaign and the class of last Sunday though not the prize vvinning number has in- 'creased the membership to a nevv total and the court is planning very many activities in the fu- ture. Jugoslav Slovenes Hosts of Magyars *‘Backwardness” ProducJes Much Fun The Backvvard Party given fbr the Magyar : girls by the Jugoslav Slovene Club Club was success- fully “backvvard” in entertaining last Monday, January 20. The “backvvard” idea added a unique iest to the program, vvhich vvas arranged by Miss Genevieve Schneller. To begin vvith, every- one vvore their clothes backvvards. The styles certainly vvere amusing, but on the vvhole they suggested some very clever fashion ideas. The games vvere excitirig and prizes vvere given to those vvho outmatched others in the “back¬ vvard spelling bee.” To crovvn it ali, Miss Martha Suhadolnik prepared an ali home cooked luncheon, kranjske klo¬ base sandvvitches, potica, krofe, and of course, coffee and punc.h. It vvas a feast fit for a king, cun- ningly and artfully served. And, if vve must admit it, it helped to find the shortest route to the guests’ hearts. PERSONALS LEGION POST DANCES The Lake Shore Post No. 2 73 surises vvill be in store, and the vvill entertain its many friends e;rtainment committee is secret- lpreparing something vvhich that the first edition of that vvork j pfnises to be very exciting. Ad- has been found in a pile of second i nsion to the location vvhere your hand books. Published in Philadelphia j ac j j uc k w j] j be vvaiting vvill be in 1848, it was bought for $25,000 5Q centg _ go a jj yQU “ gooc j hy Owen D. Young. Only tvvo other , . , . ,, , , , lk seekers do not miss this op- copies of the book are known to esist. Jrtunity. vvith a dance vvhich vvill be held at Mervar’s Hall, E. 60th St. and Bonna Avenue. on Satufday Jan 25th vvith a special program prepared by the entertainment committee, a good time is anti cipated. Musič for the occasion vvill be furnished by Novak. Vera Candcn promise an arm or tvvo rather than go away from home and spend endless hours in loneliness. “Home, I'm home” vvas the first tning she could say vvhen she vvas brought into the house and there vvas a smile as broad as the heavens in spite of the hard trip she haa had on Sunday afternoon and evening. She vvas home and that vvas ali that mattered. The pain vvhich vvas increasing igreat- er because of the trip had no ef- fect on her feeling at the thought that after three months she vvas at home again. Even the treatment and it vvas painful - lost much of its terror vvhen she knevv that she vvas at home. Now she feels that under the čare of kindest of ali nurses—her mother—she vvill get along mar- velously fast in her recovery and it vvill not be long before she vvill be fully recovered. Whether that is the čase is another question, the most important as far as she is concerned is that she knovvs BIRTHDAV DANCE Novelty to be Feature of the Evening v Four years have already passed since Comrades have appeared among the lodges of the community and as a date that is important in the life of any organization the Comrades vvill celebrate it vvith an real honest-the- goodness Fourth Anniversary Dance- The dance will be held in the upper hali of the Slovene Auditorium on St, Clair Avenue under the musical di- reetorship of the Arcadian Melody Pilots. The Comrades have a' real some¬ thing to talk about vvhen they talk about the Fourth Ainniversary of their organization. In the past four years they have accomplished and set nevv records for things that other or- ganizations have not accomplished in five or six times that length of time. They vvere the first English speaking lodge of the S. N. P. J. to organize in Cleveland and in the meantime they have gotten more members on their books than have been enrolled in so- cieties of twenty years standing. This is due in part for the activities they sponsor and in part to the hospitalitj- and sociability of ali the members vvhen they entertain. Their past do- ings and dances and the entertain- ments. that they have staged have been the talk of the eommunity in the past. One Lake Ride under their auspices in 1928 has been more sue- cessful than that of any other or¬ ganization in the city. In the next year they have staged tvvo rides that have had suceessful follovvings. The Fourth Annual Dance that vvill be held on Feb. 8 vvill start a pre- cedent that has never been attempted by any other organization that haa held a dance in the Upper hali of the Slovenian Auditorium. This vvill be the first dance vvhich vvill be held that the upper hali vvill be decorated, The preparations to make the hali look attraetive and ornamental are be¬ ing- now undertaken and the prospeet is very goo. “The decorations” ac- cording to the committee, vvill be of such a nature that they vvill surpass anything that has been. undertaken by any g-roup of people. Added to the decorations the Blue Hour from 10:30 to 11:30 vvill be an added feature of the evening. The orchestra needs no introductior and the Comrades are anxious to hava ali the other lodges come to the af- fair and make it a grand occasion to become mutuallv acquainted at -the Fourth Annual Dance of the Com- rades, that vvill' be held at the Slo¬ vene Auditorium on Feb. 8th. Kushlan’s or any one of the mem¬ bers can supply you vvith the t : ckets that cost only 50 cents. B. S. A. ram Scout Gets High Recogni- , tion Steve Trebeč, 567 E. 200 St., pbesident of the “Progressives” in Euclid vvas taken to Glenville hospital, vvhere he successfully undervvent an operation for ap- pendix. Friends are invited to visit him. Mrs. Barbara Česnik, 1 4402 Sylvia avenue returned from the hospital last vveek. Friends may novv visit her at home. “Martin Krpan Cankar Play Folklore Hero to be Re- Iived in Play : Berdaus vvas before the city o Vienna and demanded the daugh- ter of the emperor as one of the ladies for his harem or the city of Vienna vvould fall into the hands of the Turkish hordes that vvere encamped before the gates. And there is only one person vvho could save the emperor from the situation and he vvas Martin Kt- pan. That is the central theme of the nevv production that the Dramatic Club Ivan Cankar vvill stage next Sunday at the Slovene Auditorium on St. Clair avenue. Amusing, interesting and giving a chance to display a vvcalth of acting ability Martin Krpan prom¬ ises to be one of the outstanding plays that vvill be produced in the current dramatic season. There is ample opportunity of shovving the best that there is in the reper- toire of the local dramatic club and Ivan Cankar is not lax in do- ing the utmost. This they have proved on former occasions. Cos- tumes of the most ancient Slo¬ vene times vvill make the produc¬ tion colorful and a pageant of beauty, and the theme of the play itself vvill be interesting enough to everyone that the vvhole per¬ formance vvill be :uccess. Krp an is a legendary that the combination of being home and the nursing of her mother are a combination that cannot be beaten vvhen recovery is at stake, She stili lies on the bed vvith her back bandaged and unable to move and must be tended to for the slightest cares but she is there smiling ali those smiles for vvhich she became so popular and have vvon for her such a host of friends. Though it may be trying at times to have a smile vvhile the vv-ounds pain more than ordinary she does it much better novv that she is at home. The Boy Scout Movement provides a program diversified enoujg-h ,to meet the needs of ali boys. This pro¬ gram has been so deftly built up that it provides for the city boy, the bos in the suburbs and the boy on the farm and in the small town or vill- age. Under the -supervision of the Department of Rural Scouting, thou- sands of country boys have an op- portunity to enjoy a Scouting pro¬ gram especially adapted to their every day needs. Country boys have difficulty owing to the problems oi travel and farm tasks, in meeting at stated intervals wih other boys. For them there is a special rural pro¬ gram suitable for an individual or small groups. Thirty-six of the eighty-nine Merit Badges in the Boy Scout vocational guidance program are on subjects pertaining- directly to country boy activities and farm- ing. The bo’y Scout Program does not aim to turn a country boy into a city boy, or vice cersa but it does seek to give to each a distinct pro¬ gram and opportunity for advance- ment and reinforcement in connectio:! vvith his ovvn home and the busineps of his family. Empasis upon its sev eral activities vvill be made by the Boy Scouts of America during the vveek in vvhich it celebrates its 20tb (Continued on page 4) Martin Slovene character of gre strength and at the same time a smuggler of salt from the coast to the interior of the country. With the inroads of the Turks in¬ to Slovenia and consequently in¬ to the Austrian Empire they final- ly arrived as far as Vienna and threatened to put an end to the vvhole organization and eubject- ing it under Mohamedan rult and they almost succeeded in the ef¬ fort. In the army of the Turks Ber¬ daus vvas the leader and the granc: shiek So proud and tyranical that he made demands upon Emperor John that he surrenders his ovvn daughter if expected any mercy at the hands of the Turkish sol¬ diers. The daughter out of self sacrifice vvas vvilling o undergo the bargain, poor as it vvas for her- self, so that she may save the na- tion. Emperor John did not fa- vor the plan and remembered that on one occasion vvhen his coach vvas travelling dovvn the road he met Martin Krpan vvho to accomodate the royal coach iift- ed the loaded donkey from the road vvhile the coach passed a- head. This memory in the life of the Emperor became vivid at the predicament that he novv faced. He knevv that there vvas only one chance of victory and that lay Irt the finding of Martin Krpan and arranging a personal duel betvveen Krpan and Berdaus. This vvas ea- sily arranged as soon as Krpan vvas found. As a result of the match Krpan overcame the op- ponent and beheaded him thuS saving the nation. That is the folk? lore of the famous legendary hero Martin Krpan vvho has fascinated many boys and girls vvho knoW any Slovene or are acquainted, vvith Slovene folklore. Next Sun- day the vvhole play vvill be repro- dueted on the stage of the Slove¬ ne Auditorium and many older, men and vvomen vvho have rne- mories of the olden days vvill be able revive them and the young vvill be able to get a glimpse into the life of the Slovene folklor® and a look at the Slovene her<3 Martin Krpan. T Page 2 CLEVELAND JOURNAL ‘(Elmlani) Immtal ff Published every Thursday by The American - Jugoslav Prin ting and Publishing Company 6418 St Clair Ave.— Cleveland Ohio j the milling crowds that are satisfied with mediocrity It is possible for any person with an ordinary brain and an ambition to withdraw himself from the competetion of the cro,wd by moVf\g' upward toward a level which most people will not take the trouble to attain. ♦!* ♦> v v v v v v v v v v v Lea ves From Nature BY JAMS < 4 1 which had been gathered on th ,;.*❖❖*********$ j: f the Himalaya Mountai ns ' 6 sI °Po s *j*j The seeds were sown j n ", ❖ i reath*glass, where they ren . eds '*• j* three years‘. At the end of ts ! driveway. So it has been nešJ^uj I :_<-1__ . 4r W fl«, % i tfiey vere set out along Sann Sl Avenue, which was then a tll %| Ex LiWis Conducted by the St. Clair Branch Public Library. ... ,! years since these “trees 0 f o " a fine tield trip 'you canj There are many different kinds 01 j began rea ching their n,- moths and butterflies that yo.u may | towards their Mak a '"“"s K."* in your hunt, some chifanous | j sfey This half-ce^v? and other wi-th a slik j ^ aippn( . fnr S]]rpfv ^ ha s ^ OUTSTAND-ING BOOKS OF Continued Ellis, Mrs. Anne Life of an ordinary vvoman The autobiographjl of a Woman who grew up in the environment of Vestern nriMing* >canips. SH-3 Itelts th« stpry of her childhood, vvith. its lpoverty and harc)ships bult wealth of experience and associations". Anne Ellis grew to womanhood, and, vvith the 1929 Seabrook, Magic William Buehler island First-hand revelations of voodoo- ism, necromancjn and blaok magic fill the first part of the book. Mr. Seabrook went to iive in the mount- ain jungles of Haiti vvith the family of Maman Celie, a voodob priestess. jHe was initiated into the cult hy her. These and other vvlld, barbaric rites he describes, and in the latter part of the book repeats stories of sor- * * -Y- Dceping, Warwick it oper’s Row Ohristopher’s mother lias sacrific- ed greatly to put him thru medical col lege. And for her sake Chris has suffered, Vvithout retaliation, the ' i 1 * 7 | sr.eers of his fellovv students at nis: lameness and his difference. Ruth! Avery who rooms in the same hotiSe in shabby Ro.per’s Row loves the carnest, pale young študent, and Tke his mother vvants nothing better than •to serve him. After they are married Cora ! “'Gora” presents the Schvvieterts, a German immigrant family, under- going the nainful process of Ame- ricanization in a little Iowa towr. and, later, a factory city.- Out of this root the life of Cora, the most pro- vocative and airibitious member of the new generation, flovvers into a thoroughfafe is located JOBS There are three kinds of jobs in this world: jobs that anyone ean fill, jobs that almost anyone can learn to fill, and jobs that reflect the personality of the per¬ son who fills the job. In the same proportion the jobs are selected for a gre at numfaer of people or rather the greatest number of people hold the jobs of the first class, because they are the ones who need very little training to hold. Of the second class.there is a smal- ler number because every one cannot be sufficiently j trained to hold the more partieular job. To the second i her marriage to a miner and the cery and vvitchcraft gathered in class belong the specialists who by their training and b ’' th of ' he . r ch:idre ' 1 . '' ved llfe full >' vanous circies of Haitian societ y o (j J , J1 ° . . i as hhe foun(1 +> »t the same time from the most primative to the by their natural abilities can easily command the job. j buiiding U p, in so far, as possible, most cuitured. They however are many in number and they are easily T ultu I' al . smTOUndings for herself ^nd *** replaced by others who are just around the corner toj a „ e xtraordtoary, rather than an 0 r- fill the job as soon as it is vacated The peculiarity of the- d; nary woman. jobs of the second class is that the vvork is not extra-! rp Am °”« th)e v are crowding the libranes, “The ordinary that it vvould take a lot of hard training to qua-irfe of an ordinary vvoman” makes lify for them for the fact is many are capable to do, 0 "" , of the few real contrl butions to .. . , ,. , , , , , , ,, , i the history of the American people. that sort of work and could easily qualify but they do not take the trouble to prepare themselves. Then there are people who carve their own work and make the job themselves and make that work in~ dispensible. They are the'yerv few people who have stamped their work \vith their personality and they stanci alone. If any of the- last iclass were to step aside and discontinue the work thev have attempted to do there is no one who can complete it for them. Thus Joseph Conracl did not finish his last and probably greatest work in Suspense. Now there is no living author who can complete the work in spite of the $25.000 of- his success is iar ge iy due to her faith fer for a good conclusion of the novel. His personality I ^ 1 cS was so impressed into that work that no one can attempt P kfHy. to complete it successfully. Stuart’s unfinished portrait of George Washington is suffering from the same loss of personality. It is the same with thousancls of teachei": : artiats, scientista, journalists, business men, inventorsj n amba comes out of the darknes« and others who have macle a job for themselves (not of t'harieston’s undervvorid, the cat- fitted into . job) that are the most missed men they are no longer among the active. j fo the sake of the distmction which This enviable position does not belong to a fe\v|*ouid come to her from being con- , , . . -it „ T „j inected vvith quality vvhite folks. The people because they are extraordmary people e»dowed st0 , y of o]d Mamba> her daughter with marvelous intelligence or an extraordinary talent, Hagar, and Hagar’s chiid Lissa, runs but people who with a patience and a normal mind «t yo» can hoP ! oc f 0 ° on because the, nd polypbemus cocoons ;ve rather « 0 ®“® n gathe red your col- 1 , When you bave « la , ge glass ny put them mt t \em every lobe and m Maich J pursev | c logy? p#. gjlOl •*ay. The moths .'^btaidei hues are; 2nd Stude — Did I- I Kot diesand delicately biena ; {or three new vvisecracks to p K L f v never ending source o --- my flivver! Lpic ___ _ ___ _ _' , \ *I ! jCfO 1 * 18 Street of Xm« Trees ^ id man I ever v.-itty sayings.’ ‘‘Yep, we call him epigranip a .. <11 1 st Stude - Hid you p ro f it p.of, Dugdale’s lecture on a »thiJ . gett t Lh» ; i n vvith that school teacher i le >. i on now ? - 8 «fp ihis is the story of a street vvhich lectric light bulbs are in tnree m- mg uii . nv chiid (or grovvn-up) ought to be lors, red, green and vvhile. Eacli j Foote — Well, every time h. t” tree is lighted -mth three to se her she keeps him rproud to live on- Christmas Trees an T T T He svard, Du Bose :ilamba’s daughters thorny biooming. At the end of the rtory she is a modern vvoman vvith a plače in the communit.y and a pro- | sperous business of her o wn, a srrtali | daughter to choose frocks for, a bad | marriage safely behind her and a series of dinner engagements, vvith not impossible suitors ahead. “Well,” say the neighbors, “that girl has! got somevvbere.” -f * ?. ' \Vharton, Mrs. Edith Nevvbold Hudson River bracketed Mrs. Wharton’s curious title re- | fers to a type of American arehitec- ture popular in the last of the pe¬ riod (1842) as “Hudson River brack- eted,” and mueh of the action of the story takes plače in the setting of an okl house vvhich vvas a perfeet example of this style. The novel deals vvith Vanče Weston, a young lite- rary genius vvho comes to Nevv York from a ravv Middle West. tovvn and discovers, vvhen ieft to brovvse in the Lbrary of this old house, the ricli background of culture vvhich he had lacked. Helil dovvn by poverty and his pathetic child-vvife, Laura Lou, and snurred bv his intellectual m pa n ionship 1 vvith H a 'h Tar r ant, artist struggles to are in (three red, _ the Street of the alternate tree is lighted Wth three to se her she keeps This vvonderful streamers of bulbs, vvith tvlenty-five i onger for being naughty. the little‘bulbs to the streamer, or seventy-; Q city of Altadena, California, a beau-! five bulbs in ali. The vvire used for; Teacher tiful suburb of Pasadena. the electricity in lighting tle douole ? Throughout the year it is a vevy vovv of Himalayas is in eicess of Harry — The nevvspapers say Jeb eC lovcly street, indeed, but during 20.000 feet. | :ountry is stili unsettjed. ‘ kan Christmas vveek it takes on such ad- Thousands Vievv the Sparlacle j , 'fn# 'iiti rnal beaut.y that thousands of The illumination begins ©eh year Ella Vator —- My husband SiieJl® 81 ' people from alk parts of the country: on Christmas Eve and pontinues a n his špare time reading dctec-# 381 dri ve down its one-mile length to gaze) thrrugh Nevv Year’s Night. Every j s tories. fill Harry, when was upen its grandeur. On either side the avenue is lined vvith Himalayan cedars, their lovver branches, vvith a •pread of about forty feet, grace- fully svveeping the ground. There are almost two hundred of hese trees, each measuring about eighty feet in height. Their branch- tips are defisely set bluish-green needles and the branches, unlike tbose of most species, grovv dovvn- waid the trunk, rather than up. The čustvom of illuminating the trees for the Christmas season vvas begun in 1920, vvhen the Kivvanis of Pasadena conceived the Idea. The pvoject met vvith such enthusiasm, and so many visitors ca me to vievv the displav the first year, that the club decided to make it an annuai avent. In the beginning, lights vvere plačed on only a few of the treeS, but each succeeding year the num¬ ber has inereased, unt’l in 1928 the bulbs used totaled 6000. These c- 1882 they vvere planted fiim seeds night throughout the vved Christ- ma:i Tree Street glovvs ioldlTully from five o’clock until ter. During the e hours the traffic is si henvy on Santa Rosa Avenue (as it s prosaic* ally called except at Ohristnas time) that a great number of trffie offic- t's are called into service.These Of¬ fice :s are vei*y ably assisttl by hun-1 dreds of Boy Scouts. Upoi eni -ring the Street of the Ghristrtis Trees. eacli dri ver is reouested tt tura off the lights of his car. Thus oniy the g-lovv of the colored tree lights is seen. With the majestic snw-capped Sle it a Madre Mountains , looming darkly up ahead, the visionis an in- spiring one These beautiful trees, vhich are so magically rnade to prolaini the 'Špirit of Christmas, are minbers' of the cedruis deodora brane of the cedar family, and are usudy called deodars, “trees of God.” Back in Eddie Torial — What a crime f c |ndical> Mrs. Rapper — So she fimjT # “ l * s managed to reform her husband!| Mrs. Knokor — Yes, bubo finally stepped in and gave her atggil BAKU !ift - m - 11 . u idile They vvere discussing the educatk of their children. “What’s yourfc r go : ng' to be vvhen ho finishes |Kovitch Yale ?” asked one. L a(1 “An oetogenarian, I fear,” the ott f B t a ] s replied. Mrs. Highbrovv — Does youi [fram Tee;, a dtar.v vvhile at college? PABTANS Birs. Putton-Ayres _ Yes. fc™ vaves ali his check stubs. tterlin <| preb Defense Council (vvhispering) .P a!1 Jerry, the jur.v has brought infchlgenmth sealed verdict in your čase. r ot8 l s Defendant — Wall, tell'de co’t f neednT open it on mah aceount. ^ r SKort History of Slo* vene Literature Bij F. T. 'SUHADOLNIK Farhj Fviiluric* fo 1500 A.D. after ven’ reising mami- \vould slio\v tlie of the !Slo- tliere is, i s most o. Slovenc Lairguaijv AH ivritten hits of tlie era iimneiliatelv :tlie Clirisl iaui/.al ion of the Sl o veneš are fev in number.s aiul hesides the Scripts there is verv little «nllure of the people or the progress language. \\'hateverelse Names of »the remaiiiiug' vene Iv iucluded in scattered hits. Slo vene people comprise the hulk of the literature. The manuseript bible that is iiow kepi in the Civil inusemn ol' Civadale, and vvhich vvas vvritten the 51h or (ith centurv eoiitains an interesting of Slovenes vvho have made pilgrim- Tlie names are vvrit- in list of names ages to (he cit v of Rome. of the uiamiscripl and thoug n.d iona lil ies Moravians, as ten in the lnargm Thev are of various evidenced by the entrv of Svetojiolk (vvliom we before) and of King Boris-iMichael , Bible, names are entered meinbership L Imve n« (.hvadale niauuscript book of the Brolhers in Ihe m oni the in tlie ferv of Ht. Peter members of tlie Sl ovene names of The in Salzburg. The roli of the lavbroth-erhood coidains manj' tiiose vvho have entered the names. aeeoriling to tlie pre- of men vvho have come from the to note that the names from these nnd have i i n j* U i H c comtrten aniona Bratina, Bo.jan, .., Bomogoj, Dragic l\ osat Medved. Mil, Mirrgoj Svmtoslav, Svetka, Vese i. Zvrie. Zverina. ZiToniii ! themselves preserved in i-hbor-. tlie nromisteiv tace are names i mu tn iiies id' I jcoben. It is interesting earl v Times are • eh« rac-1 eri s t i ca II y Slovefie lot heen imporfed froin other neis i, vvhich vvas the casg later. Some ol names aro plače names, or trade names and are the Slovenes toda v. Farni Iv names Dol.irodej, .Dobfomisel, Predo¬ bra. I lomogoj« m iiffu, Dragov an, Oo.jica, delen, Kragulj, Krul.j, Krepek, Ibejnt, Ljuba Mala, Mirigo.j, Premeisel, Rada, Slavo. Stojan, e*veliiauv, V.1V t' V rvct » V ('sela, A fadimir, \jol- - r/: ' y j, K [ manj' have and lisi of peoples. Ilovvever nobilitv and urban people coiisidered liiemselves above lin* standard s on tlie i»efisants vvho toiled in the fields and slaved on Ihe lord’.-- ostale and vvished to sliovv Their sti- perioritv and dignilv bv imporling foreign names espeeiallv from the (lermans. A bend the vear 100(1 tvpicallv (Jerman nantes are met among tlie ur¬ ban populatimi. Names of Orthovviii, \Volfhara, Sigihart and manv others are names that vvere adopted. Among the peasants the iidroduction of and adoptation of other names did not take plače until the end of the 131 h centurv and then names of the Roman, (Jreek, or llehrevv origin vvere ad¬ opted. These names vvere most Iv na-rnes of saints of (Miri st iandom about vvliom the people have learned from the missionaries, and have learned to love. The names of Sehastian, Agties, Oecilia and others have heen added to tlie names listed above and there arose tlie familv and the Christian name as vve have it todav. 1'nder the Mol v Roman Empire the Slovene countries liave retained the right of using the Slo¬ veni' language, as ihe official language of tlie court. Tlie leaders of the Slovenes tliough thev vvere German, weri> svvorn into office in Slovene. The leaders vere also coiisidered Slovenc vvhen thev vvere real Germans. With this official rcc- ognilion, it vvas Ihe right of tlie Slovene leaders to ase Slovene at j ho imperial court and thev vvere nllovved to defend themselves in the Slovene. Lirik Von Liehtenstein in his poem “Fraueu- deinst” gives an altogetlier nevv aspect of the ase of the Slovene language in tlie court of the Ger¬ man leade.r in eastern Panonia. Aceovding to tlie hint that is given in tlie poem, Slovene vvas, The language of tlie court. \Vheu l irik foing from Vcnice to the Bohemian boTder a .gi*oup of aelors, he himself vvas dressed as Venus, V hen tlie companv came to the eifv of Vrat, Bernhart in the companv of princes address- ed him in a poem vvhich iucluded the line “huge \yaz primi, gralva Venus n or as mav eeremouu vas vvith be traftseriln*d in o n. : i in the nianuscripti modern Slovenc “Bog vas sprejmi, kralj Venus’' (God accomjialiv von, king \'enus). Sneli favorable conditions did not last for a hmg time and finallv 1hey vvere ehanged at the death of the last Spouheim aucestrv and tlie leadersliip passed from the Slovenes to IM toka i' (12(i!< to 127-S) then permaiientiv to the Meinlmrd l‘amily and tlirough them to tlie Maiisburgs. To tlie imsympatlietic eyes of tlie Germans, the Slo¬ venc language and Ihe ritual of inslallation seemed foolish, and it finallv disa]ipeared in 1+14. The right of aecusing the lord vvas also ridieuled vvhile the right of using Slovenc as a court language vvas a lav. A manuseript teliš of one such instance in vvhich an accuser makes his accusation in Slovenc and the lord in ridieule cuts himself off sluirplv vitli ‘tleli versten dine sprach nit”. Such is the dec line of the Slovene language in the official cir- cles Ihorigh some legal papers have been used Slo¬ venc language milil the hegfiining of tlie 18th cen- 1nry. The ritual of investiture is liomage (Oath of fideiitj*) and suliinfendation oatlis are tile treas- trre from vvhich original excerpts of the liisto-rv of Slovene language are dravvn. These manttscripts sliov that Ihe language in vhich ihe people vvere addressed remained Slovenc for a long time. Tovard the end of tlie Thirteenth centui-y German vas adopted as tlie legal language of the imperial court. 4. /Ve IleformaHoii era , 1400-1530 The loth centurv has been more bountiful in tlie number of mamiKcript s that have heen pre¬ served and from vhich mueh informalion has been gained eoneernitig the cillture and the intellectual altainments of tlie Slovenes of Ihe Middle Ages. Records of schools have heen retained and pre¬ served for posterilv. Gathedral Schools flourished in Sioveuia as veli as in tlie other nations and 'comniuniti('s in Europe. Iligher school cxistcd in Ljubljana as earl v as 1470. Sl Peter’s school vas a liiglier school in Ljubljana in vvhich vere laugiiT ali the fine arts, languages. Other schools a( Kraju, O el j and doubtless in manv of tlie mon- asleries have exii-ted. The volkerschule of the grade school of tlnt United States have been es lablished in ali the larger communitie s of Sioveuia. The eharaelerislieall.v Slovenes nature of seupture and pa i uti ng gives evidence of the development of Trade Gnilds that have made the Middle Ages famous. Tvpical Slovene Architecture as exein- ]i!ified in a large number of Glmrehes and the fres- coed deeoralion are a mate toslimonv of the plane of artistrv Slovenes have reached in lliose ages. Ghurches are not the onIy liuildings tliat have* been lini It bv the artisians. Manv pri vat e buildings bear ihe stamp of their vvork. AVilh tlie v ide dissemination and -pread nf khovledge in tlie vritten languages (he number I of maiHi8d*»ts becomes greater than vas Ilir before. Tli most importaut is nov at the dent’s Libri y in Ljubljana. Originallv it kepi and p*[)bably made in the Cistertiau inoiii terv of Stiini tlie largest Cini reli center in li venia until he establislimenl of the archdioccse Ljubljana i 1461. This rrinuseript vas the note book of a l tevtian Eath* vvho came from Bohemia at the h' of the Husi e vars and resided al Stična book is fjLillbf sermon notes and studv notes, f vas vritteijin Latin tor the greater ]iart bul places v her the Slovenc diet ion vvas bard or id matic he mile inlerlinneai* notes in Slovene. * ing a parislpriest he inseribed pravers on tik 1 '* fl.v leaf of to note book. There one can hu e od hnerti t val' ’ in the incantatioii tor Go* jI Amre ncededjot be kiiovvn of Ihe song for Vl **' | lirsl line*' t halva« chanted bv tlie jiriest the P c0 JJ vvho came to iass took ii)> the chant and sl111 * . vvlude ol it. o thi s there is testimonv in out c ' » S Ion« k in big biographv make-' f , remi m r ot tlie customs before the Churcli holidčs, “Ln II,e oiden days the sevved a ver beautiful eiistom of song tliat vi: appropiirate for lin . , , Ihe sermon. „ advent; Poslan je angeli (Angel Gabri is N<>m v ■ r.... /'n...:.• bn* 1 ■ Mali Ul Gune “giant lov i ne¬ si nging season 'osian je ange le n,i,),,,, t v . ls ) ; hor Christmas; od nniv'l ' Ulvn) ; for Ea ter; d' :8 "‘ m,h ' 11 T-o--™ s An.4 r„,„, II,, (tn hofoce, vve reliearsed the ^ • tor inchante,r a, ’' Ul ' 1 f . hc whwl | 1 D S" U V-lioiight vv wenc čred nivsteries’ For some Ju)1 'ie; tlie o Idi lt^* litelodv and sang M 1 Ju heaven vitnessing' M o be continued LOUIS SODJA — LOYALITES, S. N P. J. Louie has been in bovvling for two yeap 3 and in that time quickly rose to st ar dom. He is the tal lest in the league, measur- ing six feet seven inehes. His greatest thrill he says vvas when he hit a three bagger against the Kenosa .Stalvvarts thus paving the way to a victory for the Loyalites in vvinning the S. N. P. J. National indoor bali title. Come close to the graphophone girls, that’s it. Now we’ll teli vou a secret. He’s single! The first of a series of spotlights that wil! feature interest- ing members of the Interlodge. Another next tveek. Team Rebec teman Historicai Tale in Five Acts ■ Dramatized by Fran Govekar Presented by Slov. Dramatic Society “IVAN CANKAR” SUNDAY, JANUARY 26th, 1930 AT SLO VEN LAN AUDITORIUM, 6417 St, Clair Ave. Come and get accjuainted with the Slovenc “giant” Martin Krpan. Prctty costumes daneing girls., etc. Original humor! at Slov. Home, — Holmes Ave Musič by Arcadian Melodv __ Pilots. - — - 15810 given by the F estiva! Simday* Januarv 28th Admission 50c held by the “Arcadian Club” ON THURSDAV. JANUARV 30th - 1930 at the Slovenc National Home — East 65th Street and St. Clair Avenue Musič furnished by Arcadian Melody Pilots. january CLEVELAND JOURNAL JOURNAL ŠPORT l, ** ,, *** ,,, >*****»««***»wi, INTER LODGE BOWLING LEAGUE Team ZAN SHOE REPA1RS 179 Kromar 184 92 126 143 114 130 125 125 149 Team COLI.. DRY CLEANERS •J. Laurich Krall T. Laurich Koren Baraga — Totals 181 158 134 141 171 124 150 175 179 178 197 16S 138 113 206 lm.an husbandj ■ but '“ve her a J imdieap Totals Team COMRADES Turk Alich Tekautz Martin F. Fifolt .— Totals e educaj a your finighei the otl L VSClJ BAKERIES itandle iddle eje 'olar Ivovitch ■tavmaft Totals • - - 158 133 143 172 204 135 143 124 149 142 W1 tiic S” iotid* cl1 it C « 1 , oven ' UP’ 1 ' 1 ] ,heF # I ali tlie INTER LODGE BOWLING LEAGUE STANDNG TEAM HIGH SINGLE Coli. Boosters .'. .1.800 Loyalites .945 Spartans .936 IN D. THREE HIGH Wohlgemuth . Bencina . Baraga . .66 2 .599 .599 A. B. C. To urn ament The Interlodge League officers have taken the precaution to safe- guard its members by paying the nsces3ary entry fee to the Amer¬ ican Bowling Congress, thereby making it a sanctioned league. Thic giyes each member the op portunity to bowl in ali sanctiona' tournaments. Such a tournament, in lact, the greatest of its kind, will take plače not in Chicago or some other tovvn, but right here in Cleveland, at the Public Hall An- nex, staring March 1 st and ending April 1 st. This, indeed is a great- er enterprise than we can pic.ture. Let us delve into this gigantic event. IND. HIGH SINGLE Bencina .:...26S Ju. Bokar. 255 G. Kovitch .246 SCHEDULE FOR SUNDAY JANUARY 26 th Alleys 13 _ 14 Clainvood vs Progressives Alleys 15 — 16 Coli. Boosters vs LoyaIites Alleys 17—18 Comrades vs George Washington Alleys 19_20 Spartans vs Bettsy lloss Fight Card oVer the country and it is expect- ed that about 250 cities will be represented . It is estimated ac- cording to present indications that; alleys, providin Girls 9 Bowl*» ing Tourney The tourpament, the first evei attempted in our community will begin Sunday at Del Young’s Rec reation Parlors, E. 123rd and St. Clair avenue. The purpose is not only to find the champion bovvler but as one of the girls expressed it, “to have some fun”. Now that i: the proper attitude to take. To date, no girl has been pick- ed as the likely vvinner. Ali are reticent, and for once are modest and shy when being accosted, to commit themselves on their chan- ces in the tourney. This event will begin at 3:00. About thirty girls have entered and more are expected to enter | FRANKIE SIMMS’ BATTLE Sunday. The closing date origin- Thc tournament is adverti: ed ali ,ally was ret for Saturday, but has been prolonged for one day. Ali arrangements have been made such as reserving the best scoremarkers, about 12,000 bovvlers will be en-j advisors, and first aid if needed. tered. The average expense to, The girls will : imply roli, shove individuals from out of tovvn-vvill j p-.tsh or bounce the bali, and re- be approximately $ 100 a man. | frain from using unladylike lan-l The aggregate sum hovering j guage when getting a bad break. around $1,200,000. Of this That is not too hard is it? Frankie Simms the Slovene heavy glove handler made an¬ other record for himself last Tues- dav when he was given a draw decision in his bout with Jatk Gagnon. Under ordinary circum- stancec this would not be consid- ered much of a victory or much of an honor in the fighting circles but it becomes a great victory when one considers that the de¬ cision was gotten with a man who is touted to be one of the best heavy vveights in the šport circles and one who has had an abun- dance of experience that would recommend him to the best of the fighters that are getting so much publicity since the retirement of Gene Tunney and ^he possible contender for the highest fistic honors in the country and in the vvorld. Frankie vvas scheduled on the Ray Campbell benefit card that took plače last Tuesday night and his opponent was Jack Gagnon from Boston. a Matt Brock Draw decision we stili believe that Frankie shoWed himself the better fighter of the two bedause he was able to stand the gruelling rounds taking and giving with a man who was sup- posed to be a magic K O artist especially in the Simms čase. Simms also gave as much and took as much as did his Boston opponent and at best he was given at least a good decision of draw. We’re not saying that Frankie Simms has a long way to go be- fore he is at the top of the ladder We hovvever do say that in this particular fight he shovved him¬ self a least as good as Gagnon and from the experience end of it rompared with the experience of Gagnon, Simms is much better. The fight fans do not look at it that way they decide by what they see in the ring. And what they saw in the ting last Tuesday was aplenty. They saw that Frankie Simms because of his experience was at amount about half will be left in Cleveland. Prizese totaling the vest amount of $100,000 will be di itributed. \Ve can readily see the publi city Cleveland will derive from this six week event. Hovvever, let us look at it in another light inso- far ar our community is concern- And nov/ there is something *d. nev/ in the li.re of Slovene athlet- j Joe Pozelnik proprietor of Nor ics and a departure from the old ; wood Alieys, hit upon the great sty!e of doing things.The Slovenes i idea to have ali the Slovenes bowl under the auspices of The ; S. Y. the same day and use the entire M. C. Club are arrariging a fight J A rnex consisting of 32 alleys. Joe card that will bring together ali; and his supporters feel confident that such a plan will vvork out and the Slovenec who are donning gloves as a šport and ali those vvho are making a nam: for them¬ selves in the local city fistic circ- lcs. At present the plans include the a headliner bout that will fea ture Eddie Simms at prerent the title heavy of the City of Cleve¬ land. The opponent has not been matched as yet and there will be some little effoert expended on the part of the S. Y. M. S. Club to secure an opponent who will be a good match for Eddie Simms. Ali the Slovenes who have been j connected in any way with the | Fight game vvill be included on i the fight card though the match- Last week were published the names of the first entrants. Others vvho have entered rince are: Julia Mramor Anna Kogoy Aliče Kerze Mačk Slogar Anna Marinček Franci: Peterlin Mary Zakrajšek Mary Fifolt Vera Laurich Jean Knapp Mollie Knapp Jack Gagnon was the best and a loss of how to start the argu- the toughest ‘customer that ment and they saw that he did not Frankie Simms ever took on and from the dope of the papers a fevv clay: before he was not even given a possible chance to stay in the ring for any length of time and was given up as an also-fought entry on the card that' was sched- uled. But any argument has only tvvo sides to it and the two :ides rnust be heard from before the argument can really be decided and Frankie proved that he has quite an argument to put up when he is called upon to take sides in a fight proposition. know the best way to begin but they saw that when he did start that he meant business and was after his opponent as hard as he could get behind him in the la Tunney style of fight. Knocked down and taking a rest and adopt- ing the offensive in the latter part of the bout and leading with such ficrcenesr that th Frenchn an had to resort to ali the tricks of keeping on hir pins. Gagnon however did plenty of damage in the initial rounds of the fray and Frankies eftr was badly cut in the^ are workiner hard to make it a! T 1 huge succeis. The cost of each local bovvler j will be approximately $5.00.! When we consider that this event] dces not take plače in Cleveland! every year, (last one took plače j 25 years ago) and that we have j no railroad fare, no hotel bills, no £> a t e extra meals or other extra expen- ses incurred in traveling we should be glad to jump at the chance to i participate in thir tourney. Furthermore,. Pozelnik is so in- \ tent on having the S'ovenes GIRLS’ BASKETBALL SCHEDULE JANUARY Date j27j Spartans vs SDZ !27! 1291 ! 6! i 6 1 |10j IlOi j!2[ Time |9:00| Geo. Washington vs KSKJ j 9:30j | 8 : 00 ; The fight proved to be one of f if th but that did not bother him the bouts that was the most vvorth i in the least with that bulldoggish the vvhile of attending for both and courage be went to the mid- contenderr were in the ring to clje of the ring with ginger and show the sports fans that they can met his opponent as he has been depend on a real fight when they met a very fevv fights. Time after come to see any fight that features time the fans thought that Frankie Comrades vs Sokols FEBRUARY Geo.. Wash. vs Comrades KSKJ vs Spartans SDZ vs Sokols Comrades vs Spartans KSKJ vs SDZ Frankie Simms. fights to the last. Time | 8:00 19:00| j j9:30] |9:00j |9:30l vvould nct ansvver the beli of the new round but he came back every time vvitb pep and ginger and vvith hi:- povver of taking it he lasted the vvhole ten rounds Geo. Washington vs Sokols [8:00 having the strongly represented that he ha secure d the aid of the merchants 1 Pozelnik at Norvvood Alleys lo- vvho are just as anxious that his Gagnon’s experience was the saving part in the Bostonian part of the match. And it was only, . . . , , , m J of a fight that he was to have , his experience that saved him that; ,i been kind enough to let Gagnon evemng. Many more years m thei . . . . i . , , . ,.,£■! knock him out m the early rounds i ring and having a much wider ris-1 • v £• * of the fight. Gagnon as well as tic acquaintance m the tistic vvay . . , . r the sports vvriters of Cleveland he managed to get away rrom the! tended are more anc * more surprised at the talent that Frankie Simms is cated on St. Clair Avenue near E. es at present have not been an- 1 plan vvorkr out and have contri- 62nd St. Bov/lers vvho are not nounced they vvill include the! buted financially to reduce the or- members of a team mav lile vvith names of Ralph Martin, Frank i iginal cost of $5.00 per man to] Joe vvho vvill plače them on one Ta f for and Johnnie Mordous. The ] about 50 per cent less. To top [ of his teams. This call is not only card is not compGtcl/ filled. to this off, every second team rolling j to the members of the Interlodge date and th-"e aro rtid some late] a good score vvill receive some j league buf also to bovvlers in tne entries to be made but the bouts; prize money. Under such favor- :putlaytng districts of Cleveland are scheduled for Feb. 5 and the j able circumstanc.es it behooves as vvell as nearby cities, ali of Young Mcn's Club expects to; each and every bovvler who has vvhom vvill be given the same op- have a snappy card to offer when]any iporting blood in him to join portunity. F-or further details see. the tickets šale for the shovv. the great parade of Slovenes to Joe Pozelnik the man in front of opens. The first of its kind and ; the greatest indoor carnival in the this great parade, a unu:ually good card the vvhole vvorld. Heinie Martin Antončič, Preš. shovv should attract much atten-j Ali teams desiring to enter are Interlodge League. tion of the Slovene Public. i requested to get in touch vvith Joe; Joe Kogoy, Sec., Tieasurer damages that Frankie int [to ir.flict and vvhich he did inflict j _ . , , , , c- ' displaying every time he appears | vvhenever he got a chance. rran- .... kie 'Simms hovvever is not one of those rellovvs vvho trains for the ; cinde.r track so he could not run i as fast as the other man vvas run- ning away. j In spite of ali the experience that Gagnon brought vvith him and ali the preše publicity of his P ro ° ° 1 at; - superiority and his deftness at handing out knockouts he did not Asker — j prove to be the superior of Frank- was lame. ie Simms in many of the rounds cratc hes. and the f.ght vvas decided a dravv. father died he left Mac the crutcheSi It may be that the pubhc papers Now Mac js ug ; ng them in 0 rder tc are : aying that Frankie Simms got r,«ve bis shoes. on the local bout cards. Frankie Simms has far to go' before he reached the top but he does not have near as far to go a: Sports vvriters vvould have one believe. The Simms - Gagnon mix-up last Tuesday is ample - I didn’t know MacGouga! I see him going around or jcu- Page 4 CLEVELAND JOURNAL Rd, HEALTH NEVVS Issued by the U. S. Public Health Service Prevention of the Introduction of Diseases froni Abroad ' A report vvhich shows the activities of the U. S. Public Health. Service in preventing the introduction of dis¬ eases from abroad was recently for- vvarded to Congress by Surgeon Gen¬ eral H. S. Cumming. This report in- dicates that no instance of the impor- tation of any quarantinable disease occurred during the past fiscal year. No cases of plague, cholera, yellow fever or typhus fever arrived at quarantine stations in the United States. There were, however, ten in- stances during the year of bubonic plague occurring on vessels arriving at ports in foreign countries. The preventive measures aipplied by offi- cers of the Public Health Service at foreign ports of departure are re- flected in the small number of quar- antinable diseases on vessels arriving at ports of the United Btates. During the past year at domestic ports, 19,529 vesseles, 933,035 pass¬ engers and 1,134,906 seamen rvere in¬ spected on arrival by quarantine offi- cers. At insular ports 2,937 vessels, 138,947 passengers and 203,182 sea¬ men were inspected, and at foreign ports 5,401 vessels, 544,127 passen¬ gers and 366,762 seamen were inspect¬ ed prior to embarking for the United States. Of the passengers who embarked at European ports, 43,047 rvei - e vac- cinated and 93,603 were deloused un- der the supervision of medical offi- cers of the Service. Clothing and baggage of these passengers amount- ing to 95,816 pieces rvere inspected. The number of cases of cerebros- pinal meningitis arriving at Pacific ports from the orient increased so rapidly during the rvinter season of 1928-29 that the available facilities at the command of the local health authorities at tiie ports of San Fran¬ cisco and Seattle 'became overburden- ed and, at the request of the local authorities, the Public Health Service extended the use of the facilities of the Federal quarantine stations at those ports to take čare of the cases and contacts of this disease in order to preverit its spread into the United States. By the early spring of 1929, the quarantine facilities of both the local Federal health authorities were becoming overburdened and the ad option of some other measores to pre- vent the spread of this disease- into this country rvas necessary. The final result rvas the promulgation of an executive order under date of June 21, 1929, having for its purpose the, restriction and supervision of the transportation of passengers from ports in China and the Philippines io the United- States under regulations prepared by the Public Health Ser¬ vice. !j Three amendments to the quaran- tine regulations were promulgated during the year. These amendments related to administrative features of the maritime quarantine laws of tho United States. Several new international bridges \vere constručted across the Rio Grande River along the Mexican border during the year resulting in increased quarantine and immigra¬ tion activities at these ports. On this account it was necessary to open a new ouarantine station at Thayer, Texas, ahd one at Zapata, Texas. At domestic ports 973,974 alien passengers and 984,771 alien seamen rvere examined bv medical officers under the immigration larv. Of this number 24,939 passengers and 1,951 seamen rvere certified for rsarious dis¬ ease and disabilities coming under this larv. The more important cause 5 ; of certification of alien passengers vvere trachoma, tuberculosis, insanity, feeblemindedness and venereal dis¬ eases. There has been no material ehange during the past year in the system of making medical examinations of ap- plicants for immigation visas in their countries of origin. The many ad- vantages of this system of examina- tion of intending immigrants have been amply illustrated during the four years during rvhich the plan has bectn in operation. The pplicy of making medical examinations, upon the reauest of the consul, of entire family units accompanying lieads of families who intend to emigrate Vi the United States leaving the family be- hird, has done much to eliminate crit- icism of immigration enforcement On the ground that it causes separation of families, as the admissibility of the entire family is ferecast before the head of the family departs for the United .States. For the fiscal year recently ended, a totai of 173,740 applicants for im migration visas rvere given medical examinations. Of the totai number examined 17,847, or 10.3 per cent. rvere found to have mental or phvsi- cal disabilities; 7,968, or 4.6 per cent of the totai examined, rvere refused visas for medical reasons. The effect- iveness of this system of examination is evidenced bv the fact that of tile 165,772 aliens rvho had been given a pieliminary examination aboard and to v/hom visas had been issued, a totai of only 22 rvere certified upon ar¬ rival at United States port as being affPcted rvith a disease rvhich result- ed in mandatory deportation. The medical examination of aliens abroad is conducted in co-operation rvith the Department of State and the Depart¬ ment of Labor. Undulant Fever Goats, pigs, sheep and cattle are knorvn to suffer from infections rvith closely related baeteria which be- long to the genus Brucella. The gen¬ eral name Brucelliasis is therefore given to ali of these infections. While eaeh of these kinds of animals is commonly infeeted with its own strain it sometimes happens that one kind may be infeeted rvith the strain ehar- acteristic of one of the other species. Human beings may acquire these infections from the quadrupeds roen- VVTLLIAM SITTER ELGiN pD&aier /rv_. Wj JSWELRV? p snvsfiM/iz - vhen An- thony Somrack resigned that posi- tion. Mr. Victor Nadrach lives at 818 E. 155 St. BOY SCOUtS (Continued from.page 1) Anniversary, February 7th to 13th. The Boy Scouts of America, rvhich celebrates 1 its trventieth a’nniversary February 7th to 13th, is not entirely a Movement for very young boys. It has developed activities for older boys, notably in its Sea Scout pro¬ gram for boys of fifteen years up- vvard. In this division of its activi¬ ties the b'oy learns of the life of the Sea and notable progress in davelop- ing this activitv has occurred in re- cent years. The deck crew of the John Borden-Field Museum exped- ition to the Arctic two years ago rvas entirely made up of . Chjjcago Sea Scouts. Paul Siple, the Boy Scout. rvho has made a splendid record in connection rvith the Byrd Expedition to the Anarctic is aetive in Sea Scout- ing at Erie, Pa. PERSONALS Mrr. Mary Groeinic, 854 E. 207 St. was taken to the Cleve land Clinic last week. We wish her a speedy recovery! Ellsworth Hausholder, 17, 187- 42 Monterey avenue rvas taken to St. Alexis hospital. Mr. Rudolph Vidmar, of 1145 E. 60 St. rvas taken to the East 79th St. hospital rvhere he tuc- cessfully underrvent a serious op¬ eration. Friends are invited to visit him. The stork visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Konestaba, 9919 Reno avenue, last Monday and as a souvenir left a husky little boy. Congratulations 1 Mr. Anton Koss, of Wickliffe, O., left Tuešday morning for San Antonia, Texas, rvhere he will remain in a sanitarium. i |ji ifli ftiff f u ... EYE FOR Jor Pul)hcr ANE Y E . T oOTH Slovenc song and Slovene operatic J < » FOR TOOTH talent for the great public of Cleve-j land! That seems like a'great boast and a great idealistic program for any nationality but it is a reality with the Slovenes as it rvas a reality ; vvith several other nationalities that | compose the great metropolis IrT Cleveland and will be rvith others in the near future. , to _ et t0 UiH - - .. Cleveland has' realized of late that j possiblQ and end th ® ttTpghts” there is a great porver in the various , a g 0 ny. She looked up s iid ten red on ^ er J^ ra ^.gtretcbed band cultural background that has beconie | feet almost to tne ^.uraved a ipart of Gleveland’s farne. OTCD turned ^hour dentist as and nationalities are a vital part of the j jammed on v-""' 1 Ing mountain ol Is barvi of rage časm was the last straw. Joyce m was the last strarv. Joyce dis -S endnre ten minutes more of this nightmarisb toothache! Saucmess f,*r“ of rusty-halred, adorable ofan^cworthy denl- zen l°:š£eZ inspected the weepiug girl lshly at her cheek, raising a faint pur ple rvelt. as he found qulred pol!tely enough for a Nervjori, tmffic officer just rvhere she was ing in such a hurry—she rvasut old enough to have a dying mother, he added with elaborate sarcasm. <4 I bet you never had a toothache that rvas driving you cross-eyed !” she rvailed, and then he noticed agam the faint Purple splotch on her jarv and took stock of the stili scrubbmg fist, and rvith surprising gentleness he said: “Scoot along, now, child—and I hope it doesn’t hurt much!” JNot . so much as a scolding—nor a tlcket form the Opera at the Little Theater - nor any rac ]j e t rvhatever; just that on March 9 and rvith the performance 1 s ijnpi e admonition 1 of the opera ali the people rvho have j -won’t, much longer I” she said not had an opportunity of seeing the I grimly, and skidded ^around his sta- performance on Thanksgiving rvill have an opportunity to do so on the said date. With the performance of the opera at the Little Theater the Slovenes rvill shovv rvith the other nationalities that they. have a cultural program in mind and that they are as capable to Realizing that there are many pos- sibilities and to give the various groups to express themselves in the best that they can offer, the papers of Cleveland have been favorab‘ly dis- posed to give them a chance to shorv themselves at their best in ali the lines that they are aetive in. Thus the Ali Nations Shorv rvas sponsored by the Press as rvell as the Yuna- boia. JThe Cl^vteland ISjfervs }has sponsored the Gymnastic Shorv only a ferv vveeks ago. And now the Cleve¬ land Plain Dealer rvith the organiza- tion of the Inter - national theatre has interested the various national¬ ities in presenting the cream of their dramaties in plain drama or musical drama — the Opera. The Slovenes have been invited to present their cultural vehical before the public of Cleveland and they rviii do it rvith the performance of the Opera “Urh, grof celjski” rvhich j has had remarkable sueeess at the initial performance at the Slovene j Auditorium on Thanksgiving Day. j Zarja the choral ciub rvhich has j given the performance rvill agin per- j as others. The honor of performing rvill not be the privilege of the Slovene Dram- atic Society “Zarja” only; the Czechs rvill perform the “Bartered Bride and dramatic offerings of their nation- ities at the Little Theatre. The whole series of (performances is under the auspices of the Plain Dealer and by the Recreational De¬ partment of the City of Cleveland. Mrs. Bragg — I’ve just come back from the beauty parlor. Mrs. Gnasty — Too bad you rver« not waited on. n Tomasso — Do Funnyunk’s com- panions lead him into temptation? Tobaseo — No, indeed. Funnyunii does the leading himself. printing: When you want a classy j ob of Printing done in a hurry, bring it to this shop. — Hand Bills, Public Šale Cards. Wedding Cards, Notices of ali kinds, Business- Cards; any and ali Job Printing \vork. A TRIAL WILL MAKE YOU A STEADY CUSTOMER American-Jugoslav Printing & Publishing Co. “No Job Too Small or Too Large” 6418 St. Clair Ave. Henderson 5811 OBITUARV Miss Josephine Ogrinc, 19 years old, died yesterday morn¬ ing after a prolonged illness. Miss Ogrinc rvas the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ogrinc, residing at 440 East. 158 St. Besides her parants, she is survived by three sisters, Angela Cvek, Mary and Jennie and a borther Anton. A baby girl rvas born to Mr. and M'rs. John Božič, 5902 Bonna avenue last Tuesday afternoon, but after living an hour, she pass- ed away to eternity. Mr. Frank Spiegel, father of Mrs. Elsie Kotnik, of Cleveland, died in Uniontorvn Pa., last Tues- day. i tion on three rvheels and rvas off across town to the dentisfs In less time than it takes to write it. The memory of the lovely girl stuck in Bruce’s mind ali the rest of his re- maining half-hour of duty and through- out his tedious journey across town to his brother’s Office, rvhere he rvas hav- ing some work done on some defective shorv themselves on the- same plane fillings. He rvondered if she had had her tooth fixed and rvhat she rvas do- ing now and if it hurt much, and rvhat a plucky little mut she rvas to stand such a horrible nightmare as toothache and not yell and cuss at everybody and anybody! “That you, Bruce?” called Doctor Robbins from his rvorking room. “Teah, that filling’s punk, Bert ; she’s gotta come out!” “I think rve can save it,” counseled his brother, and he looked at his love- ly patient in the chair, rvondering if he had hurt her to cause her to jump so, little guessing that she rvas think- ing gratefully that it simply must be he; nobody else she had ever knorvn had quite the quality of voice of that wonderfully decent traffic cop at Fifty-ninth Street and Broadway. “I think you cannot!” replied the unseen speaker grimly; “it’s coming out just as soon as you can tie into it!” “Nonsense; rve ali must save our teeth If possible!” retorted the dentist as he carefully seraped Joyce’s gum for any remaining root or adhesion. “Great hat, Bert! I darned near barvled out the one and only girl to- day just because of that darned tooth I j Think I rvant to get to be a crabby old jarv-cracker just because of a tooth or so?” “Dldn’t know you had a girl, Bruce,” ansrvered Doctor Robbins, rvondering rvhy Miss Palmerson paled so ; he rvas sure he wasn’t hurting her. “She wasn’t my girl exactly; that is, I don’t knorv her name or anythlng about her, you see,” rvent on the rem- iniscent, gentle voice in the outer room, “but if ever I met the girl of my dreams, she’s the girl!” “Oh, come, Bruce; the heat’s get- ting you! Falling in love rvith a girl you don’t knorv,” joshed Doctor Rob¬ bins as he continued his rvork on the quiet, stili very pale Miss Palmerson! “Well, I’ve always said that a dentist rvas pretty cold-blooded,” re¬ torted Bruce, by rvay of avenging the slur on his intelligence. h ‘‘^ 0t ,. t0 m f tlon ^affic cops,- came back the pat ansrver of the smili n Doctor Robbins as he unelasped the torvel from around Joyce’s neck and moved the chair dorvn and fo^vard to allorv her to step out. Face to face, Bruce stnna ri,,. wlth horrified eyes at the “girl 0 f his dreams” as she stood quietty in doorrvay a moment looking a t h m before getting into her rvraps u G R I N ! Judge — But if you rvere doing nothing rvrong rvhy did you run rvhen you saw the policeman approaching' ? Prisoner .— I thought he rvanted to seli me a ticket for the Policemen’s .Annual Bali. n Applicant — If I may say so, Pni pretty smart. I’ve rvon several cross tvord and rvise crack contests. Employer — Yes, but I rvant someone rvho can be smart during Dffice hours. Applicant — I did this during office hours. «1 Sailor — Man overboard. Wife of Victim — Pardon me, my husband is a first-class ipassenger, You must say gentleman! i “So the people in the chureh aro going to have you arrested for rivet- ing on Sunday?” “Yes, I kept some of them awakc ali through the sermon.” SLAPNIK BROS. FLORISTJS — Flovvers for ali occasions. 6113 St. Clair Avenue Kandolpli 1126 _ One Store Onlv! A. Grdina and Sons. Invalid car and auto Service, Funeral direetors HEnderson 2088 A Modern Institution. Dependable and Reasonable FRANK BUTALA 6410 ST. CLAIR AVE. The Plače to Buy Fine Footrvear for the Entire Family at a Saving Priče. ^ ™.. llke . a ass, ana she it his lučk! a nd never once seeing a girl d nf ' VA ” him look trvice, and norv after „ her, to go and spoil «11 \ !eeing like this! And tho n-- h chan «s which he marched in tZhT With offending tooth removen h 0 the nificant of the hlA, 1 Was sig- his heart as the dooV^ ^ eelin S In softIy, and he realized l ever so been faint laughter in ? t , there had let eyes as she shot a l0ve,y vio ' Before he left tho „f‘ ance a t him. removed three teeth aruw Bert had on saving a fourth and If rted ' vork gered slightly as L ca Bruce sta K- hright sunshlne after tn® into the of the elevator, conscionc^v darknes s a light lunch, due to some teeth. He wl*hed h.» '-b enough rvith him to Pav 1 4 he felt little like wal]« n „ ,°U t th a . hev and being banged R bou t route homervard, when a » ,'‘ i> him. 0!c « t, “I’m going your rvay. Wjn Mr. Robbins?” and h® g* a ion about to face the gin of sh, ture, too amazed to even ^ «i able rep!y as he climbea , s smart sedan. % “Do you live alone, M; r she asked solicitousij as'th ^ to a halt, several blocks far , 1 i than her own residence. ^ “Teh; Bert’s married. j-j. right—just a bit disžy fro ‘‘ and that stuff he gives -em out rvith!” “ITi send you up a tray ; n what’s the number?” she an , “Three sixty-five—but i you trouble so!” “Nothing at ali. y 0 u y er to me.” And the tray she orderefl from the restaurant was bw /vP Cl JVI/rnJf.1.1 'iitei, ginning of a friendship «i( destined to ripen into s that finer as the rveeks rvent son >ethi 0 „ on. Mongoose Not Immun e to Poison of j Perhaps you have seen th e * al of a figlit betrveen a mong 0 ! #f a cobra at a moving-pi ctu ^ sometime. The mongoose i s .J bra’s deadly enemy, and this č the death betrveen mammai pent is an absorbing p i loto "J study. Tile contest between J and cobra has been on the S c t ? a sbort subject by itself, ana ' s a part of a talking picture. The full name of tile cobra i, bra de capello,” rvhich is p * for “serpent of the l.oua.’’ ster’s Nerv International fc points out, this snalce is so na tt9 cause of its porver to espanj, skin of the neck into a broach, rvhen suddenly excited or an? , by a movement of the ribs.” n le dilates this hood rvhen ready to- A native of Asia, and p ar tj c j common in India, the cobra hated and feared as a fatally TS ous reptile. Though sometine s dued by snake cliarmers, the causes as many as 5,000 death nually from its bite in India al® The mongoose and its name are*' Indian in origin. The name of the mal is “manegos” in Tamil, the oldest of the Indian languaj! it, of eourse, in no way related goose.! Though the animal h s quired the reputation of being * to snake venom, because it so* lessly attacks poisonous serpent® mongoose has no such imnji|| the snake should bite the monj it would probably be the eni oj little animal. The mongoose sim in attacking and killing sile . se as the cobra because of its rej ably quiek sight and its Ughtniv; ity. It dodges tiie snake’s thruf launclies its attack rvith a speri most invisilde to the human eye In the animal kingdom, the goose is classified rvith the civet! of-rvhich are long-bodied, short-lrj mammals. Licensed to the Limit A vlslting Elk from Kansas ^ out to Los Angeles in his orvn ca! that after tiie big doln^s in I« geles rvere over he could mahei« tor tour of Southern California-^ got along ali right in spite of fly quarantine and otlier little of routine until he g°t t0 *! From then on he rvas stoppej most every torvn. Finali?, i® ' ,0s v“les he rvas grabbed once moK- “Let me see your license,” “ c ed the officer. ,», “What is it this time?” asMl." er Bill meekly, “marriage, car^ camp flre, fisliing or huutinS' the license trunk, Ethel, !,n< , sf gentleman help liimsolf.”-—Los Times. niii Long in Mayor’s Chair William M. Reed, seventji mayor of Beach City, Ohio, maj , the oldest aetive mayor in the s He has served three times executive of the city, and it Is that he Is not going to be allo* retire. In fact, he has never si Office, but the people have con him. From 1890 to 1894 he si as mayor of Massillon, Ohio. 1 rvhen he moved to Beach Citj, 1» nounced he did not rvant the i mayor. Horvever, that made no i ence. The voters merely rvrote name on t,he ballots and he was i ed. It H. v aid that rvhen he rvas® of Massillon he made so much ® for the city by careful mana?® there rvas enough to run the cit! six months after his term expi» Indianapolis Nervs. Veteran Sail° r ( Capt. Walter M. Mallett, " sham, Maine, went to s ea p 'vas a lad. At trventy-to ur ^ master and he follorved his 9 lj((i 41 years. Altliough he had t for steam he alrvays stuck j craft. Despite the superstn sailors attach to the P re iA l!» rvoman on shipboard, CuP j B ,, S usually took his rvife wit». ‘ j has rounded the I-Iorn 28 the captain has made it sn Mechanism of Coi° rt ^. .. Coloretl light ma.v he rf loand and srveep over disp 1(1 > ]| ings by a controi tnec ’ iarl r .°ted d Piano player roli, the P er fed into the appa 1 ’ 8 t ,JS color combiimtions.- ics Mogazino. -1’opc at "'1