Ruth continues with "You Know Me Al" by Ring Lardner. The 1914 baseball pitcher Jack is now married. His other two gals married others so he marries Florrie who isn't as good looking. Here is where Lardner cleverly shares how private lives can ruin a ball player.
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Ruth continues with Ring Laudner and "You Know Me Al." This week we hear some of the romance problems of Jack. Being a simple but talented pitcher, Jack can have some female problems but he does recover swiftly. Rather funny stuff. Ruth also reads something she wrote about things the Queen of England should solve regarding naming of cities.
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Today's reading of "You Know Me Al" by Ring Lardner starts with July 20 from San Francisco. The pitcher Jack has been demoted to Frisco and then is called back to the White Sox, but he is engaged to Hazel Carney "a great big stropping girl that must weigh one hundred and sixty lbs." They have a long distance romance for a while but she wants to come to Chi and get married.
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Ruth continues with "You Know Me Al" by Ring Lardner. Today the fictional letters from a Bush League Baseball player cover April 11- May 20. Jack the pitcher loses his place in the "Big Show" and is traded down to Frisco. His girl friend Violet doesn't want to waste time on a "Busher." The story may be fiction but Lardner tells the behind the scenes truth of Baseball.
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Ruth continues reading from Ring Laudner's book, "You Know Me Al." This week we hear March 9 throgh April 10 of the fictional letters from a bush league pitcher that made Laudner famous. Listen in for a lot of fun from baseball is 1914.
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In a effort to share American vernacular writers, we hear ""You Know Me Al" by Ring Lardner. Ruth reads a few of the first fictitous letters home by a semiliterate pro baseball player named Jack Keefe. These letters made Lardner famous in his time. Lardner was born in 1885.
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We had a quake out here in California, mostly in Napa, so I read from Mark Twain, "Quake." Then went on to "Reading in the Digs," and Chap. 1 of "Huck Finn." It makes for a nice comparison of writing from late in Twain's life and much earlier when he was newly married in a "love match" that brought much joy and his best writing.
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The weather has been so nice, Ruth decided to read her own story: "Just a Stage Coach Ride in the Country." Hope you enjoy the ride.
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Ruth reads the second half of the Mark Twain recollections of Bret Harte. They knew each other before fame and after. Then Ruth reads a few poems by Harte that are quite entertaining. All this makes for a good half hour of radio.
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Once again the KDRT Theatre Players perform original material meant to entertain and defuse. Today the skits will be "Salad and the Burning of the KDRT Studio Kitchen, part 2," "Doper Dan," and "Cat's Craddle." The players will be announced on air as they could change at any moment, 'cause that's how it is.
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