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St. Louis Magazine - April, 2009
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In This Issue

Features

Best Places to Live From the Editor Neighborhoods to Know The Local Lingo A Condo Home Companion The Perfectly Personified, Quasi–Bona Fide Guide to St. Louis Neighborhoods Top 10 Moments in St. Louis Golf History Fairways in Heaven Sure Shots SLM Golf: Baby Tiger, Burning Bright SLM Golf: Tee-Box Trends The Man Who Made an Icon Struck by Surprise Taking Care of Mom and Dad Raising Kane Cut to the Quick The Ernest Trova Profile: Online Extras Work, Play, Love The Seven New Rules of Real Estate Bronze Mettle There’s No Such Thing As a Free Zoo

Departments

Agenda What It's Like to Be a Marathon Winner The Trash Bin Tilting at Windmills Wish Bone The Buzz: Blunder Bracketology The Buzz: It's About Folkin' Time First Shot: A Contemporary Milestone The Buzz: New Moon Rising Shop Talk: Hat Trick Stylish Subtleties: Jasmine Huda Feedback Out & About: Everything's Gone Green First Stop: The Firebird War and Peace: An Interview With Poet Brian Turner Cameo: Charles in Charge Liquid Assets: The Return of Absinthe Review: SLeeK Frugal Foodie: Bobo Noodle House First Look: McCormick & Schmick’s Kitchen Q&A: Greg Perez Flashback: 1890s A Conversation With David Peters
2009.11.21 - 2009 Beaujolais Nouveau Celebration
 Join us at our intimate French-American Bistro for a 2009 Beaujolais...
2009.11.28 - Mount Pleasant presents "Lucy Goes Cruisin" Murder Mystery Dinner Theater
Join Mount Pleasant for an evening of uproarious whodunit as only Lucy...
2009.12.03 - "GIFTED" Original Art for Holiday Giving
Skip the malls this year and make your gift giving a unique expression of...
2009.12.03 - Holiday Rooms in Bloom
The Historic Samuel Cupples House on the campus of Saint Louis University is...

Flashback: 1890s

Pie Alley

Flashback: 1890s
Lange’s “Heavy Weights” Bowling Team, photograph courtesy of the St. Charles County Historical Society

Until 1905, bowling balls were made from lignum vitae, otherwise known as ironwood, which is so dense it sinks in water (yet, curiously, is commonly used in shipbuilding). Left unpainted, ironwood is a deep, radiant brown reminiscent of wild honey. The Victorians, always up for an unnatural effect, sometimes painted bowling balls (and bocce and skittle balls) India-ink black, which faded to aubergine after being repeatedly rolled and caressed between some sporting gent’s sweaty paws. Browse a bin of antique postcards, flip to the “Bowling/humorous” tab, and you’ll see that in the 19th century, nothing was thought to be funnier than the conflux of bowling, mustache wax, jackanapes, and men of a certain size. German illustrator Arthur Theile, though best know for his katzenschule (“cat school”) postcards, often drew caricatures of heavy men in popping suit vests, cigars in their front incisors, hurling decidedly unbouncy bowling balls toward the tenpins. The modern imagination has fixed bowling in the midcentury world of ball polishers and atomic starbursts; with the exception of antique cartoons and a few photographs like this, we forget that bowling was the sport of the German immigrant, newly affluent—and happily corpulent—thanks to a job in industry.