LOCAL BOY WINS SCHOLARSHIPS-SOME MIXER BTt'VHBMmjkJHjV t?Jt a illB John Larsen. John Larsen, at 19, is a fine lit tle mixer. He can mix a pousse cafe or a suisesse with the same abandon that he juggles algebraic equations, discourses on political economy or "draws one with a 'low collar." As bartender in his father's "life-saving station," on Milwau kee avenue, John mixed drinks for others he doesn't indulge and studied night after night un til 1 a. m. sounded the closing hour. I His surroundings never caused jthe boy to swerve from the ath . he chose as a lead, ' to keep straight and obtain an education. As a result of mixing work and study, he graduates in the fall from the barroom and matricu lates at Princeton, with a schol- arship which assures his expenses for four year.s, at the New Jersey institution of learning made fa mous by "Doggie" Trenchard, the Poes, de Witt, Sammy White and Woodrow Wilson, inventor of the criss-cross play in football. Larsen was chosen by the Princeton club of Chicago, which annually selects the student who best stands the acid test as the k-