OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER LADIES, USE YOUR OWN JUDGMENT THE GUMPS iawey - ot w my miROWCl To xw OF lAtl- - n.uAt MM4 To WW IDUKIS feYAY Kvjo OF xt ' NORM. CM)A6t- - A COH'btWAYfc HUbgAKD Goob FATHER E AX VJOOO 81 ku. MO know -- tLPEHbtn CAMtMKVt FOW AR- - AwbREtD OOM- F- SWttnft HIM-"1W- OVI'YED FOF M OXATt- S- ANF Xoy.COtFIF.NCl MAwf WUAY AMO 0tX 'll HA SvFFOVT " T'CKtT AH IHOIPTHOWT FCID6E OF. PVOM6E- - To 6Vfc SOU XH1 BEST CEW'SlAYtON OF THAT Mrt PCwJCE UlVTHOOX .tlAloH UU. OF '(tAW TO OFFER. ' 1 Fits Fc. An.R. WtH80X AMWFATt - OH ONAHO TO SOU UAF'El MAFHXFXCtHT AutAEMCE VMHO ARE TMVl MARRIE- DARAUMENYt OF ' lH THE FEOFUE- SOU CAM MX! UE Hxs MOTHER. UXtoTo MAKE DvY FOHT MOTE TIES HOME- - father. UE toH'Bvote i)EED - FdOMY- Al HU5AAMDS NOTXKXO Fmxt- t- -xoo7 fob. The. OOHT RECOMMEND FOl'TXCAC X . - HIOE-BOUHHAVE HO AHCXENT XFAOV'O OHX TO F'MO SOU TO UTH1F. FAATS . TO SELECT A SO TOO AF1 ORGAN TOUR THE EFVBL'CAH T'CFtT BECAUSE OF AFFAHAH OF. THE DEMOCtAVtC. UMCOtNTCKVT BECAUSE OF ANDREW OACKVO- H- 60 TO THt FOULS AIM XH ARHV tUT WOT? FOR THE MAH WXXHOVT OtS OA RDV-V- TOU tit INJnVRH . 1 , XF ACC&EOtb OHVS WOMEN HAFt tlClHTtTTVt A COMFTITVTIOmAL. FVbH'T HO THAT OlAVAM OF SUFFRAGE Tou ttFE XVK'V MAlt NAVE EHJCNC AFVHEtt An 0.AT OOHt iPO WAVE CYM BUSTOvJED VFOM Ml ttOY WOYHVMC, TO HWtOtt TMs WJtmot ox Ouch a EA,vmF. anf MAtFtceY Eoal AOFHCt- - I COME TO TOM A$ A FVAtH HAM tUtKIHC, XH H'4H HOMCA OF EttM ELECTED xo THt COH6FESB OF TV A 15 28, 1922. 4 fb....... Knudson The L. D. S. U. backfleld has proved Hartwell.,., formidable In other games. Neve Fox Substitutions: Granite Longson for and Ralph Dyckman are the' only two Jackson: Harris for Longson ; Behring for lads who have had previous experience. Olsen; Parratt for Druk; Lindsay for Coach Warthman of the Leopards Is Plnney. In Provo Smoot for Gray. -getting a having much difficulty Ghlc" Referee. Twltcheil; strong team for the. iray. The backfleld umpire, is the weakest part' of the team and the Hart. coach will probably give a few of the a chance to show their regularInlinemen VICTOR . . the backfleld. wares With three players on the Injured list, OVER MONROE and with a question of eligibility to settle, the East high team may be greatlv West-Jorda- n East-L- . The East high rooters will Special to Ttat Tribune. D. weakened. occupy the east bleachers and the L D. RICHFIELD, Oct. 27. In a slow but U. the west bleachers, Interesting game here this afternoon, the S. U. Games L-- D. . U. Dou 3. East. , local high school football team' defeated ... Caffey the Monroe eleven by a 12 to $ score. Chrlstopherson Twn Dern ble-Headlg.... of the Richfield men. Captain Soyka, Cummings. Carman, Ryan It...., who Is away, and Hansen, who was Inle. ... Glynn jured In the game with Hallna,. were out, re ... . Peterson and both teams had had a Rhead rt..., beet harvesting vacation. Soyka regular-- ., Thl Afternoon At Cummings field two Smith ....rg... left tackle And Hansen quarter-.- . ..Pratt I ly Played i....qb... football games of thf Salt Lake divi- Vorse Pierson back, and are rated two of the fastest lh..,. Roberts..., sion will be Flayed. Their loss was . . Beesleylmen In this division. Pearson rh... ..Jenkins keenly felt by the home team. The first contest will be played at 1 Tauter. fb.. teams The played straight football for oclock between the West high and Jor-athe most- -' part, few passes being tried AND while the second enoounter will start and those not very successful. Richfield was the first to score, making touchat 2:30 o'clock between the Eagt high, and COMBAT downs In the first and second quarters. theI D. S. U. In these periods the ball was continually Because of the beet vacation, the JorLee Prouse will take the TJ kept In the Monroe territory. Neither Coach dan team has been able to get In only frosh to Logan today to tangle with the team scored In the third quarter and In two days of practice and as a conse- infants of the Utah Agricultural college the fourth Monroe punted over quence the Jordanltes will bo at a disad- In the anhual battle of the two teams the Richfieldquarter line, a Monroe man falling be seems to the vantage. AJthough dope match Is scheduled for 2:30 oclock on the iall. against them, the Beetdiggera will enter ITje Adame field, whloh Is In rare shape Richfield will next play the Wasatch the fray with a determination to down on football. on November 4. The game will for fast the West high team. been' a academy has battle always The be baby played on neutral grounds and le exThe Panthers' coach has made a change feature of Utah collegiate football and to be a stiff contest. Richfield Horace In his backfleld by shifting titular pected bears the earmarks of the real Thankswill put In some hard licks this week d Lfoyd to quarterback, while Hal on the between when regulars game and they face the Wasatch eleven will take Lloyd's place at fullback. This promises to be no next Saturday they wfll probably be This combination ws first tried out In giving day.and the year at a fever is rivalry exception helped by Captain Soyka and Hansen. game and Beems to be heat. the The lineup The Panther g a plan. which Coach In the Included squad Monroe, (d). Richfield (12). team is in good condition and should be folare the to Is Logan taking Prousg a hard obstacle for thd Beetdiggera to Colowing: Captain Van Cott, Jones, surmount. ' llette, Gillespie, Morris, Moyle, Merrill. The probable lineup: Smith, Burbldge, Olsen, Billings, Jordan. West. Rock, Newman, Kepple, Bradshaw, Jones c , Bowen ..Nelson Hows and Burrows. s rg Good.. Boob Burrows, the husky pivot man. son Boren Stlcox. ....... lg the job and will probably open rt Fltxgerald Is back on Mork His Aggies this afternoon. It Saddler against the Allen 'iDow presence will materially strengthen the re Roberts to is expected give the le Dewey Utah line, which, Newhausen.. (Whltmope Salt Lakers the real advantage over tjie qb IJoyd Goldbranson. Alsop Loganlteei fb Braden Oldham lhb Klngwood... rhb Thompson MURRAY Harvey TAKES The Leopards and Saints are primed for SECONDS the tussle which will take place at 2.20 GRANITE ONE o'clock. The game gives every promise of contest, since the being a school a The high strong played Murray to Tribune. The to chance Special Saints are credited with a good game against the Granite seconds yesterTWIN FALLS. Idaho, Oct. 27. Outdown the East high team. Coach Peterscore while a and up piled heavy tn the first half, whloh closed sen will enter a squad much stronger than day scoreless, the played holding teir opponents with a 0 to 0 score. Twin Falls high any of the IL. D. 8. U. teams of previous count belqg 32 to 0.- - The game was school football team rallied In the secon ths Murray campus. Murray ond half and defeated Buhl 33 to 0, in yThe Saints have been working hard for playedfeels revenged for the walloping they one of the hardest fought games of the the game and are ready for a real scrap. now received - last year at the hands of the season played at Buhl today. . Granite team when they were defeated Buhl's loss of Moore, stellar fullback, by more than 104 points. , The Murray eleven started off with who was taken out of the game tn the because of Injuries, and a rush and during the first quarter scored third quarter line plunges made by Jenkins, three touchdowns. These resulted from powerful some very well executed forward passes, Twin Falls halfback, turned the tide for Blue and White squad. making long gains. Kastelllc and L. and theAbout 3000 persons, eald to be the O. Sanders carried the ball over for crowd at a football game In Buhl, these scores. O. Sander made one of largest contest. The weather was witnessed the the goal points count, the quarter ending raw hnd it dusty storm Interfered with 19 to. b for the Smelter team. The visof aerial attacks. itors played their best game in thd sec- the success Filer defeated Rupert 34 to 7; Wenond period and had the ball oit their defeated dell Gooding 12 to 0; Hagerman d line when the opponents' 29 to 19, and Burley whistle ended the playing for the half. defeated Shoshone defeated Oakley 19 to . was the best chance they had to Tls score. In the third quarter Granite worked ORDAN SECONDS Wear custom-- 1 a the ball to their opponents flfteen-yar- d line, but were held. In the final period GRANTSVILLE clothes and you xnll be a a number of substitutions weakened the man. Granite line and the Murray team car' d GRANTSVILLE, Oct. 27. The Jordan ried the ball almost at will, making con. team defeated the Suits and overcoats made slstent gains and sooting three touch' high school second GrantsvlUe high school football eleven, downs. to your individual measure outplaying them12 In the second quarter, The lineup and summary: to 0. The other quarfor a score of cost no more than Granite. Murray. Ons touchdown was French ters were scoreless. Cunntngton. eeeieeeeiiCtt, ie made by R. Vincent, who received i .... Walker forward Rockwood rg.... over the goal line. A sec .... Hansen ond was pass Hutchinson lg..... SUITS AND OVERCOATS, made by Richardson from Metcalf Nelson rt . kick. ... Caldwell Mullen ......It..... $27.50 to $60.00 GrantsvlUe. Jordan, re Thaxton Nielson OnK. Vincent Berry McPhllllps le...., Guaranteed Fabric . Castagno Every, Kastelllc Walker..., qb Taylor . Hollands Rowberry lg L. Sanders Bennion rh Pure Wool. . All V. Johanson O. Sanders J. Day lh Whittaker . Barrus rg R. Brown M. Day fb Egan Cook rt Substitutions: Granite Westguard for Wright .re Rydalch Rockwood: McDonald for Mullen; Little-for- d L. Vincent Johanson F. Francom qb for Nielson; Anderson for Taylor; lh Wrathall Benfell for Bennion; Rowsell for Benfell. Richardson Scott Bldg. Stromber Kimball .rh Errickson for Berry. Murray fb Atwood....Soelberg Referee, Jones; umpire, B. A, Exclusive Dealers. The officials were P. E. Anderson, reflinesman, Broomhead. linesman. heed R. T. and Johnson, eree, GrantsvlUe high school will play WestGRANITE WINNER minster college t GrantsvlUe next Friday. 111 METODlY RICHFIELD ' and Form HlGlf S-- at er two-we- n, AGGIE UTAH FROSH IN Ring-woo- West-Grani- te smooth-workin- g, DEFEATS hard-foug- TWIN FALLS FROM BUHL HARD ht YOU! Are Judged by Your Appearance one-yar- ilored BEAT well-dresse- Race Against Time to Report Fights in Days of Sullivan lt......... R.M.Gates&Co. 300-301-3- OVERJPROVO HIGH Special to The TYtbone. PROVO, Oct. 27. An Interesting and football game was played here between the Granite high school of the Salt take division and the local high school teams, which resulted In a victory for the visitors, 17 to 3. During the first five minutes both teams seemed evenly matched, but after that the Farmers had the local team The Provo always on ths defensive. team found a stone wall In the oppo nents line and during the entire game were able to make first down only once, this resulting from a completed forward gain. pass for a twenty-yar- d After a few minutes of play a Provo them player Intercepted a pass, giving . line. the ball on their own thirty-yar- d made a kick, giving good drop They them their only points of the game. In ths second quarter Lindsay of ths visitors booted one between the uprights and thereby tied up the score, the half ending S to t. In this half Granite made their first down five times, while the home team was unable to make' first down a single time. Neither team scored In the third quarter, but In the final period the Granite boys played their beet game and forced over two touchdowns, Lindsay and Plnney carrying the ball over. They made good both of their goal points. For the visitors Warburton played wonderful game In the backfleld, while Lindsay also looked good at quarter. On their line, Mon son at center and Gwil Hams and Peterson at ends played strong ball. The local team fought hard, few Individual stars showing up. hard-foug- International Truck AT , BIG SACRIFICE $300 capacity. Inclosed express body. Good condition. Good tires.' Just what you are One-to- n looking for. $300. 25 South 3rd East St. Was. 5101. Ask 1 for Mr, Davis. - " ! h i B. Y. U.-- B. Y. C. CONTEST ENDS IN 13-1- 3 TIE ht Special to Tb Tribune. LOGAN, Oct 27. The Brigham .Young Young college university13 and 13Brigham afternoon In a to tie this played a game on the Crimson field. A dispute occurred In the last quarter as to ths legitimacy of a touchdown made the game by the B. Y. C., hut after was over and after having consulted the hard-foug- ht rules. Referee Stubby Peterson declared the touchdown legitimate, thus making the score a tie. The local team opened up sndh out first played the Y" completely In the Crimhalf. Early In the first quarter the down the son scored a touchdown, going field on straight football to the B. Y. U, d line, Johnson, B. Y. C. quarterback, took the oval over for the first missed goad. ThroughJohnson score. out the remainder of the quarter the teams shifted the hall up and down the field. The second quarter opened with B. Y. U. going down the field to the. Crimson line, where they .lost the ball on downs. The B. Y. U. were penalised for ten and fifteen yards several times during this period. With B. Y. U. on the Crimson four-yar- d line, a double pass for Provo sent the ball over the line for a touchdown. Provo missed goal. lie the third period a series (ft long forward passes proved the undoing of the B. Y. C. defence and- - after the baH had been relayed to the shadow of .the goal poets, a penalty on the Crimson placed the ball within scoring distance amT the Y" made tbelr second touchdown and kicked the goal. In the fourth quarter the B. Y. U. was penalised for slugging by Fuller? thirty-eigyards and this gavs the B. Y. C. a chance. Bergeson threw the ball to Johnson on a forward pass and after a thirty-yar- d run he crossed the line; Ref- two-yar- . rd - one-side- d. By AL SPINK. pionshlp took place, and, with Mike DonoBj- - common conrepresenting the New York Herald. sent the real beginning of prize fighting van. I sent out the first news of the battle tn this country came when John L. Sulli- to the waiting world. van and Paddy Ryan met on the turf, on There were" no telegraph or telephone On the tariff Beveridge JusFebruary 7. ISSf, at Mississippi City, wires in Rlchburg. Miss., on- - that awful tefference. Miss., and Sullivan won in nine rounds. day that Kllraln and Sullivan fought In tifies approval of the new bill on the CHICAGO, Oct. 27. It was the following September that Sullivan started a tour of the United States, a tour that lasted nine months, and as he went along he offered to give any boxer flOO who would appear on the stage and whom he could not stop In four rounds. More than fifty accepted John L.a defl and he knocked them out as they came. Sullivan was the only champion that has come since who met all comers, met them as .they came, without reference before or after to the slxe of the glove worn. It was Sullivans wonderful physique and wonderful boxing that attracted the attention of all to the flattc game and that made the sport universally popular. the ring there. The sun It was a frightful battle. shone out from a clear sky and It beat down on the fighters and the crowd cruelWith bare fists, Sullily aiilt fiercely. van end Kllraln fought until thetr hands were swollen to the slxe of boxing gloves. As Mike Donovan, Kllraln's chief second, threw up the sponge and Charley Mitchell, another of Kllraln's seconds, threw buckets and towels tn the ring, 1 ran for the locomotive and the first two that were ready for the run Into New Orleans, the nearest telegraph station to the fight. Kllraln, driven by Parson Davlea and Donovan to the train., which was only stone's throw away from sha ring, was scarcely seated .when word was given for New OrI am one if the few left who saw that and we went ltckety-spl- lt first great fight for the world's cham- leans. pionship. It was Dan O'Leary, the veteran pedesThe locomotive running In was given of way and we went driving into trian, whom I meet In Chicago often theee right who sent the Crescent City, a hundred miles awsyi days, and my brother. William, n Sulllvan-Ryaof news the On the first the way Donovan told me he was fight out to the world. anxious to get a dispatch to the New had raced York Herald and I told him that I was O'Leary, then to the telegraph office a few hundred just as anxloua to get one to the St. yards away rom the ring. He wanted Louts to send the result of the fight to the So we bargained to run together from Chicago Dally News, as he had prom- the depot in New Orleans to the telegraph office. ised to do. office first, I had been writing about the fight half Reaching the telegraph send the "the to asked operator the night before end all the day while O'Leary asked seated at the ringside, and I had a bundle dispatch for him. The operator to write out hi message. of manuscript all ready for the wire. O'Learythen Just my brother, William,- then a Donovan had prepared a twenty-wor- d came in. running good friend of Dan, dispatch. An expert telegTaph operator, he tpld We reached the telegraph office elde got there we handed O'Leary that he would send his message by elde, and as we If given the key, and his own message all the matter we had written tq the with' It. clerk on the other side of the counter to the St. Louis One message would not Interfere with He started to read my etory and would the other and both O'Leary and the op- have delayed the two dispatches had not erator were willing, and, sitting at the Donovan shouted "Send those messages first. You can key. mv brother sent out first details of the great fight to the two newspapers read what they sey later. The clerk took the cue and rushed the named. anxiously dispatches to the operators, later, the- waiting, like all the world, for news of July 8, 1889. or seven years chamthe great fight. next great fight for the world's fleet-foote- -- Globe-Democr- Globe-Democr- at ground that It contains, for the first lime, a flexibility" provision,, which makes It possible to change the rates from time to time. Beveridge approves this as a beginning, but would go much further. He proposes to take the tariff out of politics completely, and put. the fixing or rates Into the hands of a nonwhich should partisan tariff commission, act from time to time on tariff rates In much the same way that the federal re serve board acta about Interest rates and other matters affecting banking and rency. As to our foreign relations. Mr. Beveridge Is a strict and thoroughgoing Isolationist. At a speech In Chicago last week he reed three times with earnest Impressiveness some sentences from the utterances of John Marshall, which counsel freedom from all entangling alliances. No Cancellation cur-ca- (Copyright, 1P32, by the New Evening Post, Inc.) rs MAYFIELD WINS OVER OPPONENTS . AUSTIN, Oct. Texas, 27. Probability be certified to oounty clerks tomorrow, was exof State pressed tonight by Secretary a motion for reStaplea Possibility-oIn the suhearing of the Injunction suit preme court was eliminated when the court's-oplntoordered the clerk to certify Immediately to the Dallas court the The lower higher tribunal's findings. court also Is directed to act immediately In the case. Whether another attempt will he made by opponents of .Mr. Mayfield to get the Injunction suit again before the courts could not be learned here tonight. that Earle B. Mayfield' name will f n SUPPORT FOR BROOKHART Greenleaf Far Surpasses Allen in Second rt NORTH OVER SOUTH CACHE peelal to The Tribune. ' cond HYRUM, Oct. 27. In a test hare this afternoon the North Cache by high shut out the South Cache high the South score; Although a Cache eleven fought stiffly, they were They no match for their opponents. made first down four times, while the North Cache aggregat.on made yards through the line on almost every play. Traveler was the moat consistent sprinter for the winners. He made the longest run of the day, about thirty-fiv- e on yards, and could always be depended to make necessary yardage to give his ' team first down. The score at the end of the first half of those points bestood 19 to 0. seven was ing made in the first quarter. There no scoring In the third quarter and six Those last. the nl were made points Larmaking touchdowns were Rirle. M. latson?, N. Thomson and Traveler, the touchafter ter tnaklng the only point down? The lineup: South Cache (0). North Cache (25). s. Maughan le Smith H. Olsen . N. Thomeon ..It. Hammond H. Johnson ..lg M. ...c Rigby R. Smith . O. Larson A. Anderson A. Maughan C. Maughan H. Maughan M. Maughan .. 8 Rigby Hendrick Substitutions: North Cache. M. Rlgbr for foe Smith. South Cache, O. Larson, S. Anderson for M. Rigby, Referee, M. Rigby for S. Maughan. , Falk; head linesman. Plant. one-side- IDAHO FALLS TEAM DEFEATS ST. ANTHONY Special to Tb Tribune IDAHO FALLS, Idaho, Oct. 27. The Idaho Falls high school football team won a decisive victory over the St. AnAnthony. thony team this afternoon at St,score stood At the end of the first half The local t to 0 In favor of Idaho Falls. secthe during boys picked up speed ond half, gaining several touchdowns, 20 0 to at which piled the soots up to the close of the game. BLACKFOOT VICTOR OVER Mf CAMMON Special to The Trlbaae. BLACKFOOT. Idaho, Oct. 27. In the district football confer enee Black! oot today defeated McCammon 18 to 6. eastern Idaho SUITS READY-MAD- E AND MENS MADE-TO-MEASU- RE SUITS In choice Tweeds and Worsteds, are offered now at the above remarkable price of 34.75. OVERCOATS that for quality and workmanship cannot be excelled at the price, only ' $34.75. . - Z. C. M. I. Special Values are Always ,no Reliable-misrepresentatio- n, titious values. ht TILDENS FINGER SAFE. PHILADELPHIA. Oct 27 Physician at the Germantown hospital, where William T. Tilden, national tennis chamion. OUR DRUG STORE IS AT 4 SOUTH MAIN ST. 112-11- Davis Says. SPOKANE, Wash., Oct. 27. There will be no cancellation of the debts owed by the European nations to the United States on loans mads during the war, James J. Davis, secretary of labor, declared In an address here tonight. He spoke In the Interest of the candidacies of United States Senator Miles Poindexter and Representative J. Stanley Webster of Washington for reelection. On foreign debts the government under the Republican administration Is firm. Secretary Davis declared, digressing from hla prepared address, adding that eleveiv thousand - millions of dollars belongs ter ths people of the United States who Liberty bonds to provide ths funds York boughtwere loaned to Europe. President that Harding and his cabinet areto insistent us." , that Europe shall pay Its debt GREENVILLE, Taxes. Oct. 27 An at- tempt tonight to secure an Injunction restraining Secretary of State 8. L Staples from placing Earle B. Mayfield's name on the ballot as Democratic candidate for senator failed when Judge George BA Hall of the Eighth judicial is being treated for an Infection of hla district refused to grant the Injunction. eree Peterson did not permit the touchtoday that down for the time being, but upon con- hand, expressed the opinion would leave no permanent the In rules, sulting the technicality Y. C. When the the Infection injury. One said the finger was coming ASKS awarded It to the B. game ended the B. Y. C. was marching along nicely. straight to the goal. B. Y. U. CHEROKEE. Iowa, Oct. 27. Enlarge...... , Swenson ment and broadening of the scope of the Anderson to look particularly to Bloch Republican party Crowther the interests of the farmers of the north-wes- j, Hinckley as exemplified in the workings of Prior 27. Oct. PHILADELPHIA, Howard Ralph the farm bloc, and an appeal for the supKimbail Greenleaf of New York, national pocket port of Colonel 8m!th W, Brnokhart for the Uulted States senate and McIntosh billiard champion, outclassed Bennie Al- Boles of the Eleventh IowaCongressman district for Pync len of Kansas City, Mo., tonight In their reelect Ion to the house, were features of Bird Dixon second block of the challenge match for the address here tonight by Senator Peter C., Davidson for the title. Play ended with the score Nor beck of South Dakota. Senator Norbeck praised Colonel Brook-hat Davidson, Da- standing: Greenleaf, a worthy successor to Senavidson for Maughan. Bose for Hall. B. Greenleaf made 152 810; Allen, 124. tor as being and a man in sympathy with and points tonight Kenyon, Y. If.. Partridge for Prior, Fuller for Allen 84. The was of the northwest and its made best Interests the for Ward hlgtnun by Swenson, Allen - for Crowther, ' 88. ten of which, however, people. Greenleaf with . Bird. came from an unfinished run last night. a low ebb, be said, Is at "Farming The next high was the champion's 33 "and right now, aa perhaps never before, In the thirty-fift- h CACHE WINS we need men tn Washington who are alive Inning. N ' to the needs of our people in this section of the country. "High transportation rates, a Inadequate credit plan and the marketing problem," he continued, "ere among the things we are now contending with In congress, and we need more such men as Brookhart to help put It across." Discussing, the charge that Colonel Brookhart U radical. Senator Norbeck said: "When men go to congress thetr main trouble bea been usually that Instead of being too radical they become too conservative. What we need from Iowa is a fighting, progressive man. aujh as Colonel Brookhart appears to be. Wedding Announcement Is Surprise to Friends Oct. 27- - The POCATELLO, Idaho, and Miss Jeanmarriage of J. C. Sellers afternoon earns ette Daniels Wednesday as a surprise to their many friends In bride Is ths daughter this city. The of Mr. and Mrs. Davtd H. Daniels of of 433 South Sixth avenue and the bridegroom Is the Pocatello manager of ths Revelars Secret service and a member of the Klwanls and other clubs. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. C. H. Cleaves of the Congregational church .and only the bride's family atThe couple departed that evetended. ning for Balt Lake to spend their honeymoon. STUB DESTROYS BARN. FAIRVIEW, Oct. 27. Fire yesterday de. stroyed a barn, haystack, the roof of a granary and surrounding buildings belonging to Chancy Howell. Some pigs and chickens also were burned. The cause of the fire was small girls playing with matches. FRANKIE FRISCH TO WED. NEW YORK, Oct. 27. Frank Frisch, star second baseman of the world's champion New York Giants, Is to be married November t to Miss Ada Lucy, It became known today. They have been engaged for a year. Serious Bladdsr Trsubls. Could not stand nor sit and was forced to cry out from Intense pain, writes Tarkio, Montana. "Ths Henry Williams, doctors said I had Inflammation of ths bladder and an operation was necessary. Tried Foley Kidney Pills and improved at ones. Tell all my friends about Folsy Kidney Pills as It will save many from suffering and perhaps, as in my case, Bladder and kiddangerous operation." ney trouble demand prompt treatment. Foley Kidney Pills give quick relief. Schramm-JohnarfDrugs, Five (5) Good Stores. (Advertisement) n, |