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Show ' " N MATTY IS SAVING Slant Star Pitcher HIS WHIP MINES AND MINING Is New Relying on Ability to Outguess Batter Rather Then Speed. Ore running 121 ounces silver and gold was recently struck In the Cameron Pride group of claims ats Christy Mathewson, It Is said. Is of Marysville district, south using a different system of pitching now from what he did formerly. I'tah. It Is claimed that Gold Hill and Matty realizes that he cannot last forever, yet he wants to stay as long Dutch Mountain 'tu'tet her could furnish as be can. Consequently be is giving a Ltep Greek radioad a trained of his arm all the rest he' can. A New ore eveiy day in the iar and not York critic has this to say ot him: mui h more than half try. wells are now producMathewson la saving bis mighty Twer right arm. As he grows older Sir ing In the Spring valley, Wyonrng oil field, the last to Etrihe oil being that of the Alle-han- y Oiljrompany, which I enetraUd the flist oil sands at a depth of 11 fit feet. -Within the next few d:is, it is announced, Jesse Knight will resume work on the property of the Bonneville Mining company, the mouth of na'n nnnel being near the county road, midway between Provo and ,,..ngviilf, Utah. The tunuel U In 00 feet. Another good copper statement Is predicted for July by the Interests. All the large agencies are holding to a 12c price, although some sales are being made a shade under that figure. The copper market has made a very favorable stride forward With the addition of a large sum for operating and developing purposes, the future looks bright for the Black-hors- e district, and especially since the Amalgamated Nevada Mines company has raised another large sum of money to continue development work, accord-jUto the Ely Expositor. There were produced by South lTtah 1 Mines and Smelters during June, pounds of copper, 1,534 ounces of silver and 81 ounces of gold, says the Boston News Bureau. The mill received shipments of 13,042 tons of ore which yielded 1,141 tuns of concentrates. to th A Salt Lake man, writing lrom Dike canyon, I have near National, Nevada, says: Christy Mathewson. panned gold from the very top of the In several places. From the Christopher realizes that the time is ground Yellow mine at a depth of eight Dog approaching when be will be u to retlre, Porthat reaBon be to ten feet 1 have taken ore that i 3O0.2S ounces in gold and.l4U17.. doesn't use great speed at all times, ttnees in silver, a total value of but employs methods that keep his fielders busy. It Is only when he finds himself In tight places that Matty Utah's name has spread far and puts smoke on the ball to bowl over wide qs a mineral zone of unequaled the opposing batsmen. Headwork, richness and I shall expect great rather than brute strength, Is the things. I am especially anxious to secret of Mathewson pitching this carry back with me a collection of season. your minerals for study work and analysis at the university and exhibiST. PAUL AS BASEBALL FAN tion at the museum," declared Prof. M. Belowsky of the University of BerWould Be Enthusiastic Rooter and At- lin, In an interview in Salt Lake. tend All Oamte, Ow lothftC Dr. Young of jiVlniinwmMwwewOTq ng the quarter ending May 81, One Sunday In each year la devoted the company mined and milled 8,558 church of tens of ore at a total cost of $54,715.27, by Bedford Presbyterian Brooklyn to a sermon on baseball. o" a ocst per ton of $6 39. From the The services are held under the aus8,p59 tons willed wg recovered gold pices of the New York league of Y. M. to the value of $85,196.24, or $9.93 per C. A. baseball teams. This year's serviton, from which was made a net nrofit ce" wae held recently and the sermon of $3.56 per ton, or a total profit of was delivered by the Rev. Dr. Edward $30,480.97. He told his hearers that St. Young. Late arrivals from Jarbidge report Paul, If preaching In America- - this the camp and vicinity now boast that summer, would undoubtedly be an enthusiastic fan and would attend the r population of nearly 1,000 people; that the near completion of three mills, games. Paul was an enthusiastic sports- the building of good roads from both the preacher said. "So close north and south sides of the camp and man, was his friendship with the presiding the encouraging prospects at the prosofficers at the great games of west- pects generally ail together give he ern Asia as to excite their very active camp in northern Nevada an air of solicitude In his behalf when Paul life and permanency very pleasing to seemed in danger so records the all Interested in the future of the Book of Acts. He used athletic terms camp. frequently, speaking of himself as s According to F. A. Heihze' the necrunner and boxer and figuratively ap- essary funds for financing the Ohio plying the term "great umpire of the Copper company have been promised skies to his Master. for tome time, althought the transac"A bad time came to the ball' field tion has not yet been completed, says a few years ago when betting and told Boston News Bureau. From other the now contests ruined the game, but It is learned that the matter sources young men are here taught honor, the was closed six weeks ago-bu- t practically visthereof infraction being lightest one of the parmoment the last at ited with 'exclusion from th field. ties interested decided not to lend his aid to the new financing, and the matOne by Tim HureLr ter has therefore been nanglng fir former Tim Hurst, th major league since. nmplre, was asked one day what was To tap a new field of hlgVgrade th closest and hardest decision ha coal at Bullnrd, a railroad will be ever made, says the Sporting News. built from that point to connect witlt s It was In Baltimore he said, was on first. McGraw was on the Denver A Rio Grande at Thompsecond and Btenxel at the bat. They son, Utah, five miles south. It Is exstarted a double steal Jennings as pected that the road will be completed: he passed Long.- hit ' him and Long in sixty days. With the main tunnel how In 1,300 tripped him, after which Jennings went on and Jumped Into Colltna feet, apd but thirty feet mor'e to go to Tenney tried to hold McGraw, but ba get under the old incline shaft wh ch broke away, reached second and years ago produced much ore which kicked the ball out of Lowes hands. grve up values as high as 2,000 to-000 ounces of silver to the ton, Stensel swung his bat and hit Robin the Eudora-Bel- l son on the hand trying to keep btm property in from throwing. Robby tripped me and American Fork canyon Utah, are parpoked me In the back to keep me ticularly interesting right now. trom seeing and Stenzel spiked my Askfd regarding the reports that toot." "How did you decide It?" was have been printed lq the east to the I called It a foul ball, sent effect that the Nevada Consolidated is asked. the runners back and kicked Stenzel making copper Jor less than 6 cen;s a on the shins, said Tim. pound. General Manager Ikenanonly smiled and said the facts as to the Cost would become public in about a Player Wa Rattled. New players sometimes do badly at month, when the quarterly report w'H the start from pure stage fright Ar- be given out. He admitted, however, thur- Irwin1 tells of a rattled player that they are making corper pretty a ho came under his notice when he cheap at present, but declined to ba was coaching Pennsylvania. Penn more specific, says the Ely. Expositor. An official report of the mineral had a game on with the' Phillies and Ontario for the first quarter the player booted everything which of 1911 makes the following showing: came his wsy. Whats the matter." asked Irwin after the game, couldn't Gold, 1813 ounces, 333,990; silver, you see them?" Say, coach, was 5 3y,487 ounces, $3,701,544; copper, the reply, 1 dont eveu remember tons, $884,992; iron ore. 11.54S tons, $24,401; pig iron, 115,454 tons, putting on my uniform. $1,823,717; spelt and nickel oxides, End ef Bad Boys. 107,84$ pounds, $29,882. Teacher (severely) Do you know Is one The loss by fire at what becomes ot bqys who run away of the most deplorable Porcupine In the tragedies from school every afternoon to play history of mining. From early reports ball? it appears to have been the most dis- Small Truant Some ot 'em get lata so far as loss of life is the big leagues. Iastrous, $C0 In Ten-Mil- some first base- Hans Wagner man. Too many country? Minor leagues seem to tbelr troubles this year. ..Every club manager is discover another Ty Cobb. Iletter a pennant winner In a minor league than a tall ender In a major. Detroit beUeves Connie Mack baa th right Idea In signing up the collegians. x Detroit Is doubtless glad that It put . away so many victories while the winning was good, phere, said to have Noisy John Kflng honorable. received a bonus mounting Into four It lias often been nsaertul that on the witness stand a woman will figures for joining the Doves. famous Eddie Clcotte and hi more lightly commit jierjury than a man. This, however, doea not prove well with Ed ball would knuckle that she is dishonest. It only shows that a trained lawyer is more clever Walsh and his spltballgo and BUI Lang than she, and that by his art he forces her into false positions. with bis terrific speed. There Is some ground for th beThe reason why women dir not always tell the literal truth on the jrit-nelief that a man who has experienced the understand conditions stand is because they neither fit into nor of college training will the discipline which surround them; they are. old of their "sphere; they loe the real be amenable to that In the big league. Secretary BUI Locke of the Pirates meaning of the whole court proceedings. his team has been bolding back says Isa womans standard of honesty higher or lower thn a mans? If so they could gjt tbelr second wind if is a question of commercial integrity, of common bpSuicss honesty, there and give the leaders a real battle from can be but one answer. And that answer lies in Jim comparative number now until the end. In the case of a baseball team, noth- for crimes of men and women in and few F women are piets w lio believe thi-i- r own poetry doea it not will lie inclined to quarrel with that definition follow that a woman, thoroughly Convinced that what ahe1- is to aaying is the truth, even though man by his logic proves it be false, cannot he called untruthful? A woman is guided to truth largely by ter intuhion; a man by his logic. To woman the modern world is a new, neces-ait- y strange thing. She grasp neither the meaning nor the of law, business, philosophy, jwlitics, mathematics. To her logic is only a name a mans way of looking at things. In her own mind woman envelops her acta in ajiright and idenl atmosand thus often secs a high motive in what a man would all dis- T " - y' 1 ss against property. jails kg Is so conductive of freedom from anotlonal excrement as a safe, as sired position at the bottom of the yrcentag column. Bllly Evans suggestion , that eight dub leagued have two or four towns I feserve to which they may turn In se of falling off In attendance at the fgular cities seems good. Hoblitzel, the first baseman of the lrds, is now a real dentist. He re wived his diploma a few days ago Md will start practlc next winter. Bs la not going to give up baseball the summer, however. Kling has shown more Ilfs since be Jdned than he bas for the kit two years with the Cubs. The lkves are beginning to show tbs effort of the work that Kilns ,1s putting Sun through. ' "Old Cy Young Intends to change hk style of delivery after tweDty-twHe has always ywrs of pitching. on bis speed, but now he is gkng to put. more dependence In bis erves and drops. - Efforts of three Central league cSbx South Bend, Terre Haute and Vheetlng to secure Shortstop Mo Cirtby from Pittsburg have proved nttuccessful and that player will confine to alt on the Pittsburg bench. the-Dove- s o d Women do not deliberately steal. Thryllo not deliberately misrepresent goods. They are not eml?zlers or dfdaulters. There could have been no necessity fora pure food law if women bail sole charge of manufactur- iiig foods. If women are not innahKlovers of trulli, why does religion appeal more forcibly to them thnnfo men? Why do women outnumber the men in the churches? And to whom, from mother Eve to this day, has boen intrusted the task of teaching the young? Is it of the human race, from the pojjddo that two-thirdavm of iTvillzatioii, could have instilled into children the honor and truth which they themselves did not ds I am tick and tired of this modern fad ok it Aililw ilinU It UngU u lM f CwawIcU orna Lsggue. , A baseball league bas been formed among the 600 prisoner In the Rhode themselves. To my mind it ia just an excuse for selfish mothers to salve their troubled consciences. No, you need not tell of the evil to a child of making it dependent upon other for amusement. Few children have resource of their own and if an older person will not help them out the poor little tots have a stupid limes of it In the years when they should be the happiest. Theres my Bobby. I play with him every day with never a thought of the mis his I for wife, llis wife should be glad and thankam laying up ery ful to amuse him when he is toiling and slaving for her. If she hate do sacrifice herself the more reason that Boh ahould remember a mother who was never too busy or too tired for a romp with him. lecture was read to me by the president of The other day a red-hour mother club when ahe caught me blowing soap bubble with my small y. She assured me that I was spoiling him utterly by not allowing him to coniriv e pl ans f or living htoqwn life wUhout help from others, and tried in every way to make me feel that 1 was a back number mother who had not the best interest of her child at heart. If Bobby ia not going to be as good or aa happy a man because his mother rocked him to sleep occasionally and would play with him whenever he asked tier to he will have to run hia chances of not turning out are every afternoon during the summer. Ia a recent game, a car barn robber played behind the bat, a post office robber covered Brat base, and a man convicted of manslaughter was In the box for one of the teams. Those who Island state prison, and games played In the prison yard Harry Lord. to the carriage that was waiting to Sat-uprd- cdnvey hlm to tb hotel, this fan in- did not play were supplied with pipes formed Harry that he was playing on and tobacco and rooted for tbelr faa bum team and that be waa no good. vorites during th game. HITTING SENSATION OF THE BROWNS. r ot ' well. Aa for the romps, I enjoy them as much as Bob does. It brushes up my wita and limbers my bones to keep up' with my small man. There is a lot of good in modern ideas of bringing children up, but some of the ways in which women carry' them to excess make me almost long for the time when we women were just unscientific mothers with only love to guide us in bringing up our little ones. I dont believe either Bob or Bobs wife to tie will ever revile hid mother for the jolly hours my boy and I have had together. If they should 4o so I do not care. go- j Jr ' V . ' but it is U-s- t to look below the -- - top layer.' Eternal vigilance ia the price of liberty,- - but many people, do not i v have the price. aensible a occasionally doe not make one an infelleo thought Having arc teal light. Same who would go to a horse race in a khower of pitchfork are kept dew. away from church by a heavy 7 Copyright. DU. hy Joseph B. Bowles ) . r , - V'fc feloily " By their fruits ye shall know them, 4. 3 One finger in the pie ia worth a whole rnenta. d - ' hand in the soup. ' To avoid falling into a financial pit, keep your balance at the bank. Unsolicited advice is sehlorn relished, even though Nature docs not intend a man to be at fifty. ready for the scrap-hea- p Half the pleasure in life comes from knowing how to enjoy our enjoy, d. Herald-Republica- -- rot. sugar-coate- g Jen-btng- An unwise son maketh a mad father No one is too old to set a bad example. Mental laziness leads to intellectual dry Some stage performances are worth ing miles to miss. copper-producin- 158,-C6- BOSTON FANS DOPE WAS BAD Hirry merely said, Is that so? and haded a punch on the critics jaw that knocked him out cold. Harry carrWhile White 8ox Captain Playing ied a damaged band to show for hla With Red Sox Forcibly Resented trouble and the bug took home a Offensive Remarks of Bug. badly swollen chin. Mr. Lord Sr. was One Boston bug," at least, wijl re- s fitness of the brief encounter. member Harry Lord. After one of th Chicago games, as Lord was walking Accident Made Bresnahan Catcher. As accident made Roger Bresnahan a cttcher. Roger went to Baltimore M I pitcher, but was not much good, aal Manager McGraw had Just about decided to let him go (or keeps when Wilbert Robinson and Bill Cl&rke obey ? Were hart McGraw asked Roger to bid on a mask and No matter what may have been said. 'Sr written pad and catch. Brwnahah waa game. There was 4 reabout women not telling the truth, the fact still fad man on first base who thought he mains that it is at the mothers knee that children ot the boys Inpoald tfoke advantage learn truth and receive their highest ideal of honesty experience and he tried to steal. Roger shot the ball down so fast that he and of life. hid him by 30 feet. McGraw saw vhat be could do. and asked Robinson sake a catcher of him. Teach Child to Amuse Its Own Self. tv-thr- "Molly Meloan the hitting sensation . , v ' y, Meloan ef gt. Louie bas proved to V ; Ski v- be of St. Louis nine he Joined the Browns and got a tegular position in the outfield. He duplicated bis work on the White Sox team last summer right off the reel He got away to a good beginning. nd baa mad the 8t Louta fans tit up and take notice. Last summer with Comtskey Meloai tarted lo hit like a Lajole or a Cobb id th Old Roman thought he had I. i American. the man who would turn the Whits Box team out of the hltless wonder class. He was batting In the neighborhood of .38ft when along drilled th With Quinn pitching Highlanders. Meloan ran Into a "bean ball and was After that, rendered unconscious. when he returned to the game, ha fell off deplorably In his sitting. Ht didn't show well with the stick' on the training trip, but It seems now as If he has rounded t 2,-1- |