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Show LEW FREE PRESS. LEW. UTAH Speaking of Sport $ No Job Security -- Final Minutes Jinx Arkansas HOTELS Football Hopes HOTtT PLAMMlMfc SALT LAKB Slalr St. 4lt IW kalra II .M. II H t fc Itllrt-KtSfttT- C LfcA.N By ROBERT McSHANE la IKMl MVtlll Has al tka IN LESS than three minutes of a u.tM aa BOTH (,! ntN-K- rn. actual play Coach Fred Thomsen Ml pop in r netrl and his Arkansas Razorbacks have 8T. ,Knm,K H'l'IH, s.lt Laaa survived enough football tragedy to fca 3rd Hhjtti h! TW - II M Wlla Hal a ti 25 la II Tl break the heart of an average team. 1 Iran tanvnlnt Beginning in November, 1937, the fatal last minute of play has seen CLAY PRODUCTS the Razorbacks lost- 5 out of 13 games. It all started when an ArFACE PRICK - SKWLK Fli'k. - FLOWER HOTS -- HALL tJOF-I- and kansas safety man was struck by a a 1.1. CLAY HKODl-CTBaylor punt. The ball bounded away UTAH Flttt CLAY to Salt Laaa and was recovered by Baylor with 43 seconds to play. A 25 yard touch- OFFICE EQUIPMENT down pass saw Baylor win, 2u to 14. NEW AND I KM) ar.a. ana rhalra. Sin. The next game saw Rice complete adiiini mrli'i. aafra. trawritr. 8. L, IlKKk tX. It, J 8. Sl.it kail lake. a touchdown pass in the last 32 seconds to win the game. LIVESTOCKOR SALE This tilt lost the Southwest conferRAY1S fhoir Siuff Yrarltnir. ence title for Arkansas. !S to t.'T and Unil Hsnch. In 1938 Baylor beat the Razor-back- s Utah, or Hit. 74S, Salt Ikc Citr with a field goal in the final play of the game. The Texas Aggie JCAAKUL game saw Arkansas in the lead 7 LIMITED AMOUNT OF UKF.FDf.NG to 6 with four seconds remaining. SUxk vale from iirtie winning fWkg. A The Aggies were in possession on rw fur field with a i.rovin fast, proliiHbia the four yard line. A penalty moved a and future lliua. Cumtlt prwnt, iure tratvd rK,lft mi reijui-s- t I'NITKI) KARA. them to the one varrl line and nn KUL FUK SHKKP CO . Twin Fail.. Malta. the last play they smashed over for a touchdown. LIVESTOCK With 50 seconds left in the 1938 0 KKCLSTKRED lirrrford bulk, ready for Rice game, Rice was in possesWell wte Kimiri nut, jiood huw, wdl sion of the ball on the Arkansas 26. niKikeil 217 Boatoo ;..,! shape. BldK.. Wa. 4sTJ. A field goal saw Rice on the long end of a 3 to 0 score. HOT CEREAL ' - d HAMI-.SH1R- llulb.-nok- Ji. For S.re Delioioun Rrrakfnt flKAINH OK (.OLD with That Titantrd Nut I.ika Ha vera, at all (.rocara ICE CREAM FREEZERS FOUNTAINS ICK CHKAM COUN-TEFKKKZt'KH and I Cream cabinet. Har Futurea. Slwila. Carbonaton. Steam I'ahlea Alao reeondilianed rtiuipment trrma. HODA MOSKR II faat HARTMAN Offic. Plara CO. . Manuf.rti.rrr. Halt Laka Clt ATHLETIC GOODS GRRAT WESTERN ATHLETIC GOOD -llalfaraaa, BaU. (.lovi... Baarballa. gofthalla. 0 yollrh.ll.. Athlelir ho, it. The past two seasons two-ye- ' QOL. WILLIAM PRESTON LANE, Football Messial i Md., home. His death leaves only one survivor of the 18G9 game George Hall Large, Flemington, N. J., who played on the Rutgers team. Mr. is now 88 years old. iarge Colonel Lane, a member nf fh Princeton class of '72, was one of uie players on the Princeton team fflaiJJU CINCE 1931 Duke university's foot- ball team has turned on its many foes who were accustomed to scheduling the North Carolina school as a breather and Duke fans are first to give credit to Coach William Wallace Wade, their football Messiah. Wade appeared at Duke early in 1931, and since that time has GETTING OVER IT i Balt related to you. ... 1.. Ttfn Tho were and large" mean? for their simp'.r-,- yUJf merely tikes? J 2. Who are tne do not represent w ords. 3. What is a consanguineous 5. Cuba the largest and ric'r marriage? of the West Indian isl.3!. js i ii:i.-naiiona 4. In writing tne 6. Egypt developed distress call Signal SOS. are pe- which was then rolled j V11 letteis? riods used after u:e T h i c afennnt f r,r A 5. Which country is known as ume, which comes from he La4 Antilles"? of the ' the "Pearl word meaning to roll. 6. Why is a booK called a vol7. Fictitious character ume? Swift's "Gulliver's Travels" JJ 7. What are the Houyhnnnms? sessing the form of both 'nanJ 8. What :s tne longest serial horse. story ever published.' 8 It is "The Man,d Lie y. What d:d Tneodore Roosevelt Helen and Warren, by for room there about being say Herbert Urner, which his but one language in the United running for over 20 veax States? 9. In a letter read a ti '.a All was being shown over a bv the estate agent, who was, to perhaps, a little more inclined tribe. his of some than candor "I think I must tell you," said the agent, "that there is one drawback to this house. It is very close to the railway, and you nay be disturbed at night by the trams. Still, I'm quite sure that after two or three days you'll get used to it and not notice it." Pat thought for a moment, then said : "Sure, an' ye needn't worry. Oi'll sleep at me brother's the first three nights." Answers magazine. - DON'T BELIEVE SIGNS Mike was going to Dublin for the first time, and his friend Pat was giving him a few hints on what to do and where to go in the big city. "What do I do when I go to the zoo?" asked Mike. "You be careful about the zoo," advised Pat. "You'll see foine ani-- i mals if you follow the words, 'To the lions' or 'To the elephants,' but take no notice of the one, 'To the exit,' Mike. It's a fraud, and it's outside I found myself when I went to look at it." Dublin Evening Mail. d The ;J 17) LLJ. Li ml mmji ' at . jc' rpUy semi-civiliz- & i f is . r .Cj.' V More than Double Mileage More Traction 4 Great Features SxrAx that fore it starts. WEED AMtKICANS provide extra traction and double mileage, as proved by official tests. This notable AMFrRTarCAexf rmade Vssibk by 4 great WEED -- (1) Bar-reinforc- 6k-be- vuii icttiures. cross links. (2) Weedalloy- -a tougher metal. (3) Patented Lever-Loc- k End Hooks-posi- tive fastening. (4) Side Chains welded and to resist wear. hard-ene- d WEED AMERICANS by name at better accessory stores, garages, service stations Pocket - i tl er a I r Galento Confident e f or STEAM-ROLLERE- 6 li s hepn ot I said: "We have room f,,r but Vol the language here, and that is tr. whole. English language, for we intend to see that the crucible turns 2. Tiie Jukes are a celebrated family of imbeciles and criminals people out as Americans, uni m to whom students of heredity have as dwellers in a polyglot boardon. house." given this fictitious name. Aiii-wcr- rnmi.-rehensivelv-. 1 h Budge Turns Pro 1 -- PHOTO-KRAF- ( T 'L. a - ! ... w, p.-:- . -- a maker of gridiron miracles. Be- xore nis advent Duke was smacked HCHOOL SUPPLY CO.-Laka. around by its smaller rivals with TRUSSES amazing regularity. His third team showed that he was well under way. 8urlral InatrumcnU, Iloapltal 8upi)Mea. That year's squad won nine straight, Iru.aea. Manufacture of Abdominal Sup. twrlera. Ela.lie Stwkinm took the Southern conference chamTha Phriidani Supply Company pionship, and lost only to Georgia 48 W. 2nd South St - . Salt Laka City. Utah Tech in an epic 6 to 0 struggle. In 1935 and 1936 conference championPHOTOGRAPHY ships descended on Durham, along with a new horde of students. PHOTO-KRAF- T "Welcome home, Bob, I suppose "If I had to choose between a your European travels broadened ECONOMY FILM SERVICE ' squad of good morale and one of you?" Any Ra Developed with good physical build, I'd take the - - - - 25e "Well, as they flattened me comQuality Print Extra Prinfi squad with the morale," said Wade. pletely, no doubt I've gained in 3e He means it. To him football is a breadth." Wrap coin nd film carefully Boi 749 creed, a cult to be followed with abSalt Lake City. Utah solutely loyalty. SCHRAMM-JOHNSOIOur Censorious Civilization DRUGS He went to Alabama in 1923, build"Why do people find fault with a ing that team into the great Crimson mistake and so seldom encourage HEARING AIDS Tide, which won Southern conferdeeds?" good ence titles in 1924. 1925. I92fi anri "It's due to natural requirements 1930. In eight years at Alabama Wade's teams won 61 games, lost or our civilization," answered Mr. "A traffic con. for in. Chuggins. 13 and tied three. stance, is out to arrest reckless moHis football formula is simple: torists. He wouldn't be any good at Get a Lifetime ACOUSTI-COStrict attention to fundamentals. GEORGE HALL LARGE . . . Accepted by the American all if he put in his time Medical Aaaociatioa (Council on PhyFit your system to your players. running tic! Therapy). around to compliment cautious in '69. The contest with Short, concentrated practice ses Rutgers took place in New Brunswick on a sions. ACOUSTICON field. There was no adtemporary 8 So. State, Salt Lake Play football with all City mission charge, and spectators sat all the time. Observation E. E. MORRIS. Manacer on a fence rail. This encounter The witness was on the stand durA glance at his record h gave an important trial. birth to the football yell of today. successful the formula has worked ing WNU Weefc Ne. SMT The 1809 game, in which Colonel in the past. "You say," thundered the defense SALT LA KB Lane played, differed attorney, "that Wade believes in football not saw the two vastly from only trains crash head-o- you modern football. It was plaved with as a sport, but as a builder. n Telling the Truth while doing 60 a "Do not imagine,' said Hi Ho, th miles an hour. What did you round rubber ball, which "The one justification for a footsay when this happened?" ape of Chinatown, "that you show was kicked, batted with the hand ball team in an institution of learnand thrown. The witness shrugged. intelligence by being deceitful. One ing is the training in steadiness, of the most difficult things in the "I said to myself," he replied, courage, restraint and resourcefulworld is to tell nothing- but the truth this is a helluva railroad!' "New ness it gives the men who particiYork Mirror. and still be entertaining." pate." TONY GALENTO, shy QNE-TOto That, after-dinnis no Wallace, Violet Of heavvweirrht rw,vi talk. He speaks of a game he First Settlement at Rio de Janeiro Among the 'Mizzen circles, stuck $10,000 under the nose knows and loves, The first settlement at Rio d and he means it. The captain of a of Harvey L. Miller, first vice sailing vessel Western Janeiro was made by the French in dent of presiNewspaper Union. was questioning a rookie the National Boxing assosailor re1555. garding his knowledge of ships and ciation, and offered to bet on himthe sea. After self to knock out Champion Joe repeatedly receiving A Famous Coffee House Billiards wrong answers, in desperation, he LA1U1S. Across the square from the caasked: "Ill knock him out in two By CHARLES C. PETERSON thedral in Exeter, England, stands rounds." declared "Where's the mizzenmast?" President, National Billiard Association Galento, the man MoTs coffee house, favorite "I don't know," of America and World's Trick meeting' N. B. A. declares is America's rankreplied the seaShot Champion. man. place of those gay adventurers of ing heavyweight How long has it been challenger. miz. Queen Elisabeth's time "When?" he was asked. Drake, Gilbert Hawkins, and Raleigh. "That's what I'd like to know." Miller expressed surnrio Dt m IN PLAIN VIEW Cannot Trace First Use of Salt proffered wager, saying that "As far Salt has been used as a seasoning as I know this is the first time since for food for so long that historians the days of Sullivan and Corbett cannot trace Its first use. that a boxer has offered to bet that kind of money on himself to knock out the champion." Pressure and Atmosphere From the standpoint of pressure is the most fundamental property of the atmosphere. -D0N BUGE, the nation's outstanding tennis star, who recentNo Chun ire in Pierre's Tahin Franklin Pierce was the only ly turned professional for a flat guarantee of $75,000, refuses to underrresiaent who completed his terra estimate his .aeMffigfr JK'YI net worth to America's without a change in his cabinet. tennis fans. "Yes" 'Ve 3t fifSt Sight eh?" He formerly- stated th.it" h." Cobra Spits Out Poison nuuiu make the professional plunge for no ;;Why didn't you marry her?" A spitting cobra can project pol. less than $100,000. A lack of u ,Sni was a close- takers on far beyond its striking distance. caused him to change his mind up lo those interestMany Languages Used in India ed Budge's estimate Modern Idea Two hundred and twenty-fiv- e lanf his own value How did Tom manage to get so guages are spoken in India, seems a little steep much of his uncle's of dialects. estate?" in view of the fact laWyer's daughter""" Babe Ruth, f that , whose drawing powSyncopated Rhythm in Music er was unparalleled, Syncopated rhythm is found in , A Friendly Lesson No. 6 never made $100,000 the music of nearly every savage Warning The above diagram shows ,re.ahfe Iwe a lot to my couna kiss a year out of baseor nation. break shot. the orator. try ball, and in only Not too much of Be careful to place the that balls four as ? years did he designated in The World War Slaughter a synipathet To diagram, showing ex- whispered reach or ' Almost twice as You re not the only one slightly actly how to line up the ball to many men were better be Don the not killed in the World war as in all $75,000 Budge f....,iu who second object ball dencepaid h,s income tax.-.Pr- J" mark. the wars from 1790 to 1913. When all balls are Journal. A guarantee of carefully spotted $30,000 was given and touching (frozen) Fred Perry his first the shot can-nyear, plus a be missed. - K Hold your cue level Pinch of Snuff as Treat' Then and strike object ball m the center-anHusband Sn In early days many of the new 6J.0J0 before the tax collectors got make sure you do not fathers set up the boys to a pinch their share. Helen enghsh Moody was of your cue ball, which fcred a $35,000 of snuff. will guarantee failure to make the shot result w Wlfe is doing the cooking.' IITAH-IUAI1- Marriage to a . new-hous- Pat m t Offering Informant on Various Subie,e , for the start of the 1939 season. Connie Mack. ' manager of the Ath- ry.ani letics, and Joe Mc1 Carthy, Yankee guardian, are, of course, league reci ord holders. Mack V has been managing the Athletics for as far back as he cares to remember, and McCarthy has been fc t with the Yankees since the start of the Connie Mack 1931 season. New managers of the National league include Leo Durocher with Brooklyn, Ray Blades with St. Louis and "Gabby" Hartnett of the Cubs, though Hartnett succeeded Charlie Grimm in the midst of the past A Quiz Wnh Aasw 3. I The Out'etioiis What does trie phrase "by 1. ar season. n, Funny Side c record for a corresponding period in baseball history from a standpoint of managerial turnovers. During this time only two National league managers have managed to hang on to their jobs, and three new managers will be broken in during the coming season. American league managers have been somewhat more fortunate in the period. Changes have been made at Cleveland, Detroit and St. Louis. However, managers of the five other teams will be on deck Grid Pioneer Dies last member of the Princeton university team which was defeated in the first intercollegiate football game with Rutgers university in 1869, died recently at his Hagers-tow- hn ? ASK ME ANOTHER On the HEN the wolves start their annual howling at the heels cf football coaches in both major and minor colleges throughout the United States, Little attention is paid to major league managers' jobs and their similar lack of security. AMERICAN CHAIN & CABLE COMPAMV . , ILi" mx,, BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT i vumpany. Pyreoo mmm k tulnit m TA? : Comwno, CarSa , A CSnan?-Wiwj,c-Manufacturing Maaulacturlua mm aaiujiaJi i mm MKay Company; The Hodell Chain F,ren" XJmlt01; Llral0''' li miMtr Trade Mark Is an Honor Badge and Newspaper Advertising the Sentinel "Just as cood" thinking as good reputation basis and factrer SS .?dMthey LzL StiSeb? S If suffer To X ST y TrlZ becauseherare"vUnJ, ouaUty and t0 the consumer with indiCates cle to the someihinB which is only "Just isnbn "take a chance" basis. 001,16 "? SUbSUtUte advcrtised the beCanso buyn- pla?ehcrname - price f' sale entheamanu" Ut he ls kl"wn and StaDdard f on a " merely competes qua,ity merchandise today U as the best they can on an adver-maka,n,anufacturer St Prduct 1 know how to offer to the consumer U"d ad?rtlse tised product says this- - ThuT.et It is pure, good aS wi 7 f,yUr Purase. I well of it that I so place mv s goodness. If I " M a Pa aran I f Wrn your want wUl Rood Its failure. gladly make e. InSadVr ful Instead of the to yourself of To 'r a trade v..,.-i-, marks, .... w'" Z accept the unknown the tes; "bBlttt ot the satisfT rhaser will confine positive hS his Quality merchandise there TrH Sttead t0 little causa fn uaa W. Knar" If every pur- advertiscd atSn?!! ' doubt-ante- t. Mn,.i.u ui3o uueresh E. MOFFETT |