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Show • THEJORDANJOURNAL.MIDVALE,UTAH Taking a Jump at Horse Show whimper that just reached the '\VI'. low's ears. Slowly she stretched ln an arm. It was bare and round and soft. lle might have darted forwarfl the length of his body and burled his fnngs in it easlly. But something held him back. He knew that it wns not an enemy; he know that the dark eyes • shining at him so \\ onderfully were not tilled with the desire to harmand the voice that came to him softly was like a strange and thriliing music. "Baree! Baree! Upi Bar,,~!" Over and over again tile Willow called to him lik<> thnt, while on her fac<> she tried to <!raw her><elf a !PW inches farther under the rock. She could nut rench him. There \YHS still u foot betwl'en her hand and Baree. and she eouid not wetlge herself in an inch more. And th<>n she saw where on the otlwr side of the ro<·k tlwre was a hollow, shut in hy a stone. lf ~;!1e hat! rt•moved the stune, und come WNU Service in llntt way~un ha•l S('t for all time, and twr own She drew herself out and stood once life was tilled will• a vnst lonrelines~. NARROW ESCAPE mor·e in the !'<un~hine. Her hlo'art There had been three at the gm vreside thriller!. l'i<'rrot was busy o,·er his that afternoon as the sun went down bear-and she would not call him. Synopsis.-Part wolf, part dog She -when two months old Baree -Pierrot, herself, and a dog, 11 gt·ea t, mnde an eJr,,rt to move the stone has his fit·st meeting with an powerful hu~ky with a white star on which elo~e<l in the hollow UIHler the enemy, Papayuch!sew (yo u n g his hreast and a white-tipJlNl t-ar. lie big howltler, hut it was welig<·d in Pllotogrupll ::;hows Mrs. William owl). Fighting hard, the antaghad llePn her de:1d mother's pet from tightly. 'l'hen she began fligglng with 1 Mitchell taking one of the jumps onists are suddenly plunged into a swollen creek. Badly buffeted, puppyhood-her bodyguat·d, with her a stick. If Pierrot had been there, his on Boxwood in the ladles' saddle and half drowned, Daree is finalalways, even with his head rresting on sharp 1•yes would have discovered the horse class, at a recent horse show ly flung on the bank, but the the side of her bed as she died. And si.!;llifieance of that stone, which was held In \Y ashlngton. ?lfrs. Mitchell water ha~ destroyed his sense of direction and he is lost, lonely that night, the night of the day the~· not larger th:lll a water pail. Possihly 1 received the red ribbon, emand hungry. For many days his burled her, the dog had diooppf'ared. for c;•ntnries lt had lain there, Its blematic of second prize. l!!e Is oue o! fear and distress. He had gone as quietly and ns com- SllPJlOrt keeping the huge rock from lie meets various creatures of pletely as her spirit. ~o one ever snw toppling down, just as an ounce-weight the wild and goes throuc-h a thunderstorm. He Is learning him after that. It was strange, and to may swing the balance o.f a wheel that more and more. He strays Into Pierrot it was a miraelf'. Di>ep in his weighs a ton. the trapping grounds of Pierrot !wart he was tilled with th<> wonderand Nepeese. Nepeese wounds l•'ive minute<::-and :"\epeese could ful conviction that the •log had gone Baree with a rifle, but he esmove the stone. She tugged at It. capes. Baree recovers and learns with his hrloved Wynia into heaven. Inc-h by ineh she dra~o:ged it out until nature's secrets rapidly. Nepeese nut ;-.;epe<'se had spent three winIs determined to catch Baree and at laf<t it lay at her fl'et anrl the ters at the :\Ii~sionpr's school nt Xeltame him and tries again. open in~ was renrly fc,r her body. She son house. She had l!•arnetl a grPnt loni;Pd ngain toward Pierrot. lie was 1leal about white people an1l the real ~till liusy, and she laughed softly a<:: Gnrl, nnd she kn<>w that Pierrot's Chapter tV-Continued she tmtil'd a big red-nnrl-white Bay thought was lmpo:,sible. She believ<><l -8hanclkerehlef from ahont her !"llOtllnaree dfii'ted to one side and ran that her mother'R husky was eithPr cler~. \\'ith this she would Sef'lll'l' for the open meadow. Wakayoo did drnd or had joinrd the wolves. Prob- Ban'P. She dropped on her hands anrl not stir as naree :<ped past him-no ably he had gone to the wolves_. Sl)- knef'~ and then lowered herself flat more than if he lwd heen a hird or u wns it not po>:sihle thnt this youngster on the ~-:round nn<l began f'rawiing lr.to rahhit. Then came another hrPath of she nnd her father hnd put·suecl was of the hollow unrler the bmYider. air, heavy with the ~;cent of man. th<> flesh and blood of hrr mother's Baree hat! moved. With the hack 'l'bl!', at lo.st, put life into him. He pet? It was more than possihle. The of his hPlHl flattened against the ro<:k, turned lllld lll·gan lumberiug after "lvhite star on his hrPast, the white- he had heard somrthin.!:: which Nepeese Bnree into the meadow trap. Baree, tipped ear-the fact that he had not had not heard; he had felt a slow and bitten her when he might pa<::iiy have lookin~ back, saw him coming-and hurled his fangs in the soft fle,;h of g1·owing prPf'SllrP, and from this pres· thought it wa~ pursuit. Nep<>ese arid sure he had dniggt>d himself slowl~· PiPITOt cnme over the slope, and at her n rms! She was convinced. \Yh!le and the presRm·e still followed. The the same instllnt they saw Wakayoo Picrr,)t sklnn<>d the hear, she be;;an mass of rock was settling! Nt>peese hunting for Baree. anct narf.'e. did nnt see Ot' hear or und!'rstnnrl naree hurl not movt'd nn Inch from Wlwn •hey c·nterP<l into the grassy She was calling to him more and more dip un<ler tile POck wails, nan'e turned un•let· his rork. H!:' lny lil;e a thing pleadingly: Rharply to the rjght. Here wa~ a stunned, his eyes fixed ::;teadily on the "Baree--Baree-Rar!'e-" scene of the trat:etl~· out in the '!: grPat houldE'r, one end of it tllt<><l up Iler head and shoulrlf'rs and hoth off the earth. It lookt>d like a splen- meadow. He had sern something that arnrs "·ere under the rock now. The he would never forget-even as he dlcl hiding place, and Baree crawled would never quite fnrgl't lri~ mother glow of her eyes was' very close to unrler it. Bare<'. He whinl'd. 'l'lic thrill of a But \\'akayoo kept strnight ahead grl'at and irnpNH!ing danger ::;tit·red In Fielding II. \ o:;t is thl llrt'sent diInto the mf'Hdnw. his blond. And thenrector of lntercollt'giate athletics and l<'rom whPre he lay Haree f'Ottld see In that moment )1epeese felt thP director of the surnmer school for w.hnt llnpprn; d. Sc:n·rely had he pre:,;sure of the rock on her 'shoulder, coaches at the Univer;;ity of Michicrawled under the rock when Nf.'pef.'se anfl into the eyes that had been glow- gan, and ha~. for 2!'1 years, been a nnll Pirrrot nppeared through the ing softly at llaree there shot a snrl· lerH1ing, nationally known coach of break in the dip, and stoppP<l. The den wilrl look of horror. And then football. He has place<l 14 men on fa~t thnt they stopped thrilled 13arr.>e. tlwre eame from her lips a cry that Collier's All-American teams, more They were afraid of Wal;ayoo! The was not like uny other soun1l Buree thun any other coach of the game. bi:,! l1P11r was two-thirds of the way harl ever heard in the wlldet·IH'S~ u~ross the mearlnw. The sun fell on wild, piercin~. filled with agonlz<>rl him, so his eoat shone like black sntin. fem·. l'ierrot difl not hedr that first l'ierrot did not kill for the lo\·e of cry. But he heard the sf.'cond and killing. Xeressity made him a conthe third-and thPn scream nfter servationist. But he saw that in spite scream as the Willow's tf'nder bod.v or thP lateness of tire senson, Wakawas slowly crushed under the settling It's almo;;t time for the golf liars yoo's cnat was splendid-and he raised mass. He ran toward It with the to be a little hoarse. his rifle. speed of the wind. The cries were Harp(' saw this action. He saw, a weaket·-dsing away. Tie suw Har<>e Jack Dempsey has fought less than momf'nt later, something spit from the as he rame out from under the ro•·k two hours In seven yeurs us a chamend or the g-un, and then he henrd and ran into the canyon, and In the pion. that deufPn!ng crash tiJat had come same instant he saw a part of the \Viiwitlr his own hurt, when the Willow's low's dr<>ss and her morcn sined feet. Charles R Conklin of Brooklyn has bullet had burned through his flesh. The rest of her was hi<ldPn under the been chosen captain of the Brown II•~ tumed his eyes swiftly to Wakade~tth-trap. Like a madmnn Pierrot varsity lacrosse team. yoo. The hlg hear had stumbled; he begnn lligglng. \VIwn a few moments was on his kno>es; nnd then he struglatf'r be drew ~epeese ou! frvm under Among those objects which appear ~led l}P and lumb<;!recl on. the bowlder she was white and deathto have no balance are French budThe roar ot the rifle came again, ly st Jll. Her eyes were c!%ed. His gets und a cheap brassle. nnd a s<>cond timl! \Val{ayoo went lwnd could not feel that sh~ was llv· ~)own. Pierrot could not miss at that h.g, and a great moan of an~uish ro~e "Playing tennis," says Suzanne diSt:me,;>. Wakayoo macle a splen•ldi out e>f his soul. But he knew how to "Nepeese, Ma Nepeese!" Lenglen, "has become almost slavery." mnrk. It was slaughte1·; yet for f!:.:ht for a life. lie tore open her Play isn't play when It becomes hard Pierrot ancl Nt-pN•se it was business- and Kazan and the old winclfail. He clref's and found that she was not work. the hnsiness of llfe. had wltnrssed the death of the crea- Ui•3hed as he had feared. Then he .a' • • Haree was shivering. It IY!lS more ture he had thought all-powerful. ran for water. \Vhen he returned, the A man who Isn't able to walk ·into from excitement than fear, for he had \Yakayoo, the big bear, had not even Willow's eyes were open and she was the baek yard and pull a weed is able lust II l~ own fear in the tragedy of put up a fight. Pierrot and NPpeese gasping for hreath, to walk five miles after an eluRive thesn IJJomentu. A low whine rose in had kliled him without touehing him; "The ble~";sed saints be praised!" his throat ~~~ he looked at Wakayoo, now l'ierrot was cutting him with a ~ohbed Pierrot, falllng on ltifl knees at golf ball. who had rise·1 again and faced his knife which shot silvf'ry flashes in the her gidi>. '\ ·epeese, rna NPpeese !" More aU-American football players enemies-his laws gaping, his head sun; and "\Vaka;yoo made no move~he smiled at him, with her two have been produced at Exeter acadRwinglng slo\\ ly, his legs weakening ment. It mnrle Bruee shiver, and he hands on her hare breast. and Pierrot emy than at any other prep school In under him as t!le blood poured through drew himself an inch farthet· hack hugged her up to him, forgettiug the the country. his torn Iun.r.s. Barr.>e whined-he- under the rock, where he was already water he had run so hard to get. cause Wnknyuo had fished for him, wedged as if he had been shoved there Still later, when he got down on his Ar~ Bubbling Over and Bagenbagbecause he had come to look on him by a strong hnnd. knees and peered under the rock, his gage queerer names for horses than as a friend. and hecause he knew it He could see Nepeese. She came face turned white and he said: Alexander's Bucephalus or Bellerowas death tlutt Waka:roo wns facing stmight back to the break through "Mon Dieu. If It had not been for phon's Pegasus? now. There wns a third shot-the which his flight had taken him, and that little hollow in the earth, ~-~a.st. \Vakay< o sanl' down In his stood at last not more than twenty Nepeese-" The man who learned all about gol1l racks. His ·hig head dropped be- feet from where he was hidden. Now He shuddered, and said no more. In one afternoon is going to devote tween is fore paws. A racking cough that she stood where he could not But Nepepse, happy in her saivatioJ;J., some evening to collecting all the inor two eame t<t Baree. And then there escape, she began weaving her shinmade a movement with her hand and fOl'matlon available about radio. was silence. Ing hair Into two thick braids. Baree said, srnilinll' at him: ..,. It wa~ slaught<>r-but business. had taken his eyes from Pierrot, and "I would have been like--that. Ah A use has finally been found for A mmute later, standing over he watched her curiously. He was mon pere, I hope I shall never have the aimless hieroglyphics dra\\'n on Wakuyoo, Pie Prot said to Nepeese: not afraid now. His nerves tingled. the walls of pay stations: They make "Mon • Dleu, but it Is a fine skin, In him a strange and growing forc~t a lover like that rock!" Pierrot's face darkened as he bent dandy designs for goIf sweaters. Sakahet! It Is worth twenty dollars was struggling to solve a great mysover her. over at Lac Bain !" tery-the renson for his desire to "Non!" he said fiercely. "Never!' lle drew fo~th his knife and hegan ereep out from under his rork and npThe first marathon race In America He was thinking again of ?llr·Tag· was held in September, lS!JG, the whetting It on a stone which he car- proach that wonderful creature with ried in his pocket. In these minutes the Rh!ning eyes and the beautiful gart, the factor at Lac Bain, and ]Jis course extc·ndlng from Stamford, Baree might bave crawled out from hair. NepeeRe was looking about Iter. hanlls clenched while his Ups softly Conn., to Columbia ci1·cle, New York city. under his rock and eFcaped flown the She was srn:rtng. For a moment her touched the Willow's hair. canyon; for a space he was for~otten. face was turned towarrl him, and he • Then NepN'Se thought of him. and In saw th~ white shine of her teeth, and It is said that studt>nts from MerWill Baree finally come under cersburg (Pa.) academy have held that same M•nnge, wondHing voice hf>r h~utiful PYI'S seemed glowing the domination of Nepeese? she siJolte aga'n the word "Haree." -~more world interschol:tstlc track recstratgnt at llhn. Pie!'Tot, wh•J wa::; kneellng, looked Anrl then, slH](lpnlr. sl e droppP<l on ords thun athletes from any other school. up ,t l:er. her knees and [II'Crerl tmtlcr tlw roelc ~ (TO BI'J C'O •TINUED.) "Oui, Sll{ah>!t. He wns born of the Their eyes met. 1-'ot· at le::.st hnlf It ls estimated that Sir Thom.t~ wllcl. Anrl now he Is gone-" a minute there was not a !;ound. Lipton has sv<>nt clo ·e to $10.000,000 Th li;.!Jlow shook her henr.!. Finns' Docble Cltristma• "'epee~e \lid not movl', nn<l hPr hr·c .. •h "Non, e Is not gone." ~he said, and came so softly that Barep eould niJt For cent uri<•<; ill fL·r<' thP year 177:2 trying to win hack for Great Britain the cup .Anwrlca had taken away 73 her dark eyf'S questea the sunlit hear it. tht' penpiP of Fin' nd h ,,! fou1· ! 'hrist meadow._ 'l'hen she said, almost in a whisiJPr: ma.· ltoiid•tP'. hut n :-:wt lll~h royal de- years ago. As she quested the rng-ged e<lge~ of "Baree! Baree! Upi HarPe!" ere~ isst·Pd •Jrrr• ~ear aJ.,,li~lr~>d t.he the llttle meadow for signs of the dogBuhbliug Over and Carlaris head It was the first tinre Unrt>e hIll th'nl HIHl f·1>I th, ns it wa,.; tlwu;::Jrt <I•• • pup, h~r thOUijhts flashed ha<:k swiftly. heard his name, all!l t11er" was ~onH' sinthle to n rtail the f<>stlval in the the lmpoRiug list of SO entri<'s for the Two years .ago they had hul'ied her thing so soft and asRm·ing In 1he interc~t or work. lht thP Finns ~t!H eigh1 eenth rmmln~ of the ,\nwrir:::n princess mother upder the tall Rpruce sound of It tlrat in spite of himself have two ( l:ri<t•n'ts hoii•lays, Del'ern Derby, $100,000 ndcled, nt \\'ushington aear their <·nbln. That •lay Plerrot's the dog in him respon<..kll to it In a ber ~;; anrl :.!fl ( :::t ~tPJ)llf'll"" day). Parlr i'aee course, Chicngo, .Tul~· 10. I Summer School Coach , .. .. • • • • • • . .. . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • "================·'l I • • • • • • .~ OUIMET STARTED ON COW PASTURE TOURING . ,, .·~ '•~- '•' .•: Not Enough Boys to Organize Baseball Team. Francis Ouimet, who started as a caddie and won the open and amateur golf chumplon::;hlps, says he took up ' :·. golf when he was a young~ter because there wet·en't enough youngsters in his neighborhood to organize a couple of basPball tt!il.ms. He explain:> in Liberty that he was born in Bruokllne, .Mass., "within a stone's throw of a golf course." With his older hrother, \Vilfred, Francis Ouimet rigg-ed up a little course in the cow vasture, back of tlH'it· house, since tlwy W<·re forbidden to plaJ· on the Country clu]J links. "\Ve hall three holes," he writes, "an 1 mwd old cam; for the cups. We had many a brotherly hattie there, unu grudually the pair of us began to hit the gutties with some skill and cou1idenct". "Practice in those narrow confines had Its efr"Pct. I had to he careful not to io~e balls, and acquired accuracy instinctively, as a youngster will. I found it comparatively easy to place the bull when I began to frequent J ·... ~ood com·ses later on. "Our cmv-pasture course was not a finished 11roduct. We cut thP greens with a lawn mower each Saturday. The reRt was just as natur·e made it::;wamp, long grass that was long, rocks, and the brook. The memory of reco1·eries from rnarsh and mire on that field h,ts always helped in toug-h San Francisco saw Its first game of spots In big tournament~. lt was basebal! in lSGO. crude golf but hrelpful. Stymies and Bob Reeves, rnptnin · nnd shortstop pitches, instead of puttR, became secof the Georg-la Tech team, will join <Hlll nature. "Jf ynu "ant your hoy to be a golff'r, tl1e "\Vashingtou team for a trial. mai;e him lny out a course in his !Jack .. • * ~·arc!. He'll pi<'k It up. Any of our Alhert I<'arrPII, star shortstop of the cow-pa>:ture crowd could play the St. Mary's college team (California), Conn try cl ut, in So after l wo year,; of has :;igned with the San ];'mndsr·o Jungle golf. And champions occnsion~lisslons. ally do no better than that now, with the lively hall, and the hetter clubs, Before he heeame a hall player, Eland every other modern improvemer Joseph Cox of the Brooklyn team ment." was a hoxer, engaging ln over l 50 ring battles. Have you changed your plugs within the last year? If not, your content.. ment and satisfaction on your tour will be insured if you install a full set of dependable Champion Spark Plug,1 before you start• Champion Xexclusively for Fordo-paclo:ed ii:L the Red Box 60c Champion-for can other than Fordo-packed In the Blue Box H2 75 c Each CHAMPION Dependable for E41ery Engin• Toledo, Ohio • • • JT£~,! ~U~~Ran~~t~ ~~ away by a few application• of e • • • • • • Baseball In the colleges may be waning as ~<ome think, but it remains a big attraction nt Princeton university, second to f!lo(bnll. • • • In lR8!'i and l:'<flG, .Tohn G. Clarkson, star hurler of the Chicago Nationals, piteh<>d 17 sueee. Rive games against the St. Louis club without a defeat. .. .. Wnlter (Doc) Gautreau of the noston Braves, Is the Rmaile~t man in baseball-a mi<lgpt 5 fpet 2% Inches, weighing approximately 132 pounds. • • • Max Carey h; a strang-e spectacle Playing hls sixteenth season in the major league~, this vetPran l'tands as the best base runner in either big league. • • • KonsaR City has !<ent OutfieJdpr l•'rank M<'Oowan to the New Haven club of the f'a~tern league. on option He is the chap who wn~ with the Ath lctlcs in l!J23 and 10:!4. • • • Oklahoma City Ret a league record for three-ba.~e hits hy smashing out 19 iu 12 game!'. Dem·er holds the high mark in triplets for 11 sea~ou, setting the figure at 12!J for 1!)12. * • • Po~~<lhly Manager \Va~hington ma1!e a S. R. Harris of poor guesR when he decided that Zachat·y aud :\logridge, V!'terans, were losing their effectlvtoness and allowed them to go. • • • The Boston Hed Sox Rol<l Shortstop Dudley Lee to the Holl~·wood club of the Pacific Coast len:rue. Lee looker! like a coming star In 1!)24, but last season fell off and was not better this year. • • • A Yale professor says observations of th~ latest ecllp~e prove that the moon is not round, l.mt more the shape of u 2;:)-cent ba~eball after the champion hitter has clouted it for a home run. • • • Frankie Camllli, better known as Frankie Campbell, heavwelght boxer, has signed a contract with the San Francisco Seals. He is a shortstop and Is said to possess a great deal of ability. • • • Wilbur Robinson, manager of the Brooklyn RobinA, llfls been so successful in tnking old parts of baseball machines and putting them together that he Is now called the master mechanic of baseball. Four Dodgers' Salary Is Near the $60,000 Mark One reaRon why the Brooklyn Xatlonal league club is belien•d to liUY higher salaries thnn any other organi:.mlion. in thut circuit, not exerepting the Giants, is the disclosure of sums of money to l.Je puid to four ,.•ar play- • Kill All Flies! rn~Js~~~~.w P.IMed an.ywberc, DAISY FL-..' KILLER attracts and tillo nll tties. Neat, clean. ornamental. convenient and eheap. Lasts all sea• 1 Made of metal, 1pill or tip over: wi II not sot I or injure aaytbinQI. Guarantee<l. Insist upon DAISY FLY KILLER IIAROLD SOMERS from your dealer. BrooklYn N y. LOOKS! Zuck \V!•eat, popular captain and , Don't experiment on lpft tielller, bus; $1G,OOO for the com- 1 them. usn ~IITCUELL J:.'YE SALVE !or speedy ing sen~on. Dazzy Yance, pitching • reller. Abaolutely sale. nee, will dra"\"9 $1;),500 in ae<'onlun<'e at all dn1ggists. with the ten>l" of n three-~·ear con- • _ __ r HALL & RuCKEL, New York Cit7 tract he ohto.lned from the late Charles WH.J. TRAI>l~ SF.(. 25-7-111 \\'IIEA'ri.Al\0 nCo., Mont.. 011 land for So. Calif. property II. Ellbets lttst spring. and JJUY ('H.Fh diffen;r ceo. H. :-\. Staheck., Burleigh Grinw~, ~pit ball expert, 1937 N. Gramercy Pl.. llollywoo<l. Call! wlil recei·1•e $15,000 and .Jnt•ques FourIller, hnrrl-hltting first baseman, Is Sidetracked rlO\\Il for $12,000 on the club's hooks, "Did you pop the question la~t It Is reported. night 't" Nearly $00,000 must be handed over "No; I got to talking- oil hurners to nrookl~·n'::; Big l~our in return for with her ft1tl1er and hef<>re I kll<'W It their e.fforts to win the pennant. nut I ;;he went out."- Cincinnati Tim!'sat lenst 20 otlJers wlll have to be paid Star. ,;alarics for :o;lx months of activity. All of which lllustmtes that the Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin. baseball business is a gamble, dependOn rising and retiring gently :,;mear ing on the good will of the public the face with Cuticura Oiutment. which Is w11Jing to pay the freight if \\'ash ofl' Ointment in five minutes the home team plays winning ball. with Cuticura Soap and hot wuter. It Is wonclerful what Cuti<:ura will do ' for poor complexions, danrlt·uff, itching and red, rough hauds.-Adl·ertl,~ment. 5r Uncle Wilbert Robinson Speaks Highly of Golf t'ncle Wilbert Rohlnson is a man of many Ideas and expn·~se:-; them with force and mascuiine perJ<picacity. ills ideas nre always humane. I•'or instance, golf. Whlle Miller Huggins, John )fcGmw, 'l'y Cohh and other bnsehall leaders bnn the gnme, Uncle Hobble goes about among the Dodgers seeking opponents for himself UIJd Dazzy \'an<'e. "Huggins keeps the hoys from playIng- I?Oif ht>rause he thinks they talk It all the time and lt keeps their minds of!' baseball," l1obbie pxplalntod. "But If they were not tal king baseball it would be racin.': ot· hoxing or Romething else. So why not golf? It's not a bad game. , "Speaker plays every day," said Robbie, "and Dazzy plays all season and lt doesn't hurt him. In fact, Dazzy contends that it loosen~ him up and keeps him from getting stilT. He always plays the morning after he pitches." Wilson Made Hero The gossip's mouth co~ts her nothing, for she never opens it b'ut at another's expense.-Franklin. Buy osan SAFE INSECTICIDE ills PL ES by the Roomful. Kills BUGS Wholesale A Hand Sprayer will be given FREE with every purchase. of a ·quart can of FLYOSAN until July 31st. Seckel Fritchman Company • • • Boi•e, Idaho Hal Rhyne, youthful Pittsburgh infielder, turned In a sensational duy afield against the Braves recently. Hhyne aceepted 13 chances without an error. He had thrt'e putouts and ten assists. Bagley Nelson Company Salt Lake City, Utah DISTRIBUTORS Don't Cut Out a Shoe Boil, Capped • • • Fredfly :\fcGulre, the ;>oung- Toledo secon•l ~acker, Is doing fin<' work for the Mud HPns under the <lirt>etlon of CaRey !:'Hengel. His fielding l!·ts l1t>Pn sensational and his hitting is showing lmproyement. Hock or Bursitis for • • • Wlrill) he h; many years Pa't his active pla~·ing day;:;, John Mc(}raw manager of th!' ;:\'Pw York Giants, out rnnl;s all the other vet<>rans in tile gnm!'. He is in hi'l twPnty-fifth c;ea :;on liS manager of the te.lm. • • • Manager Br·ansfif'lrl of the Waterbury J~astern leag1 e C'iuh umwtmces the lH.:quhltion of Pitcher I,an' Ke~>fe fro111 tlre Portland Pariflc r• l:t'lt league cluh tAncl Pitehf'r Elhert Johnson from the l'itt.,.hurgh l'irntes. will reduce them and leave no blemishes. Stopa lameness promptly. Does not bUster or remove the hair, and horse can be worked. $2.50 a bottl• delivered. Book 8 A free. I1 I .{ \\ !I son loltieu rise to pOpU• larity is r!c'1nite pnnf th..tt heroes are creat!'tl hy f:.n~. No IP,.::; tl1an .t ~·ear ago Wil ,on (shown 'n the photol-;ra ph) was wth d out of the • "ntlont l lengne hy the Glt..~ts lllrd 8ent to 'l'oit ln. The Cubs tool{ a S ST W. F. YellllS, be., 510 f.rmaa St., Spri!!gitld, Mz.a. |