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Show THE JORDAN JOURNA L. MIDVA LE. lT'l'AH INTENSE HEAT ITHREES STATES LEAVES FATALITIES LOSE HEAVILY 1 HOTTEST JULY 2! ON RECORD 11\1 MANY SECTION S OF THE EAST; BUSINES S STOPS "-IRPLAN E SURVEY REVEALS A RELENTL ESS GAIN ON FIRE FIGHTER S Exact List Of Dead Impossible To Compile; Showers Are Predicted. Temperat ure Was 100 At Many Point. Northern Idaho, Montana and Washington Count Thousand s of Devastated Acres; Large Force Are On Guard New York.-Th e hottest July 22 ever recorded in most secttons of the east passed with long promised cool· ing showers still only a hope. As the trend of summer's most intense heat wa"e drew to a close. it left in its wake a record of offices an dindustria l plants closes, of men and women prostrated at their work and on the streets, of drownings among crowds that surged to seaside and lake front, of both animals and humans demented by the scorching weather. Although suffering was intense Wednesday, temperatu res were generally several points higher Thursda}'. Records of 100 were unusual and scattered before, but on Thursday such tempeo·arures became tha rule rather than the exception. From all the reports of prostratio ns, drownings , suicides, deaths of persons already ill, all to some extent attributed to the weather, it was impossible to compile any accurate list of deaths for which the heat could be held dtrectly and solely responsibl e. In various places in New York, New England and Pennsylva nia stores and industrial plants closed their doors so that ·the employees might seek what relief was possible. Kew York City experience d its hottest July 22 since the weather bure:J.u has been in operation. After a rush1ng start with a 10-degree rise in three hours in the morning, the mercury reached 97 degrees at 3 o'clock. First and Lates t Golf Champions ~ SHEELY OF WHITE SOX Fll'{E AT FlJ.RST I ~~! !~~ ?~~ ~ i ALARM COAST I; Utah .l ! EARTH TREMORS I Classed With Topnotchers •I in Junior League. I In Earl Sheely, the White Sox: boast one of the best first basemen In the American league. While not an allaround player of the Sisler type, the big fellow neverthele ss can handle his position afield with almost any of them. And that's saying a bit, considering that chaps like the Browns' manager, Lu Blue, Joe Judge, Lou Gehrig and so on Inhabit the same circuit. This is Sheely's fifth season In the majors. He joined the Hose In 1921, after the Comiskey outfit had been practically ruined owing to the 1919 world series Rcandnl. Sheely was obtainPd from the Suit Lake club of the Pacific Coast league, where a batting n veruge of .371 in 1920 had atttracted the scout~. From the start the tall boy made good. And he _has bePn Improving eYer sin<'f'. He was In 113 double plays, and Intel more putouts and more as:>ists than any other initial corner guardian. Sheely was in lii6 gamf'S, more than any other American league pla~·er participate d ln. Sheely played his first profe~sional baseball with VuncouYer in the Northwestern league, back In 1912. Sine& ....... ....... ....... ..... .... o ....... ....... ...... . FRESNO, SACRAM ENTO, AND SAtl JOSE FEEL EFFECT OF DISTURB ANCES Salt Lake City.-Wi th a determina tion to bring, if possible, the next annual conferenc e to Salt Lake, Utah state farm bureau officials departed Sunday morning for Reno to attend the annual conferenc e of officials and leaders of farm bureau activities in the eleven western states, which opened there Monday morning for three days. The Utah party accompan ied President Sam H. Thompson , of the American Farm Bureau federation , who has been a Utah visitor for several days, on the trip to Reno. Earthquak e Shocks Lasted For MCJr' Than Five Seconds Sunday Morning; Many Towns Visited; Not Much Damage Done Miissoula, Mont.-Th e Independe nce Fresno, Cai.-A sEiri·~s of distinct creek fire burning in the Coeur earth termors which rattled dished, d'Alene and Pend Oreille national for· cracked plaster,_s hook chimneys and II ests, broke through all lines again on in some instances shook dishes off Tuesday and gained the top of the Brigham City.-Cou nty Agent Robof shelves was reported throughou t I ert H. (Bob) Stewart ridge between the two forests where of Boxelder the central San Joaquin valley about I county sets thousands of acres of valuable timber his foot heavily down uv10 o'clock Sunday morning. No dam- on the reports stretch across its path. that his county is not age was done, early reports indicated. , going to get at least a Advices from Glacier National park normal op of HundreC:.s of Fresnoans reported peaches this late Tuesday told of a fire in the viyear. In fact, comments feeling the shocks, !he time varying I the Boxelder 1 clnity of the Many Glacier hotel that agent, the peach crop from 9:40 to 10: 20, and like reports ' this year will threatened to destroy it and adjacent be a "big" one. The were received by the Fresno Morning 1 county I structures . A hastily recruited force bad a good export movemen t Republica n from Madera, Clovis, Ker- I over a large ' of seventy-fi ve volunteers I'Uccessfu lly territory. The only man, San Joaquin, Mendota, Los Ban- gloomy fought the blaze with the aid of three spot in the county c6ncerns os, Chowchill a, Livingston , • Reedley ; sugar power pumps and saved the hotel. beets. This crop is not likely and other mid-San Joaquin valley , to Missoula, Mont.-W ith the entire di· yield more than a half-norm al tonj towns. I nage, observes 1\fr. Stewart. As is vide between Clark's Ford river on the Early reports indicated that the the case west and the Priest river on the east in other sections of the in'l'he photograp h shows Charles B. McDonald of New York, first winner tremors were confined to Fresno, Ma- 1 termounta a rolling mass of flames, fire Tuesin region, the "white fly" of the American amateur golf champions hip, chatting with Bobby Jones, dera and Merced counties. Bakersday was sweeping the Kanikau forest has made serious inroads in sugar present amateur champ. field and Modesto reported no notice· I on a fifteen-mi le front, Fire Chief beets. able quakes in the extreme south and I Howard Flint reported after an airnorth ends of the valley. Price.-D. H . Madsen, state fis!J. and plane trip over the conflagrat ions game commissio ner, has sent word to 1 raging in the fores• of Idaho Washthe Carbon County Fish and Gamo Sacramen h 1 to, Cal.-;An ea1·t s 1oc k : ington and Montana. Protective associatio n that three more which lasted for four or five secon d s Large forces of men figlJting the Records fOI' freak hatting stunts was felt here shortly after 10 o'clock shipments of fish for planting in- the fires have made little headway in es· were put in the discard last se:;rson Sunday morning. The quake was not llitreams of Carbon and Emery coun tablishing control lines, and now are - The baseball team of 'Vaseda uni- by Jimmy Dykes of the Philadelph ia suWcientl y violent to he recorded 011 j ties will be shipped this week. There center·ing their efforts on the tongues versity at Tokyo defeated the Stanford Athletics in hi~ phenomen al hitting the instrumen ts of the local United 1 will be thirty cans of young trout in univerlliity nine 7 to 4. of flame shooting from the rapidly against the Yankees on Octohei· 2. States weather bureau. • j each shipment. moving wall in attempts to check the .Jimmy went to bat five times and The last moustache to be seen In each time up side spread. he saft-ly hit the first VernaL-A n additional shipment c t profession al baseball was worn by ball pitched. . San Jose, Cal.~ Earthquak e shocks ~ 10,000 young rainbow trout has been District Fore~ter Fred Morrell esFour of the hits were John Tyler of the Philadelph ia club were recorded on seismogra phs of the received in Vernal from the \Vhiteoff Garland nraxton and one was off timated that 60,000 acres already have Herb Pennock, and they included a University of Santa Clara and Lick rocks hatchery and planted in upper been devastated . A third of this area Charles H. Ebbets, late O"l"l"ner of the ho111e run and a three-bagg er. obsen·ato ry shortly before 10 o'clock Ashley creek, Trout creek and in that in the Kaniksu and the rest in the Brooklyn club, began us a score card I~ive out of five isn't so rare, but Sunday morning. The disturbanc e part of Brush creek flowing through Pend Oreille, Blackfoot and Coeur and ticket seller for the team in 1883. when one batter gets five clean hft>: was described as local and possibly of what is known as "buck pasture." The a'Alene forests. • out of five pitched balls he bas don<) sufficient intensity to be perceptibl e shipment was transporte d from the Fire spreading on the Coeur d'Alene Cleveland was the fir~t city to work something which the old-timers con· Farm Politics Program Fixed to sensitive persons. forest destroyed 4,000,000 feet of out a plan hatchery in a tank truck, the farthest to fostN· athletics and today ce.de Is mighty unusual. 1 Washingto n. - Developm ents about white pine logs scatered over 1500 is point of planting being n'nety miles the largest amateur baseball center 'l'he same player had another perpolitics and farming, as they came to acres of timberland between Parad1se in Hate of U. S. Unites Europe distant from the hatchery. the country. fect duy ut the plate on July 12, when Washingtu n or emerged here can be and Plains. on the Cabinet t~rest, .and • Salt Lake Cily. One of the favorite i1e collected four hits out of that enumerate d as follows. The corn belt for a time threatenN l the Pnest nver W?..shingt on. Europe is "unito!ld in Walter John>'o!l and OroYer Alexan- many times at bat. Two mouths pastimes of skeptical visitors to the ' later committee at Des Moines is not going e:xperimen t station. The Coeur d'Alene der are the only but one thin, hatred of the United two pitchers in tilt! he made good on five out of six: trips , agricultur e beits of the intermoun tain to attack the tariff. The committee 's region has been closed to camping game toda~· who have ,;truek Statt•s," Senator Hiram Johnson, Reout 2,000 to thf' plate in the second game of west is to attempt to discredit the formal statement after its Tuesday without permit and the Leinberg dis· or more bat>;men. puiJ!ic:.m, Californit. , declared in a double-head~>r. claims advancPd frequently by the )lleeting was fairly eplicit, anrl private trict to all entry. statPmPnt Sunday, urging that "with· Earl Sheely. Ira Flng~tea<l. HNl Sox inHt lder, home residents on yields per acre. informatio n states emphatica lly there out rklay we withdraw our proposal :\1. Greg;: Ilihb,:, .Jr., '23 of Bristol, also had an otltl record. On ~loty 8, ------Tourists visitmg their friends in the then he has heen with ><eYernl club~ for entry" into the French Franc Takes Plunge will he no fight by the corn belt farmPa., has been eleetetl captain of the at Iktroit, Flugstenfl went world con•·t. De west, inYestmen to the in \·a1·ious !eng-uP~. Outsit!(' of a few t bankers on inspecers ~gain~t thf' tariff. Second, tb~ spite this "h tred of the United Washmgt on.- The French franc llutf.';ers yar,:ity ba~ellall team. Hibbs plt<te six times. ma<le on~ hit. walked tion trips with thrir westE'rn arents, ~::ames whi!'h he worked hehlnf! the same corn belt commit tee will hold crashed to a new lo'v record Tuesday. is the first-string c<tteher. flates" which the senator laid to the five time» and gcon·u fi\·e timeR. and farmers from t'b.cr land~ away plate fluriug his miiiOI' Jpagne 1·egime, dclJ• anolhf'r meetin~ late this month in It was close to 50 on the dollar in f!Iestion, he dE chtred a "part of from llc home for a few wpel·s hecope has al wny,; performed around the Mike Gazella, Yrmk(•e infielder, holds Chicago to organize to defeat senators Paris and fell to its lowest level in our citizenshi p i:' so lJlind and so weak first cushion. dubious. whf'n a loyal Utahn or Idahoand member::; of con~ress who voted history-1. 93 ¥.! cents for onP franc- a deg-ree us chembt wl11Ch he earned and flabhy tlH•• they would take this an commence s to cha11t the praises against the Haugen bill. In this fight ' in \Vall Street. The par value of the at Lafayette eollegt>, hut he expects to hat-:d crP<ll tO'' nation into a world of his home town. the blame is put on "New England franc is 19.30 cents. <ourt dominat..:d by its hating debtors Impatienc e enter law school next fall. Paul Shannon tells one on Connie • * • and the great eastern industrial cen- amon~ the French people and growing :'\1oab.-- Pro\'ided a satisfacto ry Tt conws to us from various sources Mack which l.app,..ned se\o•ral years Years ago, l're~ident gbhets of the ters. In the senate only one vote for anxiety in business quarters lest tile that our nsen'atio ns will he acceptf'd franchise can be obtained from the ago when the Athletics' Iea<ler was the Haugen bill came from east of In- present economic pinch develop into Brooklyn club provid<'d contributi on trying out se\ Ul dozen players a hy no grPn.t n::>tions of Europe, but board of trustef's of Moab, the Utah year diana and north of the Ohio river." a national calamity accompan ied this boxes at the Run<!ay ball games, paid in an effort to build up his team. three small nations have acquisced in Power & 'Lt!!ht company will exercise I' able: "\Yell, well," chuckled till! : unprecede nted 'collapse in the value ndmi::;sion s being :llcgal. them. \Ve m, y he' saved from our· its opition to purchase the electrical "The He !I Sox were pl a yin;.: the g:ol fer ns he lllP>:sccl up the nine-inch • Fire Fighters Gain Ground selves by those ''dlO hnte us most; but business of the Moab Light & Power ; of French currency. The Paris produce l\Iacl;s and trouncing them," gays putt, "better luek next time." Only 12 pln~·er~ in the history of Shannon. "Connie had it woulfl be infinitely better, with the company, arcording to R. H. Ashworth Missoula, Mont.-I<'l ames which ate exchange sought to prevent specula• .. * s~>nt in ahout their way across thousands of acres tion in sugar by forbidding all deals major league basf'ball have served 20 a half dozen pitchers and every one According to Pro!'. W. T. Waugh of knowledge ex'stiag in the state depart- representa tive of the Salt Lake comor more years. Adrian "Cap'' Anson · · 1 t• b t d of them had be<'n hammered . Finally ..\IcGill university the modf'rn interPst nlPnt t o<lay anrl with the knowledtre pany, who was in Moab this week. j es t roymg r1c 1 than last Friday's 1m er s an s and at prices higher ·n . t t L topped them all with 26 active seasons. 1 he sent in anothN. in spm·ts is nothing- new. · '!'ennis wtu; that has been conveyed to our people consuming ranch houses in the forests closin~. ~he Sl { ~nc us ry. a . yons, Salt Lake City.-Sug gestion that "Half dizzy with the numher of played with ball~ like <'ricket bulls, by the daily nuws dispatches , that assessmen cf western Montana, northern Idaho of Which City P1:em1er H~rr10t IS. Mayt of sheep be kept down to Old John Scitt is still hurling a change~ that had bt•f'n made, the Ulll· football. golf and hockey were In without delay we withdraws • n· h' or • openly assmled par!Jamen t m an our pro-/ <.n average vain" of $5 a head on old an d eas.ern n as 1ng l on, h ave b een . brought under control, District Forest- outspoken address to ~he pres1dents pretty fair brand of ball ·for the pi.re ngked the Athletic catcher foe the \·og-ue in tl:e Thirteenth and Four- posal for entry." ewes, $6 on Iambs and $8 on st7ck Giants. l!'act is, he's been one of :\lc- name of the new pi tchei·, so it could teenth centuries. er F re d ]\I orre 11 announce d Th urs d ay. of the chambe1· of deputies . anrl senate. sheep was made to the state board f . Graw's most consistent winners this be rinnounced . Governors Arriving for Confab Wh 1·t e no f ur th er ca 11 as b een mad e for The industry equalizatio n and asse~sment by a dele. is. . faced w1th disaster season. "The catcher looke-d at the ump with The hor~es of India being small, the adidtional fighters, the hundreds of because of mab1llty to buy the necesg-ation of Utah sheep men beaded by a blank gan,e Rtare of polo was played fnr many sary and raw time s1lk had abroad to tw at the present 1 Cheyenne, \Yyo.-Go vernors men on th e f ron t h ave no t re 1axe d from a .Tames H. Hooper, secretary of the Ebbets fie[(], Brook!) n, may be the called while liP ran ont to the moun<l yean; on small horses. \YhPn Ameri- score of American common wealths , their vigil and are alert to check any value of the franc. _The sharp break Ctah Woolgrow ers' associatio n. home ground ,,f tl1e profe~sional l'OCto gl't the name of the heave1· first- cans began playing polo the ;;mall arrived on Sunday for the opening · 1ane fl' ht of the French franc m New Yo•·k also new ou tb rea 1ts. A n mrp of 1 1g . . . . cer club that will compete in next horf;e was fouml to be too glow, and H10ir twelfth humletl." Ogden.-T lle time has arrived for . annnal conferenc e here over th e H ay C ree k f 1re on th e BI ac k-- carried With . 1t the Belg1an fr.::_u-.: and season's tourneys and national cup they hegan using larger and faster anithe farmers of the nation to take a foot forest indicated that the flames the Italian bra, but not to the same Monday morning. 'fllcy came by au- 1 ties. n1ais. careful look into the marketing matomobile and by tr•in with their per- 1 were not spread!~, Morrell said. extent. • * • • chinery that handles the distrubtio n sonal and official families to indulge , Eleven miles of trenches surround the In a sea~on marlwd thus far by unThe bPst record for compf'tltlH of ' go! their t in a thourough -going discussion of the produce, <!Pclared Sam H. Fire Damages Arkansas Town fire. The Kaniksu conflagrat ion also u .• unll~· ff'w o•1thrr aks. Hill ~lcKc<·lmie, in a national evf'nt prior to nohhy Asscmhl.tg Thompson e of of Illinois, presidf'nt of the grid men for prelillli· vr. o'iol!s Conway, problf'm'l Is reported to be well within control Ark.-Dam age estimated at manager of the Pittsburgh Pirate~. is common to the Yfii'.Tone;;' rna1·k of 1~4 wa;; made by .Jock nary fool ball work American uncll'r the Farm Bureau federation , direction ious states at the invitation of Gover$350,000 had been done late Tuesday the first National league leader to be lines. IIutcilim;oJ J !n th(' quaoifying- round> of the CU[ltain prior to the openin~ here of Tuesoay. He was addressing ofby a fire that destroyed the Conway disciplined . nor Nellie Tayole Ross, \Vyoming 's : of the nntional opPn <·hampion« hip at the sehool t1 nn, ~<.>ptewher 1:>, Is taficers of various communit y units of .. 0 Press company plant and 3000 bales woman executiYe. They came from Submarin e Fire Overcome s Men Rkoldf' in ~worf'R of f>i anfl 6S for a boo in the 1\[i.,:;ourl Yallpy confl'rence . the Weber County Farm bureau and Not a single contest was called of!' the northeaste rnmost states in the Monterey, CaL-Fou r members of of cotton. A shift in wind later I otnl of 1:{0\. Rut in doing so he burned This decision waf: made after a heatf'tl ~!so \Veber county business men. the crew of the submarine S-9 were brought some aid to firemen, but a on account of rain last year or so iar lliscm;sion hy the athletic lllrector:s in him~elf out ant! !OJ tloe main t~>!<t two union and from the outposts of territhis warehouse sea;;on h:v the containing Charlotte 6500 . tories (N. bales C.) under of the American flag to \Yashingt on.--Food prices, it is reovercome by a fire in the vessel while thell· mt•eting at Lineoln. I'l·e\'ious day,; latN he ~lumped bndl~·. Had she was proceedin g from San Francis- cotton rf'mained in danger. St. Jos-. club. Over 100 C'!'nsecutiv e g-ames have rulin;.:H did not permit a con<"h to takP the tournamen t hPt'n (lelayed a few j work together in solving their com on PI'"ted hy the governme nt, were 5 per a bn:ak. co to Monterey ·wednesda y, but had eph's society hall was destroyed and heen played without charge of hi::; !ll(•ll until aftpt· thnt day~ lon.ger .Tork might ha\'e regained \ PI'ohlems and to later indulge in a bit cent lower in Salt Lnke City on June • il' • for a time it was feared a large por•of plav and recreation in one of Amer· ':; than a month prior to that time, recovered from their experienc e date, but the nc\\' rule will not allo1v top fllrm. AI Simons of the Philadelph tion of the ia town Athwould be swept. Small 1ca's greatest outdoor playgrou nds- despite the 2 per cent jump made in Thursday. They were Lieutenan t J. letics usPs the lon~P«t hat of any ma- the football me11 to he;::in pract_i<-e I Although W. McColl, Charles Noble, chief ma- blnzes on twelve other roofs were ex· he is prefl'dE'nt of the Kan- the Yellowsto ne national park, which prices during the month prior to June jor league player-:>7 1h inches. Trls e\ <'11 in an unor!;anizl' {l way until the <:as Rtntf' Golf chinist's mate; George Schmidt, elec· tingn)shed . The compress, where the asRodatlon . Rrlg.-Gen. they will tour after the conclusion of 15. With food prices only 36 per cent Speaker and Hnt-r~· Heilmann use regular ~dwol tenu opens. fire originated from an undetermi ned Etlwartl L. King. trician mate, first class, and C. V. Fecommnnclu nt of the the three-day meeting. above pre-war levels, Salt Lake conbats mf'nsuring 36 inches in length. cause, was a smoulderi ng ruin and general ~f'rYiCP 'chools at Fo1·t Lf'avland ,machinist 's mate, first class. The tinues to show a smaller adYance in • ~>nworth, !>pm·nfl the ancif'nt Br'dge Crash Fatal To Six fire broke out a iew minutes after the the warehouse with 2000 bales of cotfood costs compared with 1913 than JZame. Nowadays many baseball playel'S "lt'fl too ~low." Genernl King f'aifl. Charleston , \V. Va. The collapse of any other city in the country, accortlsubmersib le had cleared the Golden ton was blazing furiously and anothmake the jump from the collf'ge tllaer warehouse was threatened . "Golf i<: fin<' for women, Cliil(lren and a small foot brir!ge over Coal river at 1 mg to gO\·ernme nt vfficials. Gate. The wireless equipmen t was mon<l into th(' big league park ~OlliC olfl mf'n, hut until I lw,..ome supPran- ' \Vhitesfall , forty miles from here, had quickly burned out, prev'enting any thlng unheard of a few years hack, Heat Adds To Growing Deaths Salt Lake City.-IIer eafter only nuated, I ~hnll contimll' to play t~>n caused the death of six persons Sunword being sent out by radio. . Omaha.-T wo d rownmgs nls ant!. hnnd hall. I haYf' tried a day night. Five were killed instantly trout five inches or mote in length an d one I when an apprPntl<'eJ<hip In the minors will be })!anted in the lakes of the denth ascribed to heat were reported 1 was the u~ual rule. ~arne or two of g-nlf, but I p;·efer vlg- ' and one died lat-:r from injuries sufHundred Persons Killed In Storm TT .Iltah basin country. it wu~ announ in Nebra!;ka as the five-day heat wave orou~ sport~." ff'red ,.-lwn the srh"ll ga\·e way under Yienna.-O ne hundred persons are '\ hith 2\Ionday Thing-s looked had for Cleveland crd by Davicl H. M.:.!lsen state fish sent the temperatll l'e the weight of about 125 spectators reported to have been killed al. Rugo and game commissio ner. to lOS at three places continued 'I'ues· wlwn Rpraker lin('d to Shank-> fo1· a In a ff'W yt'ars to <'ome golf wlll who had crowded upon it to view a vo, Serbia, when a hurricane accom- day. Harington , in the northeast triple ]Jlay In thP ;::ame at Cleveland be the stf'ndle~t of ~ports. 'Thi~ Is frf'e carnival act. Most of the sixty :\1org:.~n.-The Morgan <"'Inning fac panied by a cloudburs t struck the corner of Nebraska reported 108 for on June 14, 1()2-l. But in tlH' ele\·enth duP to the Sontl., whf'rf' e\·f'r~·l>N'I~· cnn ~pectators injured when they were tory, which ha<> been in operat'on town, says a dispatch received here Tuesday's Al<"Xulty worked hi::; wa~· to thin! an(} maximum, the makf' a .C'omplN'' '·h:mg-e and s1 ill be dropped twenty feet to the shallow since federal July 6, canning peag, i'l having !hen, with two out, he stole home on from Belgrade. Forty bodies hav(> weather bureau In the g;mnf'. Tile >:nmt' ma~· he a~ water of the l'iver bed, were here said. North women its blr-gPst run this we€'k, 1t being estiMurn1y, winning tlw !:ame. been recovered . The river rose sud- Loup aJH! Culbertson true of tltf' "'f',;t. hut th<·r(' is ton and children. Thirty.fiv had the same. e were hrought mated that about 100,1JOO canH were dcnlv, inundatin g the town. Several O'Neill and Broken Bow, al~o !JlH('h ~round to he tra,·plf><l. Th (! to in north· CharlPston hospitals. The remaind· put out \\'edn >sday. Dt rii'g the heavy Seven as~ists at first base <'Onstlhoufles collapsed upon people who had ern Xebraska, had 107. avf'rnge golff'r o1' the :\ort h l':tn takf! Omaha on cr were treated ,on the scene for bro} run the factory is working overtime to tutes a world reeot'<1. Kitty Branstaken shelter in ~hem. Many cattle Mon,lay had 102, its hote~t day hifl hag of trif•k<: m11l p1·n..rieally O\'er· of en bones and bruises and later taken take care of the peas that are being and sheep perished. night he In on Ill~ ~llllll' ngaln. The 1926 and the I'LJtest July . on record field. coYerin~ the initial sa~k for the home. Pirat~>~. ncc(•pted H chances at Chibrought in from the ccunty, lntf're~t never dies and the longing c;•go ~fay ~. lDO 1, anrl half of them Rising River In Mexico Menacing lingers. Amundsen Silent On Norge Affair •. Price.~ Furnisl11n g the thirsty crops were assists. .Tollllny Bvf'rs hn<l a big j Orientals Worry Over Fall of Franc • Togales, Ariz.-A dispatch to the Oslo, ·orwnv.-C aptain Roald Am· flay at short for C'hieai;O, with irrigation water at a t':ue when yet his asWhat Is the toughel'<t event on a 1 San Jo'ranci ~co, Cal. The falling they would undoubted !> have Herald from Tepic Nayarit, Mexico, undsen rdusefl to comment on the sists peri~hed were on I~· thrPe more than Kilt~ 's. traC'k and fteltl progrmn. from th~ , French franc landed withopt a jingle the big reservoir said that the Santiago river was near· , statement or Lincoln Io:!ltwortll his of tlie Prlc£1 River vif'\\point of the contf'stan tr Mo9t 1 in San Franci«Po 's Chinatown . It sent water conservati lng- flood stage, due to heavy rains.J colleague in the flight of thP Norve on di',trict near Sco: Manager Frunk Banrroft of the DefleYotf>f'S of the sport f'Otl!<lder the a number of the orientals scurrying field and that settlers along the stream Ellsworth described Command er No· has roved a houa, nd to farmers • troit clu-b was tlw ' fir"t to US(• the Hhift to the hranch of the French-Am erican 440-~·ard run thP hnnl~>!<t. The quar· were viewing the rapid rise with bile's part in navigating the airAhii: when cf Carbon county th1s .,ummer. a left-handet l hurlei' was doing · bank in the district, anxious to withter-m!le Is a mnd tlll!>h evi'ry stf'p o1 al:um. A perceptibl e rise has been I as consisting of "relieving the wheel duty. In a game plnyc<l :\lay 10, 1881, draw their savings. The 1\Iyton.· Not to be outdone by the bank orderthe way. It is a gruf'll ing test, wherenoted all along the course of the river I men for short periodR." The Aero club Worcester vs. Detroit, Bunny benched ed t11e .T branch ohnny Shoshone \Veismulle to remain and Bannock tribesmen of~ r, open world'8 In until physical chamfitne!>s, enflu,·nnce , l!tamfrom its origin at Lake Chapala in the received a cablegram from Nobile, l!~Ll Hanlon when hf' heard that llich- pion swimmer, has so far recovered lna, speed and ability pla~T all of the inqUJnes Idaho, were the Uintah Indians residing on satisfied. Important state of Jalisco to ita outlet north or (now in the United States) declaring mond was going to pitch. It didn't from his illness that kept him out of and necec:c:a ry parts. In other many left without the their basin money reservatio after n ha\'e staged a words, San Bias, the revort said, and In sever- that certain statement s attributed to uake much difference, for Detroit all national events for the past few It I~ a 220-yard pa<'e, only twice as being told that the bank had a sub three-day sun dance, which opened al places flood water already has torn 1 him in American papers c:.ontained I made but four hits and received a months, that he fs again in active far. with no jogging stnt't or letup be- stantial reserve of good American dol- with elaborate ceremonie s at \\'llite away the banks. arave misrepres entations. " •hutout training. rocks at 3 o'clock Wednesda y. tween the plstol:s r.eport and rhe tape. . lara with which to :Pay them off. I I I I I i Dykes Sets Record for Freak Batting in Game I • • l • • • • • I I • • • • • Catcher Couldn 't Give Name of a New Pitcher s • • 1 • • • I .. . I • • • • • Grid Practice Is Taboo Until School Is Opened • • • . .. . l I j . .. . l • • • .. . .. ~.. • • • I I I • • • - |