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Show Friday. August 24. 1928 TIIE OGDEN POST Crack Shots of Nation Gather I. 5 H. Muluahy Kloded President of the Ogden i 'handier of C'oinnieree For Greatest Powder Derby li. l ii.- ".I- - t.. h tbiiii fi.rv..r u cbvtr.i cti'is t.i i vhii pf-i,li- ot ii' hy tile :it ii'ii; ! "iic - Jaiv.e-i t i. K-- :: i'.-ii- 0. Porter Named rtah - Idaho District R. Incorporates Here - xuo-I'ivm- !iri!nr r Pipe ('ompany Sewe 1 s , w.i,' - it t fi . 1 ii.; l;v r. ix C.l; ' Ix1 if lli-- - i i r i i ;i;l i I I'm i.iij (if t : , Pur- - i.m ',l1 i II.-- I ; vl-.-- . 1 1C. i. Hi. A 4 i I .!' I .i. Milling company, lo the position of Mr. M ideally 's place. i:-- ' . v! r was; fruit faim at Wiliard. vice-piesi- j Pioneer Committee Requests Old Cabin Re Moved to Park i r tn carry i Dr. Ralph (). Porter, dean of the s. h of the University of Plali ar.d i . l.arti-- tnetnher of the iviuar.is club al l.mraii, was elected district governor of Kiwanis by lit the roiii'lllilillg session held in Og.! Ut ii. Idaho den. fli.'-l.Morse of the Ogden club i:is eiri'cd lieutenant governor of the northern Ptah district when he icceiv d : u ntes to lti garnered hy Marry Caldwell of ltrighum. His election win i (ion made unanimous. William Hailey of Nepbi was elected lieutenant governor of southern I'tiilw Georee S. Sloane of l'ocutello was chosen lieutenant governor of enstern Idaho, and l eivis Yoder of Nampa was elected lieutenant governor of western Idaho. The Iasi three men were elected without opposition. A Heart v vote of (hanks was tend- mod lo the Oitden club and various civic orgnniations and musicians who contributed generously to the success of the convention. Judg Ulifton II. llartson, on of his club and the other clubs of the district, extended an invitation for the convention to meet in the Idaho '.G I v.'i.iu-f.- s ii. v :i,,i ill l'.iuUli. A r.M.lu- I ii ici ;ii..i .ipnivt'iatiiiii for I'miis audi iluy -- iivi.-cs uf Mr, W. K Wirtc - to!, Hi d niaii- llio liojird i"ni . Jli.l.-.iliis gnnr.i! maiugvr of, iii'ir; Rex a Wbiti, and .brectiir, aid Wallace M. i..:i l.I.ilio tVntral i :iilt ui. ami i. .utile in . liai'.iicr of nun-- , White. f. M. Sniii.-w.i:id J, Iostel, .Mik for many xear. K. It.! al! .if tlgdee.. a'e d rctius. The it!i the White . noral msmager of the Globe White- - are cenont.-- t li. (sovernor of Kiwanis j tvur. li K! ,t he tig- - Gl.iy cntiipany tiu'i.uii m t ( .I f.-- i ! I tJiiloi uf their tn'vo minor diet; ami temporary and permanent alimony are asked in a suit for di- oree filed b Jensen from S re the has been ostal Io Mar Jetixcu on the identity of fail- li'l-i ' the Miles Goodyear cabin ure to pro iile. The nuple wore mar- , i. .xtein street and Washington ave-!iiat ISrigham Pitx September "i n'.ie a- - tlu oldest house in the state, il'JlT. i ccmmiltee representing the Paugh- Hr- - i i the Pioneers petitioned due to the absence of Uonitnissioner tin- citv commission to have . the cabin M. W. the eject was given i'imoxvI to the tabernacle square, consideration bv lliepi board. wli-ri; could be preserved as an old Mrs. t'hri- - Klygaiv, Mra. Minerva landmu'k. Shaw, mid Mrs. Marie Taylor a ted capital for their l'J2! convention. The lol no definite action was taken. as member- - of Hie t uri'inittei. invitation was unanimously accepted. cbil-- 1 j j Villu-liii:i;- i l el I lie-ha- Pec-ry- - New Type of Magnetic Probe A Valuable Aid to Physicians Rrady for the Great Powder Derby. Rifle Champion of America; Center: al Team Blatch; Lower left: Corporal Thompson, Chicago Scientists Have Developed a Small Permanent Magnet of Unusual Strength for Use of Practitioners of Washington, leiv ?aV.r C?1 "ho ,5rke r ns;tnde" niViKuf'kPi,Io".''Il High Among J,h' Junior crack shots of America are vilians and men from the reserve officers and civilian military training fathering here for the greatest upow-- i will be grouped together. camps coun-ibever held in this der Derby Police officers from all parts of the From every state men and wo- -i will also receive special incountry men, boys and girls, rich and poor, struction. Theirs will be one of the to flow through the most interesting schools. The course are beginning the will include hand to hand fighting, gates of the local rifle range use of tear gas and smoke candles for the Na-- I the largest in the country and other methods of tional rifle and pistol matches which taming criminals. will open on August 26 and continue The school will remain in session mtil September 16. Soldiers, sailors until September 1, when the N. R. A. rifle matches, which include ind marines, kids and big game hunt-itall are settling down in a city many of the great classics of the of tents large enough to shelter 3,000 range, will open. These will end on September 8. The N. It. A. small bore persons. This great tournament for modern matches open on the same day and Daniel Boones will open on the 26th extend to September 5. The N. R. A. Kh the formation of classes in the pistol and revolver matches will be null arms firing school where any fired on August 27, and September titizen may learn to handle a rifle 3, 5, and 6. The national pistol match will be orpistoL The students will be divid- ed into groups, each under a compet- - shot on September 10, and the naeat instructor. There will be classes tional individual pistol event on the for members of the junior rifle corps same daya On the following day the of the national rifle association in-I great national individual rifle match finding boys and girls from 12 years will crowd the mile-lon- g firing line laid to 18. National guardsman, ci with the greatest shots of the army, The y. ultra-mode- n, May Be rn 30-cali- D. C, Junior Small Here 8 World Record in Nation- -' M- i- lS!C"P:J Riflemen." !: Uui. navy, marines and all other branches of the service. Many civilians, including famous big game hunters, have also entered this event. However, the climax of the big powder Derby will not be reached until September 11, when the national rifle team match gets under way, This is the Yale-- I harvard game of marksmanship and never fails to draw a crowd. Last year it resulted in a sensational range duel between the infantry and marine teams and the closest score in the history ot American rifle competition. The result wras uncertain until the last few moments of firing, when Sergeant W. r Hisscr.den of the infantry broke a worlds record, tied the marine score and gave his team the match on decision. The great experts arc not the only firers to enjoy the matches. There are many special matches, including shooting at running deer targets, lioys and girls as young as 12 of age may enter the junior years rifle corps matches which open on August 27 and close on September 1. Hot Pavements Set Fire to Mans Shoe the Biggest Hog in World The pavements were so hot Monday that the left shoe on II. D. Browns foot caught fire while he was walking along the sidewalk, severely burning his foot. Browrn hastily took off the burning shoe and threw' it in the gutter near the intersection of Twenty-fourth street and Kiesel avenue. The shoe continued to burn at its leisure, sending up a small cloud of smoke. Brown, who is an assistant agricultural inspector to Le Roy Marsh, ran back to the inspectors office and was taken to Dr. II. C. Stranquiat for treatment. The only explanation that Mr. Brown could give was that he had been spraying weeds with sodium chlorate, and he probably stepped upon a cigaret stub which ignited the chemical on the shoe. Meets Daughter at Train; Nabs Prisoner Deputy Sheriff J. J. Murphys trip to the Union station Monday evening to meet his daughter who was to arrive on the Southern Pacific train netted him a prisoner as well. Trainmen, on seeing Murphy at the station, reported that there was a suspicious looking character on the train who they thought was wanted in Elko on a felony charge. Murphy arrested the man who gave his name as W. Perez, and an exchange of telegrams with Sheriff J. C. Harris, of Elko, established the fact that Perez is wanted there on a charge of assault with intent to commit of Leigh, Neb., almost hidden behlcd his which Is believed to be the largest porker la existence. The rf41 is a pure-brePoland China stag and weighs 1,235 pounds. Daxzler feet 2 Indies from tall to nose and Is 51 Inches high. is William Deichmann . H Dazzles, d Raising Rabbits in California Ties Ordered by U. P. n jr1'- for their fur and their meat has become a b shows ab..u. s,,,:Micrn The phot --r J!no coutty. Borrn ot.e i f the rabW tries cf l.-A- (Ailif.-rtiia- " ' . S-- of the A single order to cut 2.5O0.CO0 railroad cross tics for the Union Pacific railroad has been granted the Standard Timber company of Evanston by the U. S. Forest office at Ogden, it i announced. While the order calls for delivery over a period of six or seven years, a large force of men will be put to work cs soon as possible in order to get a large number of ties cut this winter to float down the creeks in the spring to the shipping points. Part of the ties will be cut in the Horse Creek region above Kcmmircr end floated to the Green River siding. The rest of the ties will he cut in the Wasatch national forest i:i Summit the ciceka toj county unJ floated j Grander. J. O. PERRINE IIE humanitarian spirit of the telephone's Inventor, Alexander Graham Bell, which marked his lifelong activity in behalf of those with lost or Impaired bearing, has frequently been reflected in many of the auxiliary products of telephone development. From the research of the Bell System scientific laboratories and cooperating medical experts have come the electrical stethoscope, the artificial larynx, the audiometer and aids to the deaf. Now comes another humanitarian Instrument the magnetic probe. It has nothing to do with telephony, as such, but Is a byproduct of developments in the manufacture of telephone apparatus. It is a beneficent instrument, made available to physicians for the removal of steel silvers from the skin or the eye without the .necessity of surgery. By Magnets Everywhere Magnetic Instruments play many and conspicuous roles In everyday life. Perhaps the oldest magnetic Instrument Is the compass needle s of the navigator. For many compasses have pointed the direction for the helmsman as he guides his vessel to the far corners of the earth over the seven seas. The Inductor compass, more recently developed, was used by Lindbergh on his heroic flight across the Atlantic. Like the comptiss needle, it also depends on the earth's magnetism, although In a different manner. The telegraph sounder is another magnetic Instrument, as is the telephone receiver. A magnet In some form or another Is an Indispensable part of electric bells. Induction colls, magnetos for antomobllo ignition and countless other appliances used dally. Strong cen-torle- 2,500000 Railroad Mmmmm A Magnetic Probe Several Times as Strong as the Best Permanent Magnets Heretofore Available. ' electromagnets are an essential part of the great generators of electricity which light our homes and drive street cars and trains. Great masses of iron arc lifted by electromagnets of special design in the Iron and steel mills of the country. Sometimes magnets of similar de K53gE sign are mouuluil on the rear of auto trucks and One of the First Electro-Magne- ts for Removing Iron Iartlcles From supported close to tho of tho road. Ah they pans slowly along the motor highway, nails and nil sorts of rlecos of Iron fly to the tight embrace of tho magnet. With tho road thus swept with n magnetic broom, the distressing experience of a puncture Is less likely to delay the motorist on hlH sur-fac- o sharp-cornere- d week-en- d trip. Physicians' Use of Magnets For sometime a similar sort of magnet, namely the electromagnet, has aided the physician In removing Iron or steel particles embedded In the skin or muscular tissue, or in the cyo. Just as nails on the highway are lifted up and even pulled out of the asphalt of the public highway, so the tiny steel slivers slowly but surely are pulled The out of the hand or the force marvelous ever and strange exerted by tho magnet extracts a tiny piece of iron with deft and Invisible lingers. Heretofore, permanent magnets, that Is, a bar of iron alone, could not bo made strong enough to do tho trick. Ordinary horseshoe magnets and bar magnets, of course, pick up iron, but for the purposes of the physician they did not exert sufficient pull. So the electromagnet had to be used; that is, a bar of iron was put Inside a coll of wire connected to an electric battery. By Increasing the electric current the pull could be made stronger and stronger. Thess electromagnets were big and heavy and awkward to handle. Necessarily, the patient had to be brought to tho magnet. Tho magnet could not readily bo taken to the patient. The need for a small, handy form cf magnet, with a lot of pull, was a frequent topic of discussion speamong physicians and first-aicialists. New Magnetic Material Tie development engineers of the Western Comrany, wbhh manufactures telephone for the Bell System, had eye-bal- l. d t'.k-clG-c the Eye-190- 0 been studying mugneta and magnetic materials for many years.' Magnets, all sorts of magnets, i :.nm!l and big, permanent and elee- -' tro, strong and weak, are to be found In the telephone system In more than tho proverbial thousand and one places. Obviously, these engineers knew considerable about magnets and magnetic materials. Following the suggestions made by1 medical advisers as to the size and! chape of tho proposed probe, these ! researchers produced a magnet with two and a half times as much pull as the strongest permanent magnet previously possible. Of course, tho secret of the achieve-- : ment is the material comprising the magnet, namely, cobalt steel Cobalt Is a chemical element, and with Iron and nickel comprises the more magnetic materials found In Nature. Cobalt, however, does not exhibit magnetic properties In so high a degree as Iron. However, at times, Nature can be beaten ether1 own game, and using a mixture, an alloy of cobalt and steel, a magnetic material was discovered which has most extraordinary mag- I netic properties. Permanent mag- -' nets of unusual strength resulted. The New Magnetic Probe With thin new cobalt steel mag-- ! nst a probe about tho length and diameter of an ordinary pencil was designed. One end Is flattened for ure In extracting bits of Iron from ruts while tho other end Is pointed like a sharpened pencil for particular application in eye cases. The first aid specialist and the physician aro now ablo to add a now instrument to their healing kits. A hard and lifeless piece of iron thus serves as a great boon to the Injured. Cobalt steel Is not found in tho natural state, but emerged from tho scientific laboratory as a result of unremitting la- bor anil study by those who were I zealous In research. j I lf |