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Show man THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, COKEVTLLE vs. LAKETOWN Total Score and Rank of Players Player K. Gardner, (c) Aftoix '25 .. , ............. i. , Total " ... Robinson, rf R. Kearl, If K. Price, c S. Mattson, rg Te G. ........... ....... ' . . " . .1 Laketown .. .. Player 3 2 2 ST. CHARLES D. Arnell, rg K. Gilgen, 0 lg Windley, lg rf " t 10 A 5 0 1 ........... .0 11 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 3 0 i. 9 22 2 ig ft fp pf tp C ........,.5 Woiley, rf U. Burton, If K. Gardner, c D. Gardner, rg K. Humphreys, lg 0 0 1 lw 6 4 4' 1 16 8 2 2 0 18 4 4 1 2 9 ......0 Total 10 1 23 11 Score by quarters:- St. Charles North 7 3 3 0 14 1 2 .2 4 ..... NORTH AFTON ; 8 0 .......4 Afton '...,.14 4 54 ,8 1 25 1 Player Pickett, rf , Thomas. If Bateman, c Nelson, rg . Krogue, lg Hansen Thornoek . . Total 41 LAKETOWN vs. WOODRUFF E .Cox, R. Oox, LAKETOWN ....1 . 0. 2 3 1 4 1 0 2-0 ,.a ..2 ...0 rg 0 0 0 2 8 28 22 28 ...0 ..0 2 2 4 17 9 ........ ..2 1 1 2 1113 ....2 2 0 0 Player W. Norris, rf S. Kennedy, If D. Rex, c D. Hatch, rg A. Smith, lg B. Pex. rg W. Smith, If .' 0-- 0 "9 2 RANDOLPH fg 1 1 1 Player 4 3 1 0 10 22 ft fp pf tp 6 0 6 0 4 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 12 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 16 9 6 9 38 17 18 22 38 1 1 13 112 4 2 2 3 4 Wolfey, rf NORTH AFTON fg Burton, If K. Gardner, c D. Gardner, rg Humphrey, lg C. 1 10 ..5 ft fp pf 2 0 to 1 10 ..1 4 2 fg .....0 one-hal- ft fp pf tp 0 0 4 7 .....0 110 , 0 4 0 0 4 0 4 4 12 ...23 ............ ......... ...............1 026 2123 ........... .............. ........ ........ 10 ...... ....... : ! .............1 11 ..,.010 11 ....... 10 ..............1 ....... ....... .......... ......... ..... 15 11 10 . ..... ........ ...... .5 . ........... ,12 14 ....j ............1 0012 i 10 ; 15 311 Total . - ........ 7 19 19 COKEVTLLE Player L. Staffers, rf Nate, If M. Dayton, c E. Dayton, rg 12 9 5 14 29 Poulsen, lg Birch, rg 24 17 29 Teusther, If ......... 11 1 lg 10 0 2 3 0 4 , . .3 ...2 0 0 2 r. .2 3 2 2 1 2 1 1 .....2 fp pf tp 0 3 4 2 7 0 0 0 4 5 lg fg ft fp pf tp 11 2 2 2 24 Longhurst, rf .... Robihson, rf 2 2 1 4 5 R. Kearl, If .3 0 0,1 6 1 0 0 0 2 Total K. Price, c . . . . ..... 3 0 1 1 1 1 Score by quarters: S. Mattson, rg , . . . . . . .0 0 0 1 .4 Woodruff G. Price, lg . .', . ...... 1 1 0 2 11 6 17 13 E. Satterthwaite, lg ....1 1 1 0 Bloomingto.n 7 10 6 17 20 . Total Mofft, rf ST. CHARLES vs. GEORGETOWN Score by quarters: North Afton .... 10 19 7 Ookeville ST. CHARLES WOODRUFF T . ft ft tp Player fg fp pf fg fp pf tp Player Tower Eiffel The 2 5 1 1 2 5 5 2 E Pugmire, rf Anderson, rf The Eiffel tower was built as one 1 2 1 1 3 ; O. Peterson, If 2 2 1 Ashton, If of the central attractions of the . 2 0 2 2 c c 3 6 0 P. .1 Putnam, Pugmire, D. Arnell, rg ... .1 2 2 4 4 great Paris Exposition of 1889. Its E. Cox, rg . . . . .. ... .2 2 0 3 1 R. Cox, lg K. Gilgen, lg .1 0 0 designer was the French engineer, Wind ley Alexandre Gustave Eiffel hence its 8 7 2 ,4 18 Total name. After the exposition the 10 15 7 13 27 French government decided to preScore by quarters: Total 42 35 Lakfstown GEORGETOWN .18, 20 serve it, and while it stands chiefly 15 18 5. 13 Woodruff fg ft fp pf tp as a monument to engineering skill Player .7.6 7 4 1 16 and an attraction for sightseers, it Bacon, rf GEORGETOWN vs. RANDOLPH 2 0 is also an 0 Dunn, If .5 4 2,3 12 station with important government c . .... Payne, meteorological observaGEORGETOWN . .1 0 0 2 2 Armatage, rg tions' wireless and telegraphy. The ,1, ft tp fp 4 2 . . 3 pf fg 0 R. Solunii lg Player ..2 of tower the is 984 feet. 6 2 2 4 2 height ... 0. Bacon, rf 0 0 8 2 E. SOlum 4 E. Solum, If . , . . . : ... . . .2 6 5 0 9 Smith 1 3 ..0 , , .4 ? 6 1 2 9 Blind Torn, Musician Payne, c ; 0 1 Blind Tom, Thomas Bethune, a 15 17 7 15 37 Armatage, rg Total 2 3 0 1 4 Score R. Solum, lg musical freak, was a negro slave in by quarters: 3 Sfc Charles 1 1 Smith .'8 19 .21 27 Georgia who was born blind and 37 mentally deficient. He showed re27 16 Georgetown . . . . .11 11 19 9 9 31 Total markable aptitude for music and RANDOLPH NORTH AFTON vs. RANDOLPH after hearing a piece played once fg ft fp pf tp Player could reproduce it accurately on the 12 2 0 0 W. Norris, rf ."...6 NORTH AFTON 4 6 piano. He also performed other muS. Kennedy, If ..3 fg ft fp pf tp sical wonders and was exhibited "in 0 0 2 2 Player D. Rex, c .2 1 1 rf ;. various cities. After playing he B. Rex, rg .. ...1 2 0 4 2 Burton, 2 2 0 4 4 If Wolfey. would generally spring up and apW. Smith, lg .4 1 1 1 9 K. 1 11 .5 Gardner, c 1908. A. Smith M. .1 5 1 1 3 D, Gardner, rg . ,.3 5 3 2 9 plaud himself. He died in t 1 4 2 16 9 2 14 34 R. Humphrey, lg Total 0 0 0 0 E. Hale. Labor Law First ...0 Day Score br quarters: A bill designating as a holiday 31 25 10 19 Randolph .. 14 10 5 9 33 what is now Labor day was apTotal ' 21 81 3 10 Georgetown RANDOLPH proved June 28, 1894, by President fg ft fp pf tp Cleveland after agitation began in Player OOKEVILLE vs. BLOOMINGTON 2 12 1882. .;v.- W. Norris, rf .6 1 1 2 1 S. .0 If OOKEVILLE Kennedy, t ' ' 0 0 4 2 c D, ..2 Eex, tn far ft.fo Plaver pf The Gyro Compass 5 0 0 4 10 B. Rex, rg L. Stoffers. rf The gyro compass that is used on 1 3 A. Smith, lg . . . . ; L. Nate, If the bridge of ocean liners is a wheel 2 2 1 9 W. Smith M. Davton, c ...4 60 pounds and revolving at weighing 3 4 3 1 9 E. Dayton, rg of 6,000 revolutions a minrate the 11 H 3 8 25 Total .1 2 2 0 4 V. Poulsen, lg ute. Its principle was adopted from Score by quarters: Birch 23 1 11 33 the gyro tops used by children. It North Afton 8 25 always points to the true north 19 11 37 Randolph ...4 15 11 Player acres each. The saturated brine flows by gravity to 20 crystallizing like gold, occurs almost ponds, each of 10 acres area. Here In waters of the the salt crystals form and the bitSALT, sea, in the earths strata, in terns (other chemicals in solurocks yet its profitable extraction tion) are run off before they reach is rare. Utah is one of the places the saturation stage. A permanent where it occurs in abundance, com- floor of salt is maintained in each prises an important resource and pond. In the late fall, after a pond has been thoroughly drained, ordisupports a major industry. - The Great Salt lake is the cen- nary plows drawn by tractors, salt from the floor. ter of one of the worlds greatest loosen the new and conveyor it is scrapers deposits, with enough salt to sup- With a railroad siding and stacked by thoufor future generations ply sands of years. The saline content weathered until needed at the to mill. An average annual crop is of its water varies from 15 25 and the brine is so dense that about four inches of salt. The mill has a capacity of 50,000 the human body floats easily on its tons a season. From a receiving surface. It contains no life. So easily is salt obtained from storage bin the salt passes through drier (heated to 300 the lake that there has been little a rotating kiln to a and cooler, from which deg.) numerous to incentive exploit the bin. Various the stock to it goes beds and domes in other parts of Utah. Salt production is one of sets of rolls crushof and size it into which occupies the states oldest industries. The nine sizes, each is fed first settlers gathered the crystals a separate bin. Thence it left by evaporation in the natural automatically into sacks and packbasins around the lake. In I860 ages for marketing. The territory served by Utahs and after, dams were built to imsalt water. the industry, extends from Denver, pound As the demand increased produc- Colorado, to Washington, Oregon tion was organized and much capi- and part of California, covering the South Dakota, and tal invested. The Inland Salt Com- Black Hills, in Mountain states. It pany was formed in 1889. It was the Rocky to more succeeded in 1899 by the Inland gives steady employment of a 125 with than payroll people, Crystal Salt company, which, in more than $200,000 a year, and 1927, became the Royal Crystal The Salt Lake spends further amounts for the Sait company. reChemical Company, a subsidiary supplies, power and fuel it of the bulk The output, of the Diamond Match company, quires. to other states, brings much began- operations on the southern going new into Utah. Local salt money shore of the lake in 1916, primarily to produce potash for war pur- companies pay the railroads about f million dollars a year for poses. The Morton Salt company transportation. took over that property in 1918 and Salt is pressed into blocks, somehas operated it since as a salt times with the addition of phosplant. feeding; Whether the .salt in the lake phate for is livestock used for the complete smoked, it originated through evaporation or sugar cure of meat, and with volcanic action, orboth, is in disiodine, it is recommended by the pute. The lake, averaging only 15 medical for the feet in depth, its proportion of salt vention ofprofession Over 40 pre-of goiter. varies from year to year with the the school children of Utah are rainfall.' Though sodium chloride said to be afflicted with this (common salt) is the sole comdeficiency. A special kind mercial product of the lake, steps thyroid salt is iodized for animals. are under way to recover sodium of Since the days of Utah, sulphate, whose proportion is next salt has been early mined in Sevier and to the sodium chloride, and thus counties, where the minestablish a new industry in Utah. Sanpete eral occurs in beds overlain with Variation in the density at which ten feet or more of earth. This different chemicals precipitate per- salt is recovered by stripping or mits selective concentration, segre quarry mining. Some salt was gation of salt of the highest purity obtained from the great salt bed at and the removal of magnesium, Wendover, 110 miles west of Salt calcium and other unwanted ele- Lake City, but commercial producments. tion is no longer maintained there. Intricate selling problems and During the evaporation season, brine the restrictions imposed by freight from April to is pumped at the rate of 5,000 gal- rates constantly confront the inlons a minute 24 hours a day from dustry in Utah. On their solution the lake into a flume. From settling and friendly consideration at home ponds, it passes, after five or six depends an important market for days, to concentrating ponds of 250 j labor and source of revenue. By I. A. CLAYTON, JR. NORTH AFTON vs. COKEVTLLE WOODRUFF fg ft fp pf tp Anderson, rf Ashton, If Putnam, c 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 Harvesting Saif Near Great Salt Lake ft 2 3 .2 Total ...... : , 22 54 Player 15 1 14 22 9 20 fg Total Score by quarters : BLOOMINGTON Laketown .11, 3 fg ft fp pf tp Randolph ............2 11 Total"- - Player ft fg 11 9 4 10 26 Total o Score by quarters: 2 0 2 O Ookeville 3Y 31 .11 29 O 0 1 12 8 0 26 16 Blomington 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 BLOOMINGTON vs. WOODRUFF 0 5 1 7 1 13 0 6 0 2 LAKETOWN Player C. Robinson, rf R. Kearl, If K. Price, c S. Matteon, rg . E. Satterthwaite, fp pf tp G. Price, rf lg ft fp pf tp 2 8 3 1 1 LAKETOWN vs. RANDOLPH BLOOMINGTON rg 6 8 22 ft fp pf tp 13 0 Krogue lg Hansen '.. Score by quarters : 4 Woodruff Georgetown .....14 '. Nelson, 1 1 2 3 1 6 2 3 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 Total o 2 vs. NuRTH AFTON 0 fg Smith, lg Dunn, rf Armatage, rg 3 I.....!;!!..'. 1 1 2 .0 2 E. Solum, rf C. Bacon, If Payne, c R. Solum, rg 4 4 ! . . . . 1 1 ;....40 8 11 . . ft fp pf tp 132 GEORGETOWN 6 Bateman, c 0 Plant of Royal Crystal Salt, Co., Saltair, Utah 39 23 21 1 2 6 6 Thomas, If ....,..6 ..0 6 2 14 3 0 3 2 1 0 24 WOODRUFF fg E. Oox, rg R. Cox, lg 8 ; Player Pickett, c 1 5 11 23 19 17 Longhurst, g Men Basketball if 120 9 11 ....... 10 ....... 8 Player Anderson, rf Ashton, If Putnam, c 8 ...... Peterson, 9 39 WOODRUFF vs. GEORGETOWN s s I..". ....... P. Pugmire, Price, lg Ookeville 11 10 . 10 10 ............... rf 2 '. . . . . Windley, (g) St Charles Putnam, (c) Woodruff D Cox, (g). Woodruff .... . R. Cbx, (g) Woodruff R. Solum, (g) ; Georgetown Nate,, (f) Ookeville S. Kennedy, (f) Randolph . . ..1 K. Gilgen, (g) St. Charles D. Rex, (c) Randolph A. Smith, (f ) Randolph V. Poulsen, (g) Ookeville R. Humphrey, (g) Afton D. Arnell, (g) St. Charles G. Price, (g) Laketown . ; Smith, (g) Georgetown Hansen, (f) Bloomington O. Peterson, (f ) St. Charles Satterthwaite, (g) Laketown Pickett (f ) Bloomington Longhurst (f ) Woodruff Armatage, (g) Georgetown B. Rex, (g) Randolph Birch, (g) Ookeville Thornoek, (g) Bloomington Nelson, (g) Bloomington S. Mattson, (g Laketown Krogue, (g) Bloomington Dunn, (f ) Georgetown D. Hatch, (g) Randolph O. 9 2 3 3 0 5 5 4 0 0 0 ...1 1 0 0 0 0 Total Score by quarters: n ; .a 1 ft fp pf tp fg ........... .0 Satterthwaite, lg . .11 (f) Georgetown (f ) St. diaries Anderson, (f ) Woodruff Ashton, (f) Woodruff Player v 4 0 0 2 15 15 Player 12 E. Bugmire, E. Bugmire, 3 5 0 0 !.14 () Solum, ST CHARLE 4 v LAKETOWN 22 23 21 . 2 5 1 1 16 2 5 1 14 3 2 7 v w WEST BUYS UTAH SALT ft fp pf tp ...1 . .24 ' .22 ........... M Dayton, c E. Dayton, rg V. Paulsen, lg M. 20 V. .......... Stoffers, r L Nate, If Points Last Total Rank Night - Stoffers, (f) Ookeville .. Robinson (f) Laketown W. Norris, (f) Randolph Bateman (c) Bloomington C. Bacon, (f) Georgetown M. Dayton, (c) Ookeville O. Burton, (f ) Alton Iv. Price, (c) Laketown . Payne (c) Georgetown P. Ptgmire, (c) St. Charles D. Gardner, (g) Alton W. Smith (g) Randolph Wolfey, (f) Afton . It. Kearl, (f ) Laketown E. Dayton, (g) Ookeville Thomas, Bloomington L. E. OOKEVILLE fg .6 Player w . Most Remarkable Ruin The most remarkable ruin in the Indies is that of the Citadel products grown in our Southern West at Cape Haitien. Built La Ferriere states, while Brazil nuts, filberts, cashews and pistachios are imported ' by King Henry Cristophe to repel a from foreign lands. Part of the con- threatened French invasion, it at fectioners supply of walnuts is im- stands on the top of a mountain estibeen has elevation. It feet 3.000 ported and the rest is grown in this' mated that nearly half a million country. English walnuts come from tons of building material were used France and California, while black in its construction, every pound of walnuts are raised in the United States. Almonds, although found in which had to be carried up the prefive continents, come chiefly from cipitous side of the mountain. Ten were continuously Spain and Italy. California also pro- thousand men duces almonds, and Italy and Tur- employed in its construction and died of exkey supply filberts. Cashews come 20.000 more, it is said, ' and haustion hardship. from India. Facts About Nuts Peanuts and pecans are nativv : 1 t V' Contagious Smiles Chins, Mongol People can hide the sun, but clouds The The Chins are a Mongol people j in the world cant hide living in Burma and along the Bur- - ' all the clouds frontier. Said to have a smile; nor can the doctors invent come from Tibet, they are great a medicine that will keep smiles hunters and treacherous warriors. from being contagious. mo-Chine- se . V. 4 ;v.- - Where Antony Wed Cleopatra Corfu, Greece; was the scene of the marriage of Mark Antony and Queen Cleopatra.? ? ' ; . 1 Great Thoughts - Nurture your mind with great thoughts; to believe in the heroic makes heroes. ? |