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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER, HYRUM, UTAH News RToteo a Privilmgm to Liv Ut&lh i; i; in ft ; g888888imim8im8im88888888888883 Paddock Wants Olympic Berth PADDOCK has no idea of taking a serious turn at CHARLEY this winter, but the blond California veteran is to try out for the Olympic team next spring, ambitions tp do something that no American sprinter has ever achieved represent this country in three successive Olympiads. At Cincinnati to attend the convention of the Amateur onion, as a Southern California delegate, a role contrasting with the somewba sharp conflict be had with the A. A U. several years ago, Paddock declared his spiked shoes are still in the ring." Im getting a bit old," he said, but maybe there Is still a kick left. What Td like to do is to have one good race say against a man d like Chet Bowman, the national champion early this coming spring, either in the East nr West, to determine what sort of shape I am in. Bowman may consider this a challenge. In fact, if he wants to. That would give each of us something to get in condition for and make It easier later on to work up to the Olympic climax. My idea would be to make the race a feature of a meet in some big eastern1 city for the benefit of the Olympic fund." Paddock has helped the United States score 24 points In the Olympics in the sprints and relays. This Is more than any other American star has collected, but the stocky Californian wants to set a higher mark for newcomers to shoot at One of Paddocks most sensational Olympic races was a losing one, by a margin of inches. It was the finals of 1924, when Jackson Scholz, former University of Missouri star, nipped the Californian at the tape. The notion has always been prev-- $ alent that Paddock beat himself by a ges- ture of turning his head In the last couple of strides and slackening his pace a bit This is his story of that epic finish, however : It was tight all the way down although I gained and held an edge over Scholz going into the last 50 yards. Ten yards from the finish, however, I went dead. I had nothing left but momentum, and turned my head and body only with the Idea of reaching for the tape, gaining an extra inch or two that might mean Hie difference between defeat and victory. But Jack had tin most stuff and he won. Charles Paddock Sprinter. I canyon, in MT, PLEASANT Maple so narrow Sanpete county, Utah, is a in person so walls the and high, the bottom of the canyon finds stars risible in daytime. LAYTON Farmers who have been bothered with coyotes this winter are cooperating with G. E. Holman of the state and U. S. biological survey cooperative campaign against predatory animals in an effort to destroy the animals. The heavy snowfall recently, in more coyit is thought will otes coming down from the mountains, and more precautions will be taken to sheep. Poiprotect the chickens that 100-yar- result son bait will be and put out to attract the 200-met- marauders. SPANISH FORK Havoc among the deer is being wrought by four or five mountain lions in Spanish Fork can- near Red Narrows, it was announced by D. H. Madsen, state fish yon Some weeks and game commisioner. ago two lion kittens were killed in that section by George Holman, who is in extercharge of the federal work of in Utah, animals minating predatory Mr. Madsen said. The old lions could pot be found at that time. Since then, however, the old ones evidently have returned and brought reinforcements, as several deer have been reported killed in that section. VERNAL Lovers of pets, wild and otherwise, find this city a paradise. Quail and Mongolian pheasants without number are in town, driven by snow and cold weather, and they are 88&8im888ft8888888888888-8888im8- guests in barnyards, if self-invite- d Star Three-Spo- rt Sport Mates the domestic fowl get too plain at times, in signifying objection to the visitors well the pheasants are good boxers and make use of their knowl- Earle noted Americas Sande, jockey, won 22 stake races last year. edge. EUREKA At the end of its first year of operations, during which development has been carried forward quietly and methodically, the American Beauty lead-silvmine on the South fork of the Humboldt river near Lee, Elko county, is shipping six tons of concentrates daily to the Utah smelters. John McGraw thinks he has a very promising newcomer in Frank ODoul, from the Pacific Coast league. er At Intervals Bob Zuppke of Illinois painter of landscapes. But for a few weeks every fall he smears em. Is a There are 255 golf clubs In and around Glasgow, Scotland. London has 250 clubs. is covered by the heaviest blanket of snow of the winter, although the fall in Weber county is reported to be not as heavy as that OGDEN Ogden The National league has a professor of umpiring" in Bob Emslie, who teaches the young umpires to call em as they see em. progress. Importance of alfalfa reported good in valuation Utah agriculture is shown by figures on that crop for 1927, which amounted to $12,420,000. The next most valuable crop was wheat, which brought to farmers year, $5,792,-$0- last over 100 birds on which are some of the finest strains to be found in this intermountain territory, the first day of the Utah County Poultry Fanciers associWith PROVO ex- hibition, among ations annual poultry recently. The show is show opened William Denny of French Lick, Ind., who hunts rabbits with bow and arrow, has a record of 17 bunnies to his credit . The photograph shows Teddy Roh-weman at Spokane, three-spoWashington State college. He hardly knows what it means to break training. He is the only athlete on Cougar teams to win awards in three major sports. Rehwer plays halfback in football, guard on the basket ball team, and holds down third base in baseball. county last week. under The all MYTON The ice harvest has start- league may be staged by a trio next season. Travia Waner, a cousin of Paul and Lloyd, will sign a contract with Pitts burgh at the end of the basket ball season. lie Is a star forward on the East Central Teachers college quintet, and the Oklahoma Collegiate conference outlaws athletes who may have signed to play in any professional ed in Myton and this of the portion basin. W. T. Rogers has started to sport cut east of Myton on O. A. Green, manager of the Ada Duchesne river and is getting fourteen-inc- h ic6. Amateur Baseball club, believes Travia Several of the farmers near the within two years will be able to step The third Lake Fork river also living filling up the pace set by his cousins. their ice housed. It is also reported Waner batted .420 in more than 20 that the Green river at is froz- games last summer. Ouray en over and teams and autos Travia is eighteen years old. He Is are ing there. Ice over a foot thick is be- six feet tall and weighs 180 pounds. ing cut there. Paul and Lloyd Waner were also reEPHRAIM cruited by the Pirates from the Ada wool clips from range and Ephraim home-fe- d Their cousin will be the sixth sandlot. were sheep 8old during the week. to join the Corsair crew. man home-feAda The wool, which consists of 15,000 Kelly Wilson, a pitcher, and Earl about have been fleeces, was sold to L. R. Anderson of Johnson, an Infielder, Manti for Jeremiah Williams & Co. at farmed out to the Columbia club in 33 cents per the South Atlantic league, and Parker pound flat. This is of a cent less than was for Brewer, pitcher and outfielder, recentpaid Manti wool, but is three more ly signed a Pittsburgh contract. cents than was received for local wool last year. the are d one-thir- d BRIGHAM CITY More than sportsmen from Ogden, Brigham other sections of tne home of Mr. , and a rabbit hunt county Promon-orThe sportsmen were recently. met at the Promontory station by ranchfflen and taken to the hunting grounds. According to abount 5000 rabbits were the hunters, the day. At the conclusionkilled during of the hunt e sportsmen were given a dinner at In ; Boxelder 150 iarsep. LAKE 11 TT e a d at y and Mrs. Ethelbert that 1928 year for eastern Predicting record-breakin- g ah poultry products on Benjamin Brown, former dent of the Utah State mar-st- s, presi- Poultry Cooperative association and now director of markets for that orarrived in Salt Lake from ganization, w York ;caae Thursday. Pro-ucer- He Is here s to up business matters of the zation and also is scheduled to RoVef kis annua report and address turday at the farm bureau conven n t Ogden. Local and sgs, Mr. Brown said, are turkeys in especially demand along the Atlantic seaboard. - or-sa- n Auto Classic at Indianapolis Seen by 145,000. As has been the case for a number of years past, automobile racing once more had the honor of attracting the largest single crowd of the year to a sporting event in this country. It achieved this distinction on Memorial day when 145,000 persons attended the annual e race on the famous Indianapolis speedway. This was 5,000 less than in 1926, but still sufficiently large to keep Its place at the top by a comfortable margin. The famous classic was won by George Souders of Lafayette, Ind., who previously had been practically unknown. The second largest crowd of the year turned out on September 22 to see Gene Tunney and Jack Dempsey clash at Soldier field, Chicago. This throng was estimated at 120,000, a new record for boxing. The previous mark was 118,763, the number of persons who saw the Sesquicentennial battle between Dempsey and Tunney in Philadelphia In 1926. A new record for attendance at a single football game was also hung up during the year 1927. This was set on November 26 when 113,000 persons, the third largest crowd of 1927, watched the Notre Dame and University of South California eleven clash at Soldier field, Chicago. The previous record of 110,000 had been established at the same field In 1926 when the Army-Nav- y game was played there. Other football games the country attracted throughout enormous crowds, and from the standpoint of attendance the gridiron sport enjoyed the greatest season In Its history. Two of the biggest football crowds of the year witnessed games in New York. A throng of 80,000 saw the annual Army-Notr- e Dame game at the Yankee stadium and 75,000 were on hand for the Army-Nav- y battle at the Polo grounds. The demand for tickets for the annual service battle was the largest in the history of the annual classic and more than 700,000 applications were received. 500-mil- Detroit Owner Has Big Stable of Race Horses Frank Cares, the former Detroiter, who now trains at Fremont, Ohio, and who annually has a large stable of horses out for the money on both mile tracks, has h regular and half-mil- e army on hand this winter. His regular boarders now number no less than thirty and more are to come, which insures him plenty of material on which to base the 1928 campaign. Among the lot now on hand are five fast record pacers Brook Volo Lomante (4), Belle (4), 2:04; Bonnie (3), 2:06; Yednos 2:05; Margaret Brooke, 2:06, and Van Lou. , 2 :09. On the trotting side there are also some fast record horses, as the roster (3). Chestnut Axworthy includes a 2:05 ; Peter Dewey (4), 2:06; (3), 2:08, and Azon, 2:07, for which a big check was given last summer by J. J. Mooney, Detroit Insurance man, who Is staunch supporter of the trotting turf and who also owns Krnnb Vnlo. 2 :04, and a lot of colts Aql-tan- total of 51,996 balls, about 84 per game, were used in the National league during the last season. This exceeded by 200 dozen the amount used in 1926. A Horseshoe pitching is a popular sport at Northwestern university, more than 250 students competing in the last tournament conducted by the intramural department Brennan Gave Dempsey Hard Fight j Bill 5 t J t t J f r, rt being held in the Graham building, situated at 162 West Center street. COALVILLE The Uintah Ranch Another Waner Is Added and water company filed articles of to String of Pirates incorporation with the county clerk of act In the National Waner That Summit company will incorporate the laws of the state of with its Washington principal place of business at Seattle. The amount of capital stock is $30 000 and the trustees, who also are the incorporators and . own the outstanding stock are Ben C. Grosscup, I. M. Annesley and Charles A. Wallace. THRONG OF YEAR Association football has developed Into the most popular sport in Austria since the World war. Davis and Salt Lake counties. Snow fell at intervals during the day. The city streets department, under the direction of Harold Tripp, street supervisor, was busy with snow plows clearing streets for traffic and of points in MYTON SPORTS BIGGEST J t One of Jack Dempseys hard- est fights was with Bill Bren- nan in Madison Square garden. The then champion tried to be clever at the start and took a fine trouncing. He was bloody and battered before he went back to his old slugging style, and finally knocked Brennan out in the twelfth round. He took more punishment from Bill than he had In his other fights up to that time. A few years later Brennan was murdered In what was thought to be a war between bootleggers, though It was as-serted that he was an Innocent victim. A tough, fighter, this Brennan, and one whom Dempsey will not forget hard-hittin- J Figure-Skatin- g J ! J t J J Necessary to Watch Their Peculiar Pets The BABY Dont leave any snakes about tonight! was the closing remark of Mr. S. G. Finch, president of the Naturalists club, Chelsea, England, at a recent meeting of the members. That may sound a curious exhorta tion, yet on this occasion it was a necessary one. The members of this club are in the habit of taking their pets which cover a wide range to meetings held in the parlor of the Six Bells, Chelsea, and on a previous occasion some one had inadvertently left behind a grass snake. Later the landlady had discovered the reptile and was terrified. Every member of the club has a particular Interest. One breeds fish In an aquarium, another studies ants, yet another is interested in butterflies, while the president is an authority on slugs, his specimens of which get to know him so well that they feed out of tils hand. If Back Hurts Begin on Salts' Flush Your Kidneys Occasionally by Drinking Quarts of Good Water No man or woman can make h mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a authority. Too much rich food creates acids which clog the kidney pores so that they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood. Then you get sick. Rheuwell-know- n liver trouble, matism, headaches, nervousness, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders often come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache In the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine Is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, Irregular of passage, or attended by a sensation of scalding, begin to drink soft water in quantities: also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithla, and has been used for years to help flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to help neutralize the acids in the system so they no longer cause irritation, thus often relieving bladder disorders. Jad Salts Is inexpensive and cannot injure ; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-wate- r drink, which everyone can take now and then to help keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby often preventing serious kidney complications. No mother in tills enlightened ag would give her baby something she did not knov was perfectly harmless, especially when a few drops of plain Castoria will right a babys stomach and end almost any little 11L Fretfulness and fever, too; it seems no time until everything Is serene. That's the beauty of Castoria; its gentle Influence seems just what is needed. It does all that castor ol' might accomplish, without shock t the system. Without the evil taste It's delicious! Being purely vegeta-able- , you can give it as often as theres a sign of colic; constipation; diarrhea; or need to aid sound, nat- ural sleep. Just one warning: It is genuine Fletchers Castoria that physicians recommend. Other preparations may be just as free from all doubtful drugs, but no child of this writers Is going to test them! Besides, the book on care and feeding of babies that comes with Fletchers Castoria is worth Its weight In gold. W. N. t g Starr Jordan treats of the efficiency of the mosquito fish as an exterminator of carriers of malaria and other less dangerous hut equally irritating mosquitoes. In 1904 Doctor Jordan Star was instrumental in introduc- ing this fish into the Hawaiian islands, where it has since become very abundant and lias practically rid the islands of mosquitoes. inter-Antilliea- J No. Fish Consume Mosquitoes Fair Uniting Countries Because of the great interest taken by Cuba, Porto Rico and naiti in the annual proincial fair at Santiago, Dominican republic, the event Is ben It in scope. coming is believed that the little fair will attract other Caribbean countries, and result in uniting that area more closely in political, social and economic Salt Lake City, In a recent paper prepared for the Dr. Daid Smithsonian institution, J t U In an English Court Solicitor Does your husband swear Woman Oh, no; he habitually? leaves off at times. Jimmy Slattery, Buffalo youth recently beaten by Tommy Loughran for the light heavyweight championship, is said to be one of the greatest boxers in the game today. The Coffroth handicap at Tiajuana. Mex., has grown in value from $5,000 in 1916 to $100,000, the purse an- nounced for the next running of this event Illuminated tennis courts for night play are maintained by the recreation department of the city of Evansville, Ind. A base of Kentucky rock makes possible year-roun- d play. s credit Frank Ives with having been the greatest sportsman this country ever produced Ives held the championships In billiards, roller skating, bicycle riding and horsemanship. Old-timer- Jimmy Smith, who is generally acknowledged as the greatest bowler in history, is rolling the best game of his career at the age of forty-fouplaying ten games a day without let r, up. The American Olympic committee will raise $400,000 to finance its ath letic Invasion of Amsterdam, Holland, next summer. It is figured that it will cost $1,200 each to handle the 300 or more performers. It has been suggested that Miller Huggins trade Ruth or Gehrig for the good of the game, thereby help-- ' Ing weaker teams. Might as well talk of his trading Colonel Ruppert to the Cotton States league. Two street car conductors of Georgetown, Ky bought a trotter In 1926 for a song. The horse, Victor Hale, has since won a number of valuable stakes and Is worth ten times what his owners paid for him. d The University of Michigan foot- ball schedule for 1928 has been completed with six home games and two contests on the road constituting the program. The Wolverines will play Ohio State at Columbus and Navy at Baltimore in the only tilts' on the road. The photograph shows Miss Beatrice Loughran of 40 Washington square, New York city, international and national figure skating champion, giving an exhibition of her skill on the ice at Lake Placid club, New York. Many Grid Title Hopes Blasted in Past Year Shattered attendance records and blasted title hopes marked the gridiron trail of 1927. Crowds that reached a climax with the throng of 113,000 at the Southern California-Notr- e Dame game in Chicago came out to see the favorites and champions knocked right and left. Not one of the undefeated group of 1926 survived the melee, and some of them, such as Alabama, Brown, Lafayette and the Navy, went skidding sharply down the scale. Georgia, after winning nine games in a row was bumped off by Georgia Tech. Such strong teams as Notre Dame, Yale, Pittsburgh, Illinois, Minnesota Southern California, Texas Aggies, Missouri, Nebraska and others, all had at least one bad day, when they "either met defeat or were unexp3ctedly t'ed The whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote for Pain, But its just as important to know that there is only one genuine Bayer Aspirin. The name Bayer is on every tablet, and on the box. If it says Bayer, its genuine; and if it doesnt, it is not! Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Aspirin. So are colds, and the pain that goes with them ; evea neuralgia, neuritis, and rheumatism promptly relieved. Get Bayer at any drugstore with proven directions. Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin; it does NOT affect the heart Aplrla Is the trade mark of Bayer 1'amifactur of Uonoaceticactdeater of Ballcyllcacld |