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Show I THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. UTAH re- - r the proceeding., bTI H is ,"lsl. wit hunt hill ii Hi lion tO PLAIN REASON FOR 2 UTAH call. . Approving Suffrage MUm ailment and Providing funds Enforcement, Other U Should be Considered. 1 jtterl nol'TII"!' the l,,xt message to tin special In flier's the TIiii'ImmiiiIi pf t'tuli legls-dvlherc- d ut pi lol im before n Joint session Him otiiT -- ) neeet mu mnl Iioiimm; Governor's Message. to tin, niiUinrlty vmsH,1 In ..(erniT h section 0, article 7, of 'o.nliitloii of Him staU of t'tuli umit Him legislature III special extraordinary occasions, I mliHl you to "ii'Mt here nt thin tnn1dcr nmttio v which I le-t,- f mnnii.il Importance to tin f mir if nl m and to the people iniintr.v ai u wjioli. squer-rlt- h no But u to a lably 1,1,1, i tin moot liiiiortnnt ltm k would jour consider-Jn- i 11m ohm on which tin call n-- nun bused, Is tin to tin constitution Failed States extending tin uflrage to women. Utah has word so uninlslaknhly and so I foci tly in (Ids mutter that comment ul thl-- time would s ,rfuoiis. under discuim in today nre of mort impnrt-in- d widespread Interest than tin Tho matter Is one of living. moniMiit, Imth loMiilly and and all governmental forces olhnB in an effort to reduce tin rfnroessitles to a point where It not work a hardship upon the ) In so far ns I nui earner our existing laws nre ndequate t conditions in this respeet finanelal provision hns not made for their enforcement, asks tforr I would respectfully consideration of an appropriation office of the attorney genjii the amount of $10,000 for and prosecutions us pro-- i onder existing statutes to affecting the control and governing the dWposi-(frolstorage products. Enactment of Law Suggested. Ir the call for tin special consideration of the ing subjects only, it lias occurred that there are other Items of t importance to the pisiple of ttt as to warrant me in bringing t your attention at this time, 'sifiong them Is the law govern-- : he Ktle of securities, enacted nt tfular session of the Thirteenth known ns the gore, generally lias sky" law, which recently attacked been use of a clerical ia engrossment. I am strongly of iiiion that such a law is sorely stand rather than leave its to question I would suggest Nnactment at this time with such ! as the experience of the sera commission lias indicated to wjtde or necessary to Ineet . MioJtTt-- s mntrj nn-ii- in--- ex-H- do on! i conclusion. ready CAPTURE GRIFFITH CHAMPIONSHIP OF AMERICAN LEAGUE Mai.. lliul.s to nlTy Him I il . hlMilulil Il"'1 m itlt 1h iii-- t ti.iv iiml short ills, a Mf i . nlt ii iitny riiif s does ti , Manager Clark Grlfllth of tho Washington Amerlcun league team, ia disthe other evening excussing bast-bulpressed the belief tliut the White Sox would defeat the Cincinnati Iteds am) gave his reason for Ills choice. It was not Ieugue loyalty la any sense, but an opinion bused upon careful atudy of basebull that tho Washington lender gave. "To begin with, said Griffith, "I have not seen tiie Reds pluy this season. I know some of the older men and know whut they can do. I do know Ud White Sox and I know wliut they ran do. I have had practical demonstrations of what they cun do. The White Sox have every essential of a championship tmsctmll team. They have a whirlwind attack, a wonderful defense, and every move they make is directed by keen baseball n. l s pos-slid- e brains. "There Is no fluke about tho position of the White Sox. It Is true thut the Tigers hud a bit of tough luck In the start of the season, hut. Just the eunie, the Chicago teum Is a real, club. They lend the Ieugue In hitting, base running, scor ing runs, extru base hits and everything else. When they set the highest, standards In those things we cun ouly conclude that they are champions. "Just take tbeir hutting order first. Neuio Leltmld is a lead-of- f mnn of the type. He Is hard to pitch to and has I good eye. If the hulls are bad he won't take a cut at them. If they are In he is as Ruble to crack it for two or three as he is to get a single. Then there Is Kddle Collins. Collins Is hlown-in-the-gla- that about the grentest the game ever produced. Lie Is a man; or he can great stand in and slug. You know a good player does not smash the ball when that play Is on. He meets the ball and punches IL Collins can run the bases, too. "Then there Is no less a person than Buck Weaver, Buck Is about as good as Collins. I think he Is the greatest third buseman in the world today. He can go and get a ball, he can second-sucke- r Printer a Wonder. , vuli-ope- in League Loyalty, but Opinion Formed Upon Careful 8tudy of Baaeball Tlgere Had Hard Luck at Start of Seaaon. ir(Mifiirm ,,iy There was Old Limerick, an ol man since first known, and the boy used to say he was not only horn an old man but was fighting when first saw the light. He would work until a few dollars were due him, and on this would raise enough to get drunk, and when drunk he was worse than a cow pen full of wildcats. He was tn had with the police of every city In the South, and at that time there wasn't a poltcemun In this county who had not at soma time or other been scratched or bitten by him Crippled though he was he was ( match for a squad, and It was never until W was beaten to a pulp thnt he could be put Into a black roarta. And yet this man who wore hts shirts and socks until they dropped oUi't matter wlilch I would from him. and who never bathed for approval Is the enlarge-o- f years at a time, and whose every oththe powers of the state board er word was an oath, could discuss n commissioners to the end that theology with a bishop, or politics with ) Is given uuthonty to acquire Rob Toombs. Maeon Telegraph. mid land for the capltol grounds provide for authorized deficits, Dust on Oceans Bed. transferring certain duties from To an enormous extent the bed of 'ffue of the secretary of state to the ocean Is covered with lava and of the state bank commissioner, pumice stone, says the Family HerWears that inadv.ftcntly some ald. Still more remarkiihle Is It to find wu resulted wlilch interfere inn-ttho floor of the ocean covered In many with the eftlclent operation of parts with the dust of meteorites. dale hanking department. One These bodies whirl about In the heavJiim prevents the collection of ens like miniature comets, and ar m omiiectlon with the filing of for the most part broken Into In"orly reports, resulting in a reduc-Inumerable fragments. We are all fathe state's revenues to the miliar with these heavenly visitant ot ef more than !MHK) for the blen- - as shooting stars ; but It has been only The subject involves lately discovered tlmt this cosmic tiust s to sections 1000 and 1207. forms layers at the bottom of the deep-eaeas. Between Honolulu and Taof Utah 1!I7. mid I believe r sufficient Imimi'tuuce to vvur-)m- hiti, at a depth of 2.3.'i0 fathomsover twomlles and a half a vast layer of consideration. land Iwiier omission to which I would this material exists. Falling upon Is Indistinguishadust this Impalpable pctfuliy direct your attention is for centuries rMiire to make ttie dynamiting ble; hut, accumulating In the nea depths, It forms a wondrous 'ii a criminal offense. The Btory of the continuous bombardment streams and of this planet by cometary bodies. uot only Is contrary to 'ttliiis of sportsmanship, but is Better Than Medicine. NfoMly unjust to our people as that medicine la. for most Remember I 'Me. and In I trust the defect but the aubstltute of exnothing mil tie remedied at this ses-'i- f part, ercise and right thinking. And it does the legislature. uot take a great deal of either right Nne years ago the state undertook or fresh air to enable you to 'Ma, nation of certain lands in the thinkingo(T Hi row any ordirmi.v symptom of Mleof the Sevier river, the euter- thnt Is necessary Is for All Illness. being generull.v known as the In your mind the thought vou to hold projeet. It ,ms been generally Hist you are boih healthy and png that when the project was PWeii H m,uld lie gold to the vva- - SHOULD WIN SERIES Net mention lims of 1111,1,1 oilier siiii on umi I'omlil ioti. create a 'or ur puhlh- utilities, I would hardship suggest ti iiitidill. Iitlun i, M.,., lion lo the end llmt upon proper the puhlh titilitl.-mission he granted amiiority to permit a higher rate for short distance than foe a long distance, thereby the uniformity of tht laws of thu country and making a fair and Just return on Utilities llivesiiuclits In Utah. Water Surveys Urged. The development of the agrleuiiur.i of our state hinges largely upon the reelamnilon of arid lands, anil 1 id' pinion that It Is proper to provide legislation which will encourage work of an initiatory (haraeier by county authorities. T, this cud 1 would suggest that comity commissioners he authorized to make appropila-Hoii- n io provide for surveys and the eolleetloii of data looking to the conservation of water ia their respective Jurisdictions. Willi the increase in the number of motor ears, automobile thievery almost to have reached the stiigo of ail epidemic. To combat this condition I uni inclined to lavor Icgislu lion of a more stringent character thaii now appears on our statute books. It is not the intention to place un due burdens upon you at this special session. I realize as well as you that on oecttsioiis such as this, mailers of serious moment only should he given aitcnti ui. I have limited my suggestions to subjects which 1 believe have been so generally discussed ami are so well understood us to eliminate the necessity and desirability for lengthy debate. To such an extent has public opinion been voiced on these matters, it occurs to me 1 might offer with propriety the suggestion that your work would he facilitated if the various Mihjtcls were considered by the respective houses acting as con mi t lees of tho whole. In conclusion, i repeat the sentiment conveyed to you in regular session, the wish that your associations may he pleasant and your accomplishments worthy of your highest umldtloii. Old SAYS SOX Washington Manager Puts Boost for Chicago Team. - ,inj ranee , CHICAGO WHITE SOX AGAIN J lered. It has to II n i, speetfully ii,t'oiiiini,i)i ,lllt ,(11 ( Ihorlly to licgoiiuH Him s 'll Him stuto hoard f ltm eommisshm-mm- . under who... illiiM Hon tli.. project III H IlCell LAWMAKERS TO THE CAPITOL. 4 ire Tlmf throw, he hns fine hands and Is smart Then comes Joe Jackson. Jackson Is hitting .350, and is liable to bust one clean out of the lot Happy Felsch Is hitting about .200 now, but he Is a dangerous factor. Chick Gundll is a hard hitter aud is playing wonderful ball right noW. Don't let any shallow skulls tell you that Chick is not a good player. "It has been said," continued Griff, that if it were not for Eddie Cicotte and Claude Williams the Sox would be nowhere. Perhaps that Is right but you- can take It from me that If It were not for the White Sox Clcott and Williams might not be anywhere. When a pitcher can go in there and know he has the sort of team that If the opposition makes three runs his mob will make four it gives him the heart to do big things. That Is the type of men the White Sox are. They never stop fighting. "Defensively the Sox are marvels, and nothing less. I am going to tll you something now that may surprise you, said Griff earnestly. 1 am going to tell you that Happy Felsch is the greatest center fielder in baseball. But there is Tris Speaker, protest ed the writer. I know there Is Speaker, replied Griff. "I know all about Speaker; he !s a great ball player, but he Is not one whit better than Felsch, and 1 think that Felsch Is just a bit better than he. Mind you, I am talking of defensive work now. It Is practically Impossible to hit a ball over Felsch' head. He Is a bnll falcon in fielding the ground hits, and he has one of the most marvelous arms that ever swung from a mans shoulders. - n sub-'uryn- -! i fh y PHOTOGRAPH COPYRIGHTED 'IftTERNAROMAL T h:r aS ft D ; UiUw- 1 1 tKXVi il fl n v, .fO -- at eom-pHaw- hod-Mat- , Colored 'r"d ,r Breakfast Linen. breakfast linen Is In favor. Oaths vv tilch over the edge napkins, about iliht-of eolored 1,1 r trptl hang only n few of the table and 14 Inches square, linen or else ure win, color. n. in sets, show border wreaths f'M s, some show red roses with 'l green leaves. They suggest 'oust sol of English china with 'tilors and stiff figures. The Hired sels show pink, blue or y ol wors on tau or gray lluoti. The Hoopakirt Tendency. as they ar of the quaint In many observed new are wear. and evening afternoon for frocks of few As yet there have been very Rnd these seen. tho real hoopsklrts are chiefly made by the specialty whether It will shops, and one doubts n Hil Hlde of all Imve any vogue at to the Atlantic. The nearest approach Is seen n hoopsklrt ,,o with sils'iT the full, gntheivd skirts stiffened draperies. KITects us rl UinwsM CURB OBSTREPEROUS PLAYER w Head of National League Believes Beit Cur I to Take HI Money Away From Him. j 0 MILLER HUGGINS PICKS SOX TO WIN Miller Huggins, pilot of the New York Yankees, says that It la his belief that the White Sox wilt win the world aeries from the Cincinnati Iteds for two reasons. First, because the White Sor have been encountering and beating more better" teams than the Iteds have been asked to meet In the National league; and, secondly, because the Chicago Hose have more hitters than the Reds. I Imve little sympathy with those who claim that the National league Is a minor by comparison with the American ieugue etundard of long-distanc- e play," declared the snnppy, peppery Huggins. "There Is little difference between the two leagues. And thnt Is the way it ought to be and the way the fans want It What credit would it be for a team In either league to win the worlds championship if the opposing clut was of minor league ability? "But I can truthfully say that there are more strong teams fighting for the flag In the American league than is the case in the Nationul In the Nationul league for many years." league or than has been the case REDS LUCK WILL BEAT SOX, SAYS CRAVATH outfielder of the Ihlllles, pick Cactus Crnvnth, manager and the White oleun Sox in the world's series. to Chicago team up Moran's Fat "To my way of thinking the Reds nre playing better hall than the WrJN the btg series. etnli has been get ,iq Sox, and will prove steadier lu Into the senes with the tutme luck. 15 breaks all season and will go hard-hittin- g A3-th- e President lleydler of the National league believes the way to curb a ball player Is to take his money away from him. Few players have been suspended but mnny have been fined for row with umpires. Ed Rousch of the Red was recently fined $50 for disputing a called strike. Why Waa Gleason Overlooked? tA,,wWWW It was almost TTA!TlUITflel n wee hit of old Faria, the Furls of houlcvnrd cafes, and yet It really stood In the IiiihIiicms district of convciiiioiiiil, purl'nnictil Boston. Sergeant Evans ruhhed his eyes and looked ugula and, wonder of wonders, It was still there; a shallow court, filled wlih small, round tallies, huge umbrellas and the whole facing a street lined with specialty shops. Every day. after that discovery, at 12:30, Sergeant Evans took Ills hat and cane and hurried, as fust as his limp would allow him, to the Utile there to spend Ids lunch hour living agnln the wonderful year and a half he hud spent in France. It had been a glorious break In his career as a very mmill clerk In very large Insurance companies. It had not been one sort of tilings, that of those one leurns of from popular songs, but a real good Yankee vacation, with a little hard work to pay expenses. And after he hud been wounded, the whole country Imd seemed to open up to him and even Furls, the forbidden, had been his for a (ouple of days. That was where he had learned to enjoy boulevard cafes. One day, ns ho sat and dreamed of the past and planned future trips to the old country, a girl eume In and took a seat at the table next to him ; a tail, straight, cupahle-looklngirl. Sergeant Evans puzzled for a long time before lie placed her. Then be crossed to her table, with his most ' military walk and saluted. 'Turdon me. hut were you. ever a nurse at the Bordeaux reconstruction hospital?" with n most winning smile. "Yes Indeed she said. "Were yon a patient there? "I think you were the sister who put some life Into this ankle I he an-sered. But there hud been many patients and few nurses and It was only later on that she remembered him. Nevertheless, she asked him to sit down and they spent the rest of the lunch hour talking over together the queer old days when there had been a war. The next day they met again, and this time the conversation became more personal. Miss Butler wanted to know If Boston was bis home town. For the present, yes, he answered. "I am really from the West, but good Jobs don't grow on trees, so when I was offered tills, I said 'Boston is home.' How about yourself? Miss Butler laughed. "Oh, I Just grew like Topsy; no father, no mother, no home and no ties, except that 1 imve found a doctor who wants a secretary with some medical knowledge, and I am it But some day I will go back to Furls and really gay-colore- d "co-lu-l- a t 4 g w t see the country." Of course," said Sergeant Evans. So the summer passed rapidly and by the time the little boulevard restaurant closed for the winter the two war veterans had found other meeting places. One evening be cam to see her, his face all aglow. "Faith, he said, for she was no longer Miss Butler to him. "It has come, at last, sooner than we expected ; a chance to live In Faria for the next five years ; good Job and a dandy salary. We sail in June." We? queried Miss Butler, In a very small voice. Why, of course, you and me. "And how do I go, ns secretary or as reconstruction aide? asked Miss Butler, and the small voice waa almost a whisper. But Sergeant Evans had seen her eyes and did not waste word. He Just took her In his arms. "You will know before we apply for passports," wns all he Raid. (Copyright, 191. McClure Newspaper Byn-dicate.) Alwaya Something New, "Of making many books there Is no end. complained the preacher, and did not perceive how highly he was prulsing letters as an occupation. There is no end. Indeed, to niuking books or experiments, or to travel, or to gathering wealth. Problem gives rise to problem. We nmy study forever, and we are never as leurned as we would. We have never made a stature worthy of our dreams. And when we have discovered a continent, or crossed a chain of mountains, it is only to fiud another ocean or another plain upon the farther side. . . . Even In a private park, or In the neighborhood of a single hamlet, the weather and the seasons keep so deftly changing thut although we walk there for a lifetime there will be always something new to startle and delight us. Robert Louis Stevenson. Last year William (Kid) Gleason Bom Explaining Due. was without a Job. lie had been reA leased by Owner Comlskey of the parson preaching to a White Sox. Any ball club could have crowded congregation at a church where In his younger days he had been signed him. Gleason last winter was restored to curate, alluded to the many changes good standing In Chicago And made thnt had taken place. He contrasted the attendance with that of days gone manager of the White Sox. The cry went up Inst season that by, and remarked: "At one time In reul major league managers could not tills church there was not a soul er be found. person In the gallery." Next day, In a report of the service width appeared In one of the local Kopf Dont Say Much. newspapers, the minister was reported Little has been said about the pluy. At one time In this ing of Larry Kopf, shortstop for the to have said: rhurch there wns not a sober person Reds, but lie Is one of the most n the gallery London Ideas. in the longue. well-know- n 1 -- Kerr Is Hard Hitter. Dick Kerr has made quite a us a hitter as well us a pitcher. Ah, Weill Anatomy. Our observation Is that a nntalorl-nIs a poor place for a limn to go for Uie su ly of ustrouomy. Dallas Now a m i t |