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Show UINTAII BASIN RECORD - Derby Winners sue jifojjpssr;Dks Happy tj thinj 0 he'd t Octoo, pi Maggio rculars nt th- r- ers f t their McSRANE JOBERT ? went Into ;oeDl York the New nt quite the pi Sit5hoPwa s completely from one booed ncally a eie-gl- Down ties X. is of L'DWARD R BRADLEY, whose horses have accounted for foui Kentucky Derby victories since 1921 has nominated only one horse Ben h,s attemPt to win his f,fuLTIn fixtn Churchill Downs event. Six other owners, who have seen their horses win the Kentucky Derby in other years, will try to duplicate the performance when the race Is held May 6. Bradleys previous victories were scored in 1921 by Behave Yourself, in 1926 by Bubbling Over, In 1932 by Burgoo King, and in 1933 by Brokers Tip. Mrs. Payne Whitneys Twenty Grand won the 1931 Derby. This year she has nominated Equilibrium, Hash, One By One, Toll and Toss and Third Degree. Gala Hour and Book Plate will represent the Mrs. John Herts s this year, and observers are not too optimistic for them. They ,fae2io Who litetaj wlj to Gc Rowat tateg to !titfStejoTis g 1 Lmer be is 3 Statj y in lv Ipril 8 reacV ho .terrors iT nd Maj f and mg.as .! situation and h,ch t,n;e for of finance Ms. - juices Joe demand-riefanrefused to amp until led story i iced in and met D frare than half way, and U Lster couldnt see it that luck. Ruppert Kilns tough Two produc-fo- ous. Gallant Fox In 1930 and Omaha in 1935. Thi.s year bis candidates are Johnstown, Foxlane, Challenge, Flarion, Tliellusson and Joharie. Johnstown is thought to be the most iti ument rt, Ssed, t opened tion serious threat. Ral Parr, whose Paul Jones won the 1920 event, will be represented by Ebonita, son of Flying Ebony, 1925 winner. Winner of the recent Flamingo stakes at Hialeah Park, Technician will represent Herbert M. Woolfs stable. Lawrin, Technicians won the Flamingo stakes last year and from there went up to win the Derby victory. Both horses are sons Of Insco. o! mg tie Orchid t, from a irer l hot fifty-fir- st year has at Winston-SaleV. C., every Easter morning for more than 175 years. The strangest band in the world; possibly the largest, this group draws from 3QO to 400 players for its performance. 1 HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELF! Hello, might have hapyarn hombres pened out in the old Wild West when two-gu- n and booted and streets in the out spurred fought it cleaned out dance halls with volleys from their six guns. I dont know whether those things ever happened out in the West. All I know is what I see in the movies. This incident Im going to tell you about sounds like the West, but it happened way over in the eastern part of Siberia, and it happened to Samuel C. Taylor of New York City. You know, we had troops in Siberia for a couple of years after the World war. Sam Taylor was one of them. He was with a platoon of 60 men from Company D, Thirty-firUnited States infantry, stationed at the little Siberian town of Uglonaya. The town itself was nothing but a railroad station and a few houses. The soldiers were living in half a dozen box cars that had been taken off their wheels and set on the ground beside the track. But though the town was small it was affording plenty of excitement. It was about the middle of January, and for days the Americans had been watching an army go through the town. 1 ,1" 111 v x Siberian Melodrama everybody: a that sounds as if it cow-punch- well-direct- r y' i ? " I : $ -- ers ed st : 4Py-Ay- p t Sam says there were thousands of them, well equipped with machine guns, and lugging enough field pieces to blow those CO Americans and their box cars to Halifax. But they couldnt be bothered with the Americans. Taking Vladivostok was more Important. Sam Acted as Provost Guard at the Station. acting provost guard at On the afternoon of January 18, Sam was the railroad station. It was a bitter cold day. A cutting wind was sweeping past the station and Private Pat Strong, on sentry go, was stamping up and down the platform. Two Bolshevik troop trains had TUNNEY called the turn to the proposed Joe Louis-Ton- y Galento fight: Theres RECMN Paru one battle I wouldnt care to see Rns p Homes Somebody might ' be killed, and it JOE DI MAGGIO wont be Louis that he . . . Burleigh very pomtedly 3 pe 5,000 pr stay out of . U e Grimes, veteran . 21 & pitcher and baseUs time the San Francisco ball iRGAIh manager, at had been listening to the thinks that sign ano Pw it friends. They assured him Terms stealing is danV 3rd north 540,000 to the Yanks, gerous stuff. He ke bad a great season the ORS says the batter yefore? Hasnt his name a gets set, and if baw ng card? the tip is wrong jmeeded t0 advise the coloshe has no chance e eral points, which advice to duck . . . Den- - U El w wed at length in sports ms Shore, South Burleigh Grimes u , Lake Onnghout the nation. Some African sprint at AFE utterances were no doubt d PRICED champ, recently ran 300 yards in and perhaps some were The Canadian 30 and Sr seconds i cliberately for the sake of tournaments closed tennis and open EREAL )s ry. for 1939 will be held in Vancouver, ts Breads lie he did finally sign the July 24 29 . . . Tommy Gibbons, F ti contract he was thorough-i- d former fighter and present sheriff oi Flaw it i oery time he ventured on Ramsey county, Minn., is chairman REPA'f It was a long, ijmg field. of the SL Paul committee which struggle to get back into the hopes to land the 1940 American nae. Wo traces of baseball fans. tournament isficttoa r In Bowling Congress J wasnt until on Bide late in the sea-a- t . , . European chess masters will the SES public hold an international chess tourna to regard him as anything ment in Stuttgart, Germany, In May nace. The change came oi Ate . . . When Dave OBrien was stark began to threaten Foxx for ring for a Dallas high school eleven upplr t championship honors. Slt H he was regarded as being too small I f r the Facific coast idol to play college football . . . Jack UIPMES' th a hurry. He was one of Barry, former Athletics infield star, si to iks and ? report, and one of the has started his nineteenth year as ch 8, it workers on the Broid' baseball coach at Holy Cross U. practice entire attitude In an openis changed ' the better ing match with Undoubtedly x CE CRf fejrous disapproval and a Don Budge, Fred Ice Cfe" w is reflection had much to Carbon Perry was ad 3 ed eqnPB' change in attitude. He ministered h i s CO. to" dat the most crushing dead- - QENE in Q PAT regard as , k'.v('' y mx se ir RE u ... ex-re- i Touring the city in busses and playing under streetlights, the band awakens Salemites each Easter in a traditional ceremony that has gone unbroken through the years. Later bandsmen go to the old Belo home where ladies of the Moravian church have a hot breakfast ready for them. Then they proceed to Gods acre, the Moravian cemetery, to lead the ancient sunrise service. Right: The Moravian band starts them young. This lad began in Pfohls Sunday school class. He whipped the automatic up and let go. irf g s'-i'Sjs- t, cw r . sasj. - 8 . ' Hosp-- C ... P SfblflMlliMIIMlIltiatoK, t 15 well-mea- s friends was wrong. be quick to forget last Pleasant incident. And this be doe would much ,, ay baseball than clip cou- heart ,s In lhe game, and that even the best ball- e RAW sn't Coil' toDneVer'endlnS War t0 ajor Sport ?la?maior hi8h school I :;h ) ri '1 tw en a healthy boost ae schools voted 8Wts letters to tucli)atu,E in active com- - this was an Ulh by no means tsupntthhUSiafs C NSOHI H5', intat Drl?. rnmrnt 0Urt er KFY for b ICC Speed King BORICAN. at Columbia JJOHNNY student art 25 year-ol- rtirr I I I rriyrtftf 'i. Above: The democracy of the dead. In Winston-Sale, thS Moravians permit no ostentatious murks upon their graves. This Easter morning scene includes a section of Gods acre, showing how each member of the congregation has a grave marked with simple uniformity. The dead are buried in plots, according to age, sex and whether married or not. There are no family plots and no distinctions of Left: Oldest any descriptions. musicians-for-a-damember of the citizens band s 11. E. Pusey, 80, who never plays at any time except for Pfohl at the traditional service. sunrise Easter d univer- 4' s film itrt th" Ells- Vines as Budges opponent . . . The first dog i show in the United States was neld May 8 10, New in 1877, York . . . Basket- ball is the only major sport played in the United States which is purely of American origin. worth sity, is one of the most amazing decuEo e:! h discoveries of the past track 8 Precedent. chalked has high school ade. The young Negroone unofficial three official and PJ;:T)n t0 Beverly up world marks during this indoor !i "' "neapolis season. Texas ri? race Johnny In a recent 1,000-yar- d iiir's-sssestablished a new record. But that record will never get In lhe books, for the starter, Johnny McHugh, made claimed a false start had been covea carry-- b not ration a S ! only udcnt eaa con- - by Borican. Eorlcan record ime, hoM f0l distance In '' a ered the ' Glenn Cunningham, defeated but rest e. of his fj,e cockcd faster than was also who 4 r t'1 slrem rUy f Sports mark. r rclulre the existing international run"11'8 hlrd to ohi'T IIis rise to n' Rowling rp(iuirc 4 (rc came under the tulalage fame ne,dous output h1 and n E heron, W. A. Wisner, head of Until this ar ,0Caled club. N. J., athletic on th Borican concentrated Ut'nU081 dmirble season didn t fare bl and pentathlon, Borican !or maxi-under Wisner influence Pascal ,,, t'818 for no his interest on centered uUtes and !tem yard J yard and the 1,000sensation ha PrcP bowin.handlCnpPn8 cinder new The bea ? it is eciuai. a mile. Cunningham the tried b I Plrtlc'Pation CU.1 8P0rt f(,r route, mile the him over at l.oou has twice beaten Glenn lacks the yards. As yet Borican necessary endurance. 8 . feat, losing and Perry 6-- 3 replaced Hand-mast- V '-- tiation! t .V'' t Sk, '. 1$ H ? re ATCH r: i'sjHSrji -- s' x 16-1- 38-4- 0; material requirements. To obtain this pattern, send 15 cents in coins to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept., 259 West 14th St., New York, N. Y. Plant Seeds Carefully vegetable WHEN and flower purchased from reputable firms do not germinate as they should, it is safe to assume, that conditions are not favorable for growth, or that seeds were not planted properly. Therefore, it is of greatest importance to plant seeds according; to directions on the packets. Extremely small seeds must be covered only lightly with soil, according to Harold N. Coulter, vegetable expert. The will to grow is strong in seeds, but they have their limitations. To plant a tiny seed, like the petunia, under an inch of soil is like burying a man under a building and asking him to push it away. Heavier, larger seeds, of course, may be planted deeper. Beans and cucumbers may be covered of an inch to with three-quartea full inch of soil. Peas and corn sprout vigorously and may be planted from an inch to an inch and one-ha- lf deep. Many successful home gardeners actually cover peas and corn of soil aftwith an extra half-inc- h er they begin to push through. This protects them from birds, and also helps keep weeds down. vt . a , 1 r . " ' J ' rs G0E3STIPATED? Dont Let Cas, Nerve Pres sure Keep You Miserable VIiaq vnu art ormutipntfff two thing fctppen. rlltSi, Accumulated waMasawtU up tha bowel and proas on nervne in the ligoa-litract. Tli 9 nerve preannre cause he attloo aches, m dull, Jttzv fcchiig, In) mis of appetite, and dizziness. bJ COM), jparllv d guard food tart to decay formir g GA'i, bringing oo, iour stomach, acid lndit ration, and heartburn, bloating you up unlit you sometime gasp fir breath. Then you can t our atomacb is sour ou can t sleep, cat. VoU feel out, grout by, and miserable. Adlenka gives you the DOUBLE A( llOf'f you need This elfinr-n- t carminative catiiartie relieve that awful GAS almost at ones, 11 UAUsHy clears the bowels in Jrae than two hours, ho wailing lor overnight rthef. Sold at aU drug stores trd Character Earned Property may be inherited; character must be won. SALVE relieve, COLDS LiQuio-TABLr- ra 6ALV-NO- DHOP WNU W prioo 10c & 25c 1339 Salt Lakes NEWEST HOTEL WNU Service. Baby Otter and Other Animals Like to Play er tfCn 11 1 Copyright y t pulled in on a siding, and Bolshevik soldiers had crowded into the station where they could buy hot tea and vodka. And as Pat Strong paced up and down the platform a big Russian said something to him in Russian. Pat couldnt understand him. He came to port arms while the Russian stormed and gesticulated, and finally grabbed Pats gun. Pat tried to pull the gun away, but the Russian was a powerful brute. He spun Pat around and threw him in a snow bank. A couple more Amor icans came running up. He threw them into the snow bank, too, and made a mad dash for the station. Thats where Sam came into the picture. As provost guard, he rated a sentry box down at the end of the platform. He saw the fight just as the Russian broke loose and started Into the station, and he came out on the run. With the other three Americans at his back he started after him. I went bursting into the station as if the whole U. S. Says he: army was stepping on my heels. That station was full of Bolshies, of them had singing, talking and yelling. Lots of them had rifles, some hand grenades tied to their belts But 1 didnt have time to look over the grenade situation just then. That big Russian had found himself a rifle. I was five feet inside the door when I spotted him, but he must have seen me first because he was raising his gun." It Was a Question Who Would Shoot First, gam bad a .45 automatic, and it was a question of whether he or the Russian could shoot first. Without even taking time out to think, he whipped that automatic up and let go. The big Russian dropped. 1 or an instant there was a dead sllcnee In Those Huskies were surprised, says gam, "and so the station. was 1. For a second well I almost opened fire on the whole bunch of them, but 1 caught myself just in time. It was a tough spot and Sam knew it. Here was a whole roomful of wild Russians and he had just shot one of their pals. If be started out the door, some of them would be sure to begin shooting. If that happened, thered be general disorder, with 60 Americans fighting a whole troop train full of Bolsheviks. And what was more to the point, it would be curtains for Sam. I had to use my head, he says, "and 1 decided Id bluff them. 1 stood in the middle of the floor, waved my pistol over their heads and pointed to the door. And then happened the thing that probably saved my life. In swinging my arm I tightened my grip on the pistol to keep from dropping it. And In doing that 1 squeezed the trigger too hard. BANG! Off she went again. That bullet struik somewhere behind the bar and down came a lot of glassware. Sam says the falling glass created a terrible racket The RlSssians must have thought a shell had burst in there. They turned and starm peded for the door, and Sam says they went through it like a Kansas tornado. In ten seconds there wasn't a Bolshevik in the place. And where were the other three fellows?" says Sam. They were outside, turned into a rear guard. When they heard those shots Inside and saw all (hose Ruskies piling out, they ran for camp to tell the others the Russians had eaten me alive and were coming to eat them, too. Sam says he certainly did NOT feel like a hero when he went into It was only that station. He just didnt have time to think about it. after I got inside, he says, that I realized I was in a swell pickle. Ive often thought afterwards, suppose I hit one of the grenades those Russians had tied to their belts. Boy, that WOULD have been an adventuie. just ! baseball-lovin- ... ry GOLD s Large knitting needle3 and some Shetland floss make this jiffy knit a delight to novice or expert Its knitted round and round m stockinette stitch, beginning at the neck and working down. Stunning sunthe neck, burst detail smart raglan sleeves and snug all ribbing at neck and wrists easy to do and quickly finished. The plain knitted skirt, smartly flared, completes the costume. In pattern 6019 you will find complete instructions for making the blouse 8 shown and a skirt m sizes an illustration of the and blouse and of the stitches used; It wasnt a hostile army but at the same time it wasn't a friendly one either. It was a Bolshevik army moving to attack Vladivostok, not far away as distances go in Siberia. Salem s band was founded by Moravian settlers from aster mvakens not a village but a city of y o,VUO. Above photo shows the group assembling for its rehearsal at the old Home Moravian church. Mr. Pfohl estimates he has inducted about 4,000 members into the band. Sport Shorts VAin i Renos hr ADVENTURERS5 CLUB B. J. played sive as War Admiral, famous horse owned by Samuel Riddle, carried off top honors in the Derby of 1937. This year Riddle has nominated Get Off, a colt whose successes last year were few. William Woodward has seen two of his horses gallop home victori- delivered, the colonel acn't make that be had !.C. d as' bad been tract (to him) he o, me This Easter morning, roJ (left)a leads for the band which and Blouse That's Easy Ttoyd ning will attempt to follow in the footsteps or Reigh Count, who won the 1928 Derby and proceeded from there to have things his own way during that season. Neither Gala Hour nor Book Plate were impres- k- K.PJTwjboostoU Dt Mae- - Oldest es r,T iify Knit Skirt sta-ble- Dio bal f 'U Ga- agents working Oldest U. S. Sunrise Ceremony ktdl Greets Easter Mor I Most playful of all wild creatures are otters, for even when full grown they cannot resist anything In the shape of a ball that floats Baby badgers romp together, puffing out their fur until they look like black and white balls, then bouncing round and round on their short stiffened legs. A favorite game is for one to mount a fallen tree, and Its companions to try to pull it down, relates Oliver G. Pike, F. Z. S., In London Tit Bits Magazine, Young polecats play a similar game, but are far more graceful. As they prance sround. their slender backs are arched, and they look most attractive in their rich dark brown glossy fur. Badgers, polecats, stoats, and weasels have very little method In their play, unlike the organized games of the otter. I doubt If anyone has ever detected play among fish, or seen lizards or snakes indulging In games AU these are cold blooded and are only active when the temperature is warm enough to give them an interest In life. The play of foxes will often tuin to tragedy so far as the farmer Is concerned, for If they get among fowls they will kill one for food then, like puppies, chase everything that moves. If the birds had the sense to keep still Hie fox might pass them by, but he will slaughter them by the dozen while they continue to run. l ! j 1 TEMPLE SQUARE Opposite Mormon Temple HIGHLY KfCOMMKNDLD Rates $1 50 to $3 00 ItS mark of distinction to stop af this beautiful hostelry MtNKsT C. KO.SM1LK' Mtr, |