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Show THEJORDANJOURNAL.MJDVALE,UTAH .-.- INTERIOR Dill HPROTESTS Clubs Have One TRADE DENIED' Many More of Them. AGAINST RULESj I ASSAil. CRAMPTON COMPROMISE GIVEN TO SMOOT QUICKLY REFUSED BY WESTERNERS ERS' INDUSTRIES RAILROAD PROPOSAL TO MAKE RATE ADVANCE Prickett Says Present Rates Salt Lake From Chicago and Missouri River Territory Unreasonably High FIT "SPECTAC LES" TO BLIND HOLES ! I To Crampton 1 I Appeal Evidently Swayed Senator Smooth As He Agreed To Take Crampton's Proposal To The Senate I l 1 I I 1\Ietllods of "fitting: spectacles'' to bllnJ holes on golf links were discusl5ed by Thomas J. Moreau, a golf While such hole~. whose architect. greens are im·isible from the tee, are not !'O popular as they used to be, many clubs have one or ruore and do not care to rebuild them. Blind _greens haYe been cond(•mned hy many ber.ll\ISe the player c,wnot see what he Is shooting at, but more part leulnrly bE>cnu~e the ball cannot be kept In sight and the shooter Is nenr sure when the green is clear of p!uyers. !';C'hemes for giving sight t.o blind holes will not overcome the first ob.Jeetion. h11t will cure the others. Larger clubs are remaking flnch holes, but other alleviations are posslhle. The most picturef'(jue piau has heen made use of bv the Victoria Country club In the capital of BritlRh Columbla. The thlrtE>enth hole of this links, which lies partly among rugged rot·ks on the !;ellflhore, has its tee on some crags. The green Is cut off from view by a ridge of granite and one day a golfer let fly a tee shot on this 200· yard hole without ascertaining wheth· er the player!l ahead had holed out. The ball hit a man. Then players became wary and waited longer than nece1<sary to tee off. Finally a memher presented a large schoolhouse bell, handsomely emhossed, and had it installed at the edge of the green. When players have finished putting they sound this toesin as they start for the fourteenth tee and those following know that the way is clear. Another scheme Is employed by the Moo~:ejaw Country club in the broken prairie country of Saskatchewan. The club built a lookout platform at the tee of a blind hole and the players may send a caddy up the winding stairs of this tower to see that the way Is open and to watch the flight and roll of the balls. More r~mantlc and jullt as e1Tecth·e, and requiring less effort, Is the appara.tus used by the Calgary Country club In Alberta. This Is really a pair of spectacles, for the members have erected a large perl!lcope at the left ot the tee. 'l'h: player rna) look into the hottom mll'ror and see that the r:een Is va<"ant. Then he may place hls caddy o: opponPnt at the. !!;lass to watclt the fltght and final resting place of his ball. I I ' I or ·washington, D. C.-Senator Smoot gton.-Varlous Utah and in· Utah who heads the senate mem· of briefs through industries •ou:ot:tin of the conference committee on bers commerce with the interstate by H. W. Prickett of Salt the interior department bill, stepped City, assail the proposal of the i~to a hornet's nest when, after an· OLher meetlni of the conference, he I UHJ.lf.Ll" to make a general 5 per cent proposed to various western senators {fla.u..,•., in freight rates, in order that the senate abandon the Kendrick that agricultural on rates reduce may of federal aid to settlers on new plan Individual tiled Mr. Prickett projects ll.nd accept a com· Irrigation for the National Woolgrowers' •(lteflltic)n, Salt Lake chamber of promise proposal advansed by Repre· .-•w,erc!e, Utah chapter of the Amer· sentative Cramton, head of the house Mining congress, United States conferees. The new Crampton plan, association briefly, was the old state cooperation Manufacturers' 011 company and the Ogden I dressed IJP In new clothes, coupled exchange, each assailing the 1 with an alternative plan of financing settlers through corporations ~lti<>Sied advanced from a differen• , the and all in turn asking for a re formed on the projects. I Without exception the senators to aclllon in prevailing rates. In his brief for the Salt Lake cham· I whom Smoot made his suggestion of commerce Mr. Prickett says, I, quickly and em:t>hatlcally rejected the I"I'EIBe,nt rates on commodities to Salt) proposal and reminded the Utah sen· City from Chicago and Missouri ator that only a few days ago, at a territory are unreasou.ably hi~;h meeting of all western senators, he their relation to rates on the same was told to heject absolutely Cram· from the same points of ton's house provisions and to insist on to San Francisco. It is the pro-j the Kendrlc~ plan, and that western . of the carriers to increase rates senators, w1thout exception would Salt Lake City without a contem· stand by him on the progra!Jl. So In· INl'BI!OtiS Increase In the rates to San dignant were some of the senators and other Pacific coast over the developments that they de· To allow such increase to be- clded to call another meeting for the effective would not only further purpose of again instructing the sen~JIItta.sl2:e the unreasonablenes s of the at conferees to make no compromise, relatively high rates to Salt but to insist that the· house take the Cfty compared with those to 1 Kendrick plan and forget about state Francisco and other coast points, I or local cooperation. Representative Cramton until rewould emphasize the unlawful-] of a rate structure which, as it cently has assumed the air of dicta· exists, results preferentially to tor In the conference and tried to club San Francisco distributor and pre- the senate into accepting his plan of to the Salt Lake distrubtor state cooperation which he wrote into violation of section 3 of the inter- the bill in the house. However, he begged the senate conferees to give commerce act." Presenting the protest of the beet him at least an optional plan of statf' interests of Utah and other cooperation, admitting that he must •estllrn states, Mr. Prickett shows "have that much in order to save his the prewar rate on sugar from face when he goes back to the house." Crampton's appeal evidently swayed and Idaho to Chicago was 43 S enator Smoot. He agreed to take It Is now 68 cents. Freight The !:'haft of the rwrl:>cope Is some on sugar, he declares, have been Cramton's . proposal to the senators fifteen feet high, hut as It Is built o~ f d h seemed disposed to plain boards lined with tar paper, the' or·t ·1mself ~1vu.nc,eu to a greater degree than an th e main. But If Smoot cost Is low. The arran,.ement of mlr'.uJlose on any other food product, and accep t l m rates should not be liable to was sympathetic, every other west· rors places the _grE>en in" plain view al,_,111rn1A,. increases. The proposed in· ern tsenator was hard hearted. The though it nestles ln a deep valley bein the rates on beet sugar 1 sena ors saw in Cramton's offer of yond a high ridge. the western district made with· I compromise his admission that the -------distributing the rates cane sugar ! cannot dictate to the senate and they for Lackie Record ad· their away give to propose not do , refin· the give would enjoy of the east, handling largely , vantage. l'Cuban sugar, a large advantage. Plan To Form Utah Fairs Association 1 I !TERRIFIC STORM I NEAR SAN DIEGo: .. STRONG WIND FOLLOWING RAI~ STRIKES NATIONAL CITY CAUSING DAMAGE I ai I I Entire City Is l.eft In Darkness; L01 Angeles Suffers Worst April Weather In 20 Years; Damage Is Great I I I San Diego, Calif.- - A heavy wind · 1 coming on the heels of a hard rain struck National City, near San Dieg< I late Monday night and wrecked sever a! houses. Two women and a man injured in the collapse of one home All wit VI ere taken to the hospital. recover, the doctors F\aid: The storm left the city In darkness Sharp lightning accom:Danled th~ • windstorm . •• < • Pound for pound Alabastine covers more wall surface than any substitute. So easy to apply you can do a satisfactory job yourself. Ask your dealer for colorcard or write Miss Ruby Brandon, the Alabastine Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan. i Los Angeles, Calif.--Lns AngeleS I nnd the surrounding d istrlct began 1 Charlie HolT, world's champion pole 1 nutter and 1'\orway's blue ribbon checking up on the profit and losse! athlete, who has bec>n training on the Georgetown unh·ersil)' campu:<, went 1 of the l.!!laYi<'st ~;torm In more ~!:.!': out with the foothall squad for his fir><t taste of the great .\mPrlcnn colle~e twenty years. Althou;;h the raiufali game. Charlie is the good-looking "freshman" In the middle of the bottoru , was looked upon as having been high· of the pile. ly beneficial, it \\'as not without Itt clamagc. Highways were washed out and inundated, tying up automobile Frisky Fly Chaser traffic in many l5t:l.' ions of Southern j , Battling Nelson Was California. Trains from Los Angele~ 1 ~ to Santa Barbara _ were delayed for hamp10n nly Year : ' several hours by Earth slides. Havinl! Battling Nelson, one of the ' ~ Inadequate storm drains, portions ol ' ~ greatest lightweights, only held : the city were flooded. ' 1 the championship a little over a Oncbridge, a temporary structure year. over the Blg Tujunga, in San Ferandc Nelson came Into the honors ~ ~ \'alley, 'l''aR desti'O)'ed by the flood, and ' 1 1 July 4, 1908, beating Joe Gans, other bridges in the vallt>Y were en ~ the crownwearer, In seventeen ~ dangerecl. I 1 sessions. It was their second The storm started Sunday nig-ht and ~ meeting, Gans having won on ~ a la.te hour Monday the rainfall at 1 a foul the first time. That bout I reached 3.60 inches. had went forty-two rounds. Precipitation in the mountains wa~ Ad Wolgast usurped Nelson's ~ ~ hea,·y being ten inches at especially 1 1 title In 1910. The battle was and 11.17 in the Santa Camp Opid's ~ staged on Washington's birth- ~ Two cabins were W<J.Bh· Canyon. Anita , day. Wolgast made the great 1 ed away by high waters at Opid'e ~ Dane toss up the sponge In the ~ C:mt.p and the toll roads leading U]; : 1 fortieth round. Nelson was virMt. "Wilson was waf<hed out. to ~ tually out on his feet. But pro- , ~ 1 tested the stopping of the masExperts Declare Stock Show Best 1 : sacre. I r. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . :: O . ~ ~ ~ ~ I I aU colors lor all rooms lA • cooks in 5minutes u........................................................................& [JPo.rtffiJiesl Here we have Frankie Zoellers, whc cost the Yankees n cool ten grand t~ get him fro111 Atlanta so that the~ Golf Is to be adopted by Japan. could turn him over to Uncle Bill llo!lywool! sta1·s. Zoellers is a Lane's Field hockey is now played by womfrisky fly l'haser, a wonderful lead-off en athletes In Japan. man and batter, anti one of the cock· le;;t playet·s that eve1· displu~·ed his Yale has won 12 intercollegiate stun' In the Pat·lfic Coast league. swimming chumplonships In 13 years. • • • • • • • • • In the matter of engaging In a fight, :lilr. Dempsey still Is on his war basis. • • • \Vimbledon HSold Out" The prospect that Helen Wills and f;uzanne Leng-lf'n will meet at the Wimhlcdom tournamem In .June has led to an unprecedented aJ)p\lcation for seaflon tickets. Already more than 7.000 per~ons hnvP appllt>ct for tickets In excess of the :1 ccommodn t1 on;;. The money totals morE> t h11n £~0.000. The reJected applications In 1!'l2:, we1·e slightly more than half those which have heen rejected this year. Salt Lake City.-The Portland l<'eed·l ,. ers' company of Burley, Idaho, were the prize winners in the fat cattle dl· vision of the ninth annual intermoun· tain Lil·estook show, which came to a. close \Yetln.:>~<iuy 11fter five succefls· ful days at the Salt Lake Union stock· yarJs at l'\ort h Salt Lulre. This com· pany exhil.titted the grand champion ; car of fat cattle. They received for 1 this load $15.25 a hunrtred pounds, or I I nearly ~lliO!l more than could be sc· cured for the lead on the op:..n mark· Grave Error et. Seve I a! acHitional prizes were , 1 tell that Horace Bristles !warn "I load, champion grand this awarded for clown at his fence ypstercl!t~· :-hot got pre· cup loving; silver inCluding the Jolmsou upon her .• Ir~ • l5lat<:>d sen ted by \Vashburn & Condon of Los corner," call. uelgl~l.torhood Angeles, tl!e $25 prize offered by tile lt·etui'll fr,.tm a Commission company, the $25 "Seems lil;e he wus ju~t eotning round • Parsons by the Stagner, Pierpont I it when a feiiPr going by up and !'hot offered prize 1 : & Killis commission company of Kan-~ him.'' "I'1:e been Iooldng for something of sas City, the $25 ~rlze offered by the I kmd to happen for right smart of a he l 1 the stockyards, Los Angeles .. 'l'nwn replied Gap Johnson of Rum\l'hlle,'· E. i handsome !;fiver service offered by A. Cudahy, Jr., president of the Cuda· pus Itld:!<'. "lle ort to have shaved J oftener, and he wouldn't have ~een by Packing company, mi~took for a mad dog."-Kansas City ~tar . Dam Is Aided By Weather sensille springand summer I • • • • • • ·- l Sales Of Butter Grows In Idaho .Tohn Farrand, the son of the pre~· Salt Lake Clty.-Represen tatives of Je rome, Idaho.-Sales for the pa.st !dent of CornP.ll university, Is a track amountlug to three-quarters of ' nine counties in the state met with star. million dollars are reported In Agrl-~ E. S. Holme;• general manager of the • Cooperation, a publication of Utah State Fair association and de· Canada will not send boxers to bureau or' agricultureal economics , clded to form a Utah Fairs association. South America this "pring, as reque~t the department of agriculture, by · The several counties will cooperate In 1 ed to. Jerome, Idaho, cooperative cream· exhibits and hold county fairs so that The growth of the company, there will be no conflict of dates, It Indiana hns no fewer than 3,000 baswJul:n was formed about ten years ago was agreed. The communities repre- 1 ket-ball teams with upwards of 30,000 the small group of dairymen who I sented at the meeting were Summit players. the idea of handling their : Juab, ~mery San Juan, Boxelder: The prince of Wales Is presiclE>nt of own business, is shown by the follow·! Cache: 'utah, Sevier and Sanpete. SPEAKS TO MOTHERS! the attended representatives Eighteen Ync·ht Itacing Association of 1921, the ID.g figures: 1920, sales $100,000; Eugene, Oregon.-"During my- first Ameri<:an Falls, Ida.- - The recent Great Britain. ales $172,000, 177,271 pounds of but· 1meeting from those counties. Another Arthur \\'itchE>ry, a cateher, has cold snap and snow in the upper expectancy I suffered from morning • ter made; 1922, sales $125,000, 327,605 conference will be. held at an early,, sickness and my signE>d h;1-· the C'olumhus club ot 1 Snake river section is working in fa· been Cla!; 'l'h unberg of Finland, Olympi<: pounds of butter made; 1923, sales 1 date to further consider matters in hurt me all back I the in water store to plan the of Yor a~<~oclation. Arnerlcnn skating ch11mpion, e~tablished four new the f216,962, •88,206 pounds of butter I connection with the organization and ' the time. I got so American FallG reservoir this spring, I i • • • world records this yf•ar. made, 19U, sales $324,302, 839,604 i to perfect details regarding the holdweak and miserable I Wu~erhury df t~.e Eastern league, according to reclamation officials. t'n I' exhibits. pounds of butter made; 1925, sales • tng of county able was not that "mtcr!<, a young In· all probability the early run-off will Gus of anyP. W. Wrl~rht, '27. of Bellevue. (lhlo, has to doI much Miss Ethel LackiE>, Illinois A. C., ex1 <"< f f: ld SI)!'ned $709,119, 1,562,436 pounds of butter thing. Finally I be1 be dela)•ed a W;)ek or more, all or :e ei' rotH "pringfiE>Id, ~lass. ceeded by two-fifths of a second the was re-elected <::.tpt:<in of the \\'illlams Blue Sky Bill Gets Setback made. All cream not sold locally by' g an taking Dr. contractors the allow will free I whkh time world's record for tlJe 50-rurd • * * <·o\lege hasket hall team In 1!l2i. Pierce's Favorite the cooperative is marketed in Los j the to crete <·on of feet several a<id to ot outl1eldPt' om1g ) nod. I<'! Ha~·mond style swimming In an exhibition • • • 1 Washington.-T he Dennison blue Prescription and it Angeles. mark water his-h or peak The dam. ! by signE>d hPen hafl Ohio, Lnnctu;ter, mutch at l'hlladPlphia. 2'he exllihition If we had to ntay Helen '\ills two me, strengthened sky bill, to which Utah and other marked the dedicntlou and formal <.;Omr~s usuallv off run sprin« the of I Atlantic .\iiddle Clurl,sl•ur,; of the relieved me of the · out of threP 1 we dcn't know but len "'Ue "' 1 obvigorously states mining western Drive In Second Is Fort Douglas backache and made opening of the Penn A. C. pool. Her the Ia tter lhll't of 1\!ay and every day we'd he a little nervous al!"'. me feel much betSalt Lake City.-The standing of thQ 1 ject, got another black eye in the ' time was 27 ~econds flat. mean may delr.yell is run-off the that • ter. I had practically no suffering, did ~a era· j thousands of clolla: ~; to the users of the of Fort Douglas citizens' military train- ; house or representatives when the c·nt<·:,er ~hPa, ~It!n·in !';tunforcl unh'eN'ity will be the not lose my strength, and my baby was the l'acifl<' Coa,:t l<·ague, •oto:·age water. log camp in the recruiting campaign rules committee, In aiJprovlng a two1 \'ery strong an~! itea!thy. 'Favorite Precoast con· rnento clubanof Ulliile Pnelfk annual the of f'('(·ne $5 Ta:x~d Be to Alumni in sliding while !<prainPd has been placed as second in the : day program for considering bills re· scription' is a reliable medicine for f,'r<'n<'e truc·k and field "ports May :!:!. . commerce !I ('HIll Interstate the by ported Del announced. Games 1 women corps area, It was at Big Three clrid ami e;pecially helpf•ll to the Pasco to Elko Opens, Mail Air • • • 1 • • mother "-Mrs. C. L. \ViiMonte, Calif., was placed first, with 1 committee, refused to place this bill prospective 1 Five dolh1rs hHeafter will he the There ftr<• no f<·wer than 5,000 golf The ~lemvhiR club of the Southern . son, 344 E. 3d St. All dealers. Tab184 approTed applications out of a in the program. Prospects for the Den- price to ahnnni for single tickets to clubs In the Fnited States, or an awr1ets or I'tqm'd . \\'rite Dr. Pierce BufPasco, VI7 G.I>h. !lrin!{ing virtually 1 quota of 950. Fort Douglas had ninety- ) nison bill were not bright before, but football gam(o,s 1Jlaye{1 by the "Big :ll!e of onE> to e\'f'ry county in the l~Pgt:e. lias sold l'ltchE>r lllouroe 1' !l!it<·hell to the Hoc hester club of the 1 eYery city in the l'ac::iflc northwef't 1 falo, N. Y .. for free medical adv 1ce. nine approved applications out of a 1 this setback, in face of a vigorous ap- Three,'' Yale, Hur\'ard and Prln<"eton Uuion. jlo within approximatEly forty hours I======== -:--"'"'"=:-:= ==== lntPI'Ilational league. quota of 300. C?f the quota of 390 for 1 peal by Dennison to have his bill list- -among themsel\'es, it was announced • • Chemistry Most Popular J o~ New York City, th~ air mail ser·l • • • the states of this area, Nevada has al·1 ed for hearing in the house, probably at Yale for itsl'lf and sister univerfllr1 await· ha~ a ~wimming star n11nwd A Ji.<t of thP <loctorntes (advanced \\'inston-Snlf>m of the PiP<hnont 1 v_tce betwten Pasco. VI ash .. aud ElkQ, ready filled 95 per cent, Wyoming h9.s . seals Its fate for this session of con- ties. 'l'his is an increase from $:l a Johnny 'Voodd, who is somewhat leag-ut> has obu1:nc d f'itche1· Eldon • r,_enJ.dJ., ha~ st::c:·~cd. More than 5000 degrees for l'(·~earch) conferrPd by f1lled 23 per cent, Idaho has filled 20 gress at least. ticket to alumni "'hile by the agree- easier on the hPndllne writers than its from the Rp.d·taltb,u·g <'iub of ; vts:tors arrn·ect m Pasco to see the , A mericnn eoiiP!;l'!l in Hl23 reYeals the l'nn::ell ------per cent and Utah has f1lled 13 per ment single ticket to "members of the fnmous dukE>. Atlantic IP:!!;ne. ::-onth llw two planc;,s take ~ff for Elko, with the Intere,;ting fact that cht>mistry is far • • • Quarantine of States Upheld .cent. university communlt~·" ~<hall be $2, or \oadE of lll:'l>l fo;· the East. Due it 1 tlw lead, with ll total of 244 ctoctor• ftrst Claude C"ooper, \'<'!<'ran outfi 1·1der, $1 less than heretofore. tot vitdtel' former Rhl'i,·et·, Harry to the large amount of rna!!, two ma- at<•s grantccl. Zonl 1•gy is next, w!th Washington.-T he various states, Wool Clip To Be High Quality Increase in ren'nue sought by the h1111 bePn ~h·en his unconditional remade been has Hollins, At the bottom of the Ji<f ure 11. l.l"t:IOklyu chines were mccssnry. Salt Lake Clty.-no half-pint berry under the terms of a joint resolution change In prlcPs will be appliecl . lea~e bv the Onldand duh of the Pa· tlt<> of team g Clark~l.mr ti!P of with \l, palpontology, tn:,rt<l get· llteleor1>lng-~·. cups will be permitted to growers soon to go to the president for ap- "~olely in maintenunce and de>elop- 1 cilic C~a,.;t Iengue. le<~;;'lte. Atlantic tl,e ~I:dtlle Former Mlchiga!" G'Jvernor Is Dead )with 1. aurJ antllropolog,l', with 2. • • • and shippers of small fruits in the , proval, may again lawfully enforce ment of gPneral athletic facilities and l'hysic~. tltn[;:.rht h~· maro~· to he l'hem* The Hritish j!ovemmcnt rlan<; to state this year, ei~her to display or 1 their quarantine orders barring plants not to increase budgets of IntercolIndlunnpolls former \\'pa,·el·, Harry C'lo<:p!':' l'il·al, in reality claimecl i:-ttfs 1 govTiich, T. Mich.--John Lansing: spend ~1.000,000 to proYide athlt>tlc sell. The state board of agriculture and other farm and orchard products legiate athletic teams." signed has pitt·lteto, Columbus nud grounrls In clilft•t·ent parts of thP councrnor of 1\Ih:hig-<.n frnm 1S93 to 1891, ,,nly !'\G llevot<'<'S. Issued an or?er to this effect and tht <!iseased or Infected, notwithstanding with tlte Tokdo club of Ute Amer!eun died at St. J>pterslHt~·q. Florida, Sun· emp!ore<'!':. -------f'<'l'l'ice vii ci its fm· try food and da1ry department is notify. the decision of the supreme court Ball Clubs Top-Heavy association. \\'Pavet· was u f1·ee agent. 11 dny morninr. a t• h'rTam rcc;:oiYerl at • + • duty of a lllilll is to clo his fit·st The $ • • lng growers and dealers in the state 1 handed down March 1, denying the IntercollPgiate I·~<l!;tern the won Yale fir~t. Y clnt Forthe_ governor's office !!ere says. With Pitchers in 1925 that the law prohibiting their use will right of the states thus to protect Jim MeAuley, \'eternn infielder, wa· nncl swimming both in titlE's league the of rosters Covernor Rich was 85 years old. -~-u-:-=~:--e-=-----:----:::=== the mer of ! tabulation A t'Q.emselves and their farmers. be rigidly enforced. made u free agent by Los Angeles, American league last season shows ter polo by <lefeatin;! the Princeton of the Coast league, was signed by that of 2&! players who appeared In swimmers, 34 to 2R. nnd the Tig~>r wa- the Minneapolis club of the A1oerlcan Gooding Bill For Dyeing Se~ds Passes I~ Oil Fire Causes Black Rain Drops Will Clip To Be High Quality l 02 of them were pitch- ter poloists, 5G to S. scores, box the Salt Lake City.- ·Pas~agl! of the bill a!'.soda tion. Fresno, Calif.-"Black rain" fell in Salt Lake Clty.-Havlng spent con· • • • top-heavy h11d clubs the of Most ers. requires the dyeing of all irn· v.•hich slderable time In the wool producing Stakes and purses totaling !t37i'>.<JOO districts of central Utah, Alma Esplin,' Fresno. Inquiries to the United hurling staffs. The Chicago White alfalfa or red clo,·er seed to ported 1 much BPnn~· Meush, a youngster of \Vhen the Illinois dlstt·ihuted be will seathe during pitchers 15 used Sox because here bureau weather St~tes AgriculUtah the at wool specialist 1 prevent it from being sold te the farm- : meeting promise ft·om the lots of Washington, 31-day Its holds club Jockey pitchers. 15 had also Washlngtoa son. and clothing light spotting : ers of this country as home grown • tural college, makes the observation ram was BELL-lNS Park course, D. C., has been signed by ~~abby · \Vashlngton new the at used Athletics, tbe ot Mack, Connie d d Stre~t, manager of the August~ team that the clip this year, as a whole,; appeared to be black brought the re· Hot water see was secure In the sen<tte llfon· J only 12 men In the box, the smallest beginning July :Land ending Augu><t 7. of the South Atlantic league. ae< I Idaho, of be of exceptional quality. The length : ply that the "San Luis Obispo oil fire Gooding ,Senator by day • • • SureRe»ef • • • number of any club In the org•wlza· of staple, according to his observa· j ninety miles away in a direct line was tfon. Some men listed as pitchers qad 1 Ninety-three trotters and pncPrs On the request of Wade .KUJefer ,· tlon, wfll be longer than usual, which responslbl•. "The wind has been very llttle to do. The St. Louis have been nominated for the four l8 a factor having much to do with right," W. E. Bennett, meteorologls! Browns carried Chester Falk all sea- stake events, carrying a total value the Atlantic club of the SJoutkb.f'ru I agriculture the National urange, other d th · t en Ins, !arm an 1 d i has turned J~ the pr1ce received by the grower. Th6 uld. "Particles of soot have undottbt- son, and he pitched In only 25 Innings. of $17,000, to be raced at the open- league e < a ry ~tssocta JOas an to the Selil.ttla • on!I' catcher, veteran texture Ia even and the favorable wiD edly been carried over the valley and Mana«er Sisler also hung on to Staut-liD&' il'and circuit mc:'etln1 at North club of the Pacific Const fell ue. 1eed producers of Utah, Id~o.ho, Wash- ) 25¢ and 75¢ Pk8's.Sold Evei')'Whe,. lngton and othen. g w kept out weak spots in the fiber. 1 (ell with the rain." ·Randnll the we_ek of ,July 5. ter and used hlm In but 30 lnnln~ra. • • ... Alabaatine-a powder inwhiteand tints. Packed in .S-pound packages, ready for use by mixing with cold or warm water. Full directions on every package. Apply with an ordinary wall brush. Suitable for all interior surfaces-plaste r, wall board, brick, cement,or canvas. Will not rub olf when properly applied. I C instead of Kalsomine or Wall Paper I • • I • • • I • 1 • "· ••• • I I I ! • I • • .. • I 5 • • • I ~~~d!::s ~ac~:~d b~-e~:~v~~P!~~~en~~~ ELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION ... |