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Show THE HELPER TIMES. HELPER. UTAH : News Notes : t It' a Privilege to Livm in "W m ? m Utah A By EDNA PURDY WALSH XV' m Il SMALL reading lamp has great possibilities In Its light rays, as a reliever of pain. The rays of liht seem us powerless to cure pain as the air to carry the radio message until one has actualy tried them, as they are now being resorted to In hospitals. In sanltnriuins, and in the tuberculosis camps for the cure of disease. While large wattage lamps are necessary for deep therapy, to produce general bodily reaction, a small nitrogen reading lamp will relieve the local rheumatic pain, or the twinge of neu- - wVjV'.,sK " X A u. $201,-601,08- 4. MemberB of the governor's headed by Henry H. Blood, under consideration particiUtah in the Nevada transcontinental highways exposition, will meet with W, S. Lunsford, president of and representative the exposition, Utah manufacturers Monday at a luncheon at the chamber of commerce. Ogden committee, which has pation by i x I v t f " ! y I I '' " , ' Roberts' Record Is Quite Unique One He's knocked out two fellows who have knocked out a pair ol currently reigning champions but he's never received a shot at : a champion, himself. 2 That's Eddie Eoberts, And here's the story. On June 23, 5 1025, Morrie Sehlaiffer kayoed Pete Latzo, now the welter king. ' On September 28, 1926, lloberts flattened Sehlaiffer. On June 24, 192C, Joe Dundee scored a technical knockout over Micky Walker, present middle- weight champ, from whom Pete Latzo had Just won the welter title. And on December 3, 1920, Roberts kayoed Dundee In one J round. Itoberts, Incidentally, never has been knocked out ' j rltis, especially if tiie rays be brought down within ten or twelve Inches of the area, and a cloth covers the lamp to concentrate the rays on the aching spot The earache, toothache, the pain In the foot or. hand, knee Joint, elbow or shoulder can be successfully treated at home in this manner. Many mas seurs and physicians order light rnys for twenty pilnutes, alternated with a dasli of ice, which keeps un a con stant stimulation of the blood in the painful area, and it is by this curative action of the blood that the pnln, abscess, or Inflammation Is removed. Many Uses for Old Phono- graph Needles needles of the sing songs of style other varieties when they have finished their tasks on the phonographs. There is no tack made which is so soft and so practical for use In framing pictures as is the phonograph needle. It has no rough edges or top to Injure the back of the picture or mat, and Its smooth, sharp point is easily pushed with the screw driver Into the wood frame to hold the picture in place. Needles placed In a fancy glass or china bowl take the place of the shot Ogden Weber county, western Wyoming, eastern Nevada and northern Utah generally shivered when the temperature took a drop well below Saturday's minimum of 42 degrees. Rain fell intermittently during the day. The precipitation locally for Saturday and Sunday wa3 only .15 of an Inch, accord' ing to Arie Van de Graaf, weather observer. OLD Shearing of the Utah is practically completed. Indications at this time are that the production for the state will exceed last year'B by between 200,000 and 300,000 pounds, bringing the total Mt. Pleasant 1927 vool clip phonograph will and 21,000,000 between 20,000,000 pounds. Exact figures on the year's clip will not be known until the regional livestock statistician with the department of agriculture, G. A. Scott, makes his survey in June, but Mr. Scott believes now that last year's production total will be exceeded. , , i ' V - i 6 jolnts heretofore. GAMBLE I (). 1(27, WMtera Newipaper Cnloa.) Invented Pendulum Guygens, a Dutchimin, born In 02t), was the first practical exponent of the pendulum, employing It In the mechanism of the clock. However, he was not the original discoverer of Its properties. Leonardo da Vinci (1 left notes as to his study of the pendulum nud Galileo continued these studies. l.'i2-15i:- (1564-KV42- ) Excellent Simile The simile "naked ns a needle" ft tnkpn from the writings of Willlan LnngUind. In Its original form thn word "needle" is spelled "ncdlc." Our authority Is the collection of simile edited by l'uul Wllslnch. There are few HrticlM so devoid of adornment as a needle. It scmlngly affords an excellent opportunity to colli a Kunlle. The Obvious People who live in giast Ii03s should do one filing. They should t!r;iv the blind. Toronto Stur. uursa,' onon ijT nere omen :&t Mrs. art .fftSfii Elizabeth Pt..j., works in the UnlonaU facto;41',? ovprslla writen that ok. Te!iilts" w -- t. ai,i frn-.- i .wu P l ham's Vegetable Compound Chamberlain lives at 600 MtJ St., Trenton, N. J. fi She tho Vegetable Compound to herf-tbe factory and will gladly any letters she gets from women about It. In ' If Lvdla. B. PinVTiam'. Compound has helped other tt,3 fcvuui u ivi iici uu; Takes Out w aliilain instantli t or But the btlng ma ft kno ha'e. one may 8 'JIM St it lend pain bayonet hand-to-i- ouiet eith' ' that for will Is s I Li Stripes, one i o Schwartz been h w by ,e sell day out V on ioim'iity 'Zino-pad- s onthe been S io mScholl's Put one durin; have bi s Dr. Scholl's stop all quicker than any other known method . Takes but a minute to the worst corn. Healing starts it once. When the corn is gone it never ZIno-pad- Mil) me that trade may cause-press- ing S matte tat Zino-pa- 4 tl worn e comes back. If new shoes make tie spot "touchy" again, a rtops it instantly. That's beeus Zino-pad- s remove the and rubbing of shoes. are meDr. Schcll's Zino-pad- s dicated, entiscptic, protective. At tl druggist's and shoe dea!er's-3- 5c tin pain 1 is gont! l.roudi'S "The self-mad- V L0TCHY V SKIM ive y dccJ not tnacy joa. Pimpla Uii bad, etc are quickly dupclM bf I t. ye;: bach ib Nover, white etery r Idier t time t right-hande- :'.!ry ha :i;ly be: it havi :!. A i Manager Connie Mack. baseball expert, particularly if it was female hose he handled," continued the scout "In that connection, I always will remember the name of Joe Hart A's and Giants Knowing I was the scout of his Prices quoted by New York betting favorite club, the Yankees, he sent me commissioners against the chances of three letters about pluyers he had seen 10 major league teams make the in action In the sticks. The letters Giants and Athletics favorites to win were written on the stationery of a their respective 1927 pennaut races. ladles' hosiery house." Odds were offered at 2 to 1 against each club. The chances of the Tankees in the American league, winners In 1920, were fixed at 3 to 1, while the St. Louis Cardinals, world's champions, were ruted 5 to 1, Ahead of the Breadon There are seven pairs of brothers entry were rated the Pittsburgh Pi- engaged In various sports at Anrates at 4 to 1. napolis Naval academy. Odds against other clubs were quoted as follows: A total of $853,300.78 was collected American league Washington. S1, at the gate for sports at Yale In 192C. to 1 ; Detroit ; Cleveland, 1 ; ChiExpenses amounted to $070,291.03. St. Louis, ; cago, 20-1- ; Boston. 50-1- . Northwestern university has schedNational league Cincinnati, uled football games with Dartmouth ; ; Chicago, Brooklyn' for 1927 and 192S and is attempting Boston, 30-: Phillies, 50-1- . to arrange a similar series with Harvard. pr ;'esmen. m bis t For Indlgestloii, Dyspepsli, tt Relieves Distress after Hurried Meals or Overeating. Being gentle laxative, It keeps th tract working normally. 30c & 90c. At all Druggists, G. G. GREEN, Inc. W00D3URY.H-- 'ut all eo-- 'p ; ofTerc eriean: of ib i :ton c( which J turn f It r. well-know- n battery. which holds the quill pen on the desk. Both wooden and metal needles may be used for this purpose. To clean a milk bottle In which the milk has soured and caked on the sides, a handful of steel phonograph needles, shaken up and down In the bottle, will do the work in a few seconds, scraping and cleaning It off. Warm water with a little soap added to the needles, of course, Is necessary. A spark plug held at the top of a test tube In which there Is some gasoline and a handful of phonograph needles will be quickly loosened of It stubborn carbon after a few shakings. The interest that men prominent In other business take In ball players whofn they believe have big league ability is keen. Connie Mack Is authority for the statement that he has had players recommended to him by men In every walk of life. Incidentally, Connie has never failed to answer one of these letters to express thanks for the Interest. "Digging up ball players Is the biggest gamble in the world," remarked a major league scout recently. "Everybody is offering you tips and they come from all sections of the country. A scout would need an airplane to cover his territory If he tried to look over oil the players recommended. A majority of the letters simply go Into the waste basket and get no further consideration. "As a rule, the scouts follow more closely tips that come from men who have a baseball background. Perhaps this Is a mistake. "One wouldn't think a fellow selling silk hosiery would qualify as a nLVEBALL Miller Huggins, who believes In the fitness of things, was never, quite satisfied until he got a Shocker for his OgdenDuring the cruise for bark d Fin-nega- signature. d rail-roe.- Finne-gaAbove is pictured Honey-boclaimant of the featherweight championship vacated by Johnny Dundee and later by Lou Kid Kaplan. Without a king the division has gone Mary K. Broome Thinks n to seed, and it seems likely that Teachers Made Suzanne will be signed to meet his fellow beaneater, "Red" Chapman, In a Mary K. Browne, discussing the sucbout which will be recognized as a cess of France in tenuis in the last championship fight Both boys are few years, says It Is due chiefly to anxious for the scrap which may be able instructors. arranged for display at Madison Suzanne Lenglen, greatest of womSquare garden in a short time. en players, was taught by her father, a tennis pro. On this side we lack professional tennis tutors. There are few In the United States. William Tatem Tilden, greatest of players, never had a lesShortstop Jos. Euskcy Is again with son; he was ferced to teach himself. the Augusta team of the Sally league. Most of our other tennis leaders e were except a few of those The New York Yankees have re- who came up in recent years and who leased Ellas Funk, recruit outfielder, were taught by Tilden. Of these Vinto St. Paul under option. cent Bichards is the leader. Now that Richards, Klnsey and othTen years ago, In 1917, the Chicago ers have turned professional, they will Sox won the world's championship by probably accept positions as tutors. York New the Giants. defeating Every golf club has a professional ; the tennis clubs could probably afford Denver has purchased Arthur E. to have them, too. d Seydler, pitcher, from Considering the thousands that are the Toledo club of the American asup tennis, a professional would taking sociation. not have a hard time of it as far as the financial end Is concerned. Tommy Lovelace, outfielder, has been returned to the Corsicana team of the Lone Star league, by the Oak- Betting Commissioners land club. Favor Souvenir hunters cost the New York Yankees over 5,000 balls last season, most of them bearing Babe Ruth's Vernal Twenty-fou- r forest officers were on the job and a total of 265 trees, scattered over a trifle lets than a township of land, were found and treated In the recent campaign against the bark beetle In the Ashley national forest of northeastern Utah. In the drive, approximately 15,000 acres of yellow pine timber susceptible to the destrictiveness of the pest, was examined. All beetle-infestetrees were ut, peeled of the bark, and In many instances burned as a protective measure. gn 8cl0LLSi str I T iatoVs. Plenty of Tips, but Real Players Hard to Find. I r f '' Mix-U- p Featherweight i Myton Sheep shearing at the plant the Antelope association under the direction of C. Christensen, Spring-vill- e contractor, has been concluded. head were 60,000 Approximately sheared. Emplyoment has been given to sixty persons and twelve trucks have been kept busy hauling the wool to Price. Coleman brothers, Smith brothers, Jeff Thomas and several other sheepmen have an interest in the association. Cedar City Indications point to an ample supply of water to take care of all crops cultivated this year on lands coming under the Carbon canal, which was recently reparied with funds advanced by the state land board, It was announced bv John T. Oldroyd. execu tive secretary of the land board, who has just returned from making an inspection of the canal. Salt Lake Borne 313,692 head of cattle, valued at more than $8,000,000, appeared on the 1926 assessment rolls of the state of Utah. Of that number 221,888 were on the ranges. women. not v. IS BIG Photograph shows Osmond, one of the big field of thoroughbreds being conditioned for the Kentucky derby which Is to be run late in May. Ml " I y tor took- nn - IVORY HUNTING 1 of Eureka Wednesday was "good roads" day in the cleanup week. Many men of the district put Jn the day working on the road between Eureka and Dividend. "Good roads" dny has becomn an annual event sponsored by the local Klwanis clab. Provo The Salt Laks ft. Utah announced Thursday that Its limited pasHenger trains Nos. 3. 6. 9 and 10, will stop ut Hibbard, Harris. Snow, Spencer, Curtis and Lakevinw. According to A. J. Anderson, trnfflc manager, trains liava not stopped at these touiuuu3 Wtfl 1920. ; TT Statistics for Myton Uintah basin's new recreational pleasure resort ha? been namct? Victory park. The slogan adopted Is, "Uintah Basin's Playground." It is four miles east of Roosevelt in Ward It Hollow, on the Victory highway. was completed under the supervision of Hr. M. C. Campbell of Roosevelt. tn lis 1 Because Lvrj! Vegetable Keeps Them : this year show 5S40 acres of tomatoes, aganist 2G30 acres last year, and 6860 acres in 1925. The 1925 crop is remembered as that which brought a serious overproduction to the state. Last year's acreage was materially reduced, In an effort to adjust for the carry-ove- r from the previous season. Rrigham City Two hundred and forty thousand rainbow trout fry hsva been planted in the new state Ash nursery at Mantua by Deputy Gams Commissioner James S. Hull. MOWDOBf V&i Provo Continued favorable growing conditions and Utah farmers will harvest this year a record crop of tomatoes for canning, it is indicated in a report by Frank Andrews, state beetle Infested trees on the Ashley beetle Infested trees on the Ashley forest several deniaons of the forest were aroused from their lairs one mountain lion, three bears and several small bunches of deer, says a report by the district forrester. All wild animals seen appeared to have winter- ed excellently. Sneaking of Ruth's slugging power, the question arises, as It does each year, regarding tne possible number of that the Sultan of Swat will pro duce this season. If Kuth stavs In condition he has a good chance of beating his own record of 59. He should produce at least 50. Ruth hit 4(3 in 1924, but dropped to 35 In 1925. However, In that year, he spent much of his time in a hospital. He came back last vear with 47 and he was not in the best of shape all season. As far as opposition is con cerned. Ruth should not eneoun- ter much tougher pitching this season than he swung against in OCKXCKK00 r-- M WOMEN four-bagge- Relieving Pain With a Reading Lamp Heber Work commenced day on the new addition to the Was atch High School. When completed the addition wil! provide for new band and shop rooms, chemical laboratory, gymnasium and' several new clasa-romThe building Is to be completed In time for school work next fall. Salt Lake Aggregate value of real estate and mining claims for taxation purposes in 1926 was placed at Of that amount J74.733.879 was improved farm lands and 35,380, 774 town and city lots. ooooooooo 0 Will Ruth Beat His Record This Year? ,:7 1 i Wednes- statistician. Candidate for Derby Honors TRY THIS Y 0voo0-!00-- baseball The longest major-leagu- e gme was the battle between Joe (Mfschger, Boston Nationals, and Leon Cndore of Brooklyn. Nashville of the Southern league has released Ed Cotter, former Vila Nova college player, to the Albany club of the Southeastern league. 5-- 1 4,wn Old Fashioned -- Vlrct rsfrl T.fiirr makes me sb. Second Me, too. She tries to to be feminine. mjste: nsani the a obs wor new 8-- grati iiers ai 10-1- er bei 20-1- linsrtc 1 g Coach Fred Spuhn clause In major league contracts forbidding players to wnger on ball games and horse races has resulted from the latest edition of baseball scandals. Bert Foreman, golf professional at the TImququona Country club In Florida, is a "dead ringer" for Walter Hngen and Is oft?n mistaken for the great "Halg." A ' & Before being with the Chicago White Sox, Harry McCurdy was a member of the St. Louis .Cardinals, Syracuse Stars and Houston (Texas) league team. ' , Ja s , j , k . , i ifV ; n ' ' ,V , , s - , . :. , ' ' ' - , ,i ' ' ... ; ' , " ' "Wei Willie'' Klnime, Inst of the great negro Jockeys of the American turf, wns the first tn Introduce the crouching style of riding on English tracks, where lit was clubbed "the monkey on the stick." 'i . , " . - " 1'uut.ij.riipii snows t'onon Spuhn coacl.li.g the dirferent Uulver-sltof Pcn'if-yhuntcrews us (hey go through outdoor practice. Spuhn Is tu the t'(i:uliit)g bout. y a of the Itancocnt race the famous at the Itancocan N. J., rings oul Professional and amateur Ice hockey officials In Canada and the United Stntes have decided to get together with n view toward adopting n plinl-Jn- r set of rules to govern both brandies of the sport i V ' i 4 j vj Whenever a horse stable wins a stake victory bell, situated farm, near Jobstown, In silvery tones. h S "V J 'r ; ' Bnsebnll has been dropped this season by the University of Gonsgc, In Washington, hi onlt r to give the grKS.t a chance to grow In the unhensity's new ptadluui. The Chicago White Sox have turned Third Baseman Jimmy Buttle ovr to tho Little Bock dub of the Southern league. Battle was rmrrhnsed by the IJor from the Paris chili of tlio East Ttxns league, In.st full. V of y 5-- Joe Boley, shortstop, who Is now the property of the Phils- flplphla Atiiiriis, nas uecmeu to enter the bakery business In Baltimore us an vocation. "o .M.nal tion a 30-1- Bill Mullen, infielder, who Is with the St Louis Browns this season, has minor played on three pennunt-wlunlnleague teams Mobile, Fort Worth and Toronto. tie 1 The game of badminton, which Is popular with tennis players during tli winter Indnor senron. was first played In western India In 1873, a year the modern game ()f teiml vur evolved by Major Wlnfleld i; h "t the 1 Win The of n bate Bus Driver t "ial The service Dependable that's whatcountswhen tor you are responsible carrying passenger And we make sure of dependable service day In and day out by l stalling Champions. d w Was f!h-- i arble i t ii r fi ro mall 'ir to rrr- " -i cud cuuilyti tlctn tb( gr f:.e!r Ci! W 75 Champion TO 1X1X3, OHIO il'uv i;, 'be (,, h., M |