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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE, UTAH Lifting of Sports 1 orJ 1 DVv 1 A Do You Know? Champ in Round Meet ce mr 'or!i 're. 'Ifm to kei tOBF.KT ADVENTURERS' CLUB McSBANE rstra Newspaper I g, 11 1 f I 'V ' J r ft r' Ital i S3 am ii HELLO, fj .rikinr distance, leavinc ed unity and his opponent as ef him as the ring ropes 4 Lk ind y allow. L ntroit bout is scheduled to licbf Grounds. Jimmy Johnston. Pas- canny manager, insisted on it L 9 awns best known to himself. k. indicates that he insistence lertj mother footrace, and wants Lch time as possible in which lhter will have a chance to joe down and tire him out. U fifihters have tried to keep v Joe's ranee, but have been Early unsuccessful. The brown from down Alabama way has and tagged each one of Joe is popularly supposed to picked up a few pointers from taken I Armstrong. Pointers which help him overtake the fleetest Alibi itors Pastor has an alibi for shambles. Or at least the lie Johnston has one for him. time of the fight Pastor was or less a stooge because of the fry that existed between John- ind Mike Jacobs, both of whom seeking to control boxing in course, 1937 gFs" lf HAT will It cost to send your son or daughter to college? Last year 600 University of Minnesota students were asked to keep budget books by the Northwestern National Life insurant Th.i. togs may help If you add or deduct for climate, sire of college and sise of city. Outside tuition (which ran $11.07 per month for women, and $12.33 for men) average monthly costs were $59.70 for women and $56.54 for men. r coeds snent sXO.60 month- mn $84.90. Students living at home spent about half that much. Conclusion: n students spend $18 to $21 a month more than students living at home. tn rr Out-of-to- York. Jacobs' future plans le built around Louis, and John- knew that if Louis looked bad W light it would be a direct blow Jacobs. The I worked out plan, if such there in pretty fair fash es muffed every opportunity to Pastor and knock him out.The demonstrated that he didn't how to carry the attack to an Imont. Though Pastor was a hingstock, Louis dropped a few 's in the public's estimation. ii The machinery was still running, but John thought be could keep out of the way of those spinning wheels and pulleys. Besides, waxing a belt is a lot easier when the motor is turning it for you. John reached J - i. i it n Out-of-to- of $78.67 and $67.58. exclusive of tuition. A substantial saving. He was dated bewildered gasping when suddenly his clothes started to rip. Joe Is Vindicated were made recently O EADLINES when Tris was At University of North Dakota, this student built his own home near the campus. At Minnesota, men spend $11 per month for room; women, $15.47. Meals cost men $25.80 a month; women, $25.90. Average beauty and barber shop costs per month: $2.34 for women; 98 cents for men wheth er fraternity or out-of-to- out-of-to- y. At North Carolina State college many women make their own clothes. Minnesota sorority coeds spend $19.59 per month for clothes; $13.13. Fraternity $7.25. One men: $12; coed in three uses tobacco and the average cost is $1.58 per month compared to $2.41 per month for men (also one out of three). p- F k. tiV: j i "" Ai ' .i;'" : J, 6331 Here's your chance to own beautiful linens without any trouble at all I Cutwork' s easy to do, you know it's just buttonhole stitch (there's just a touch of other stitchery). Such a variety of floral motifs too. Get busy on a tea " cloth, scarf or towel. These designs are stunning on natural linen or soft pastel shades with stitchery in white or the matching color. n Pattern 6331 contains a transfer-patterof 16 motifs ranging from ZYt by 3V4 inches to 4 Mi by 15 inches; materials needed; color schemes. To obtain this pattern, send 15 cents in coins to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept., 259 W. 14th St.. New York, N. Y. the top of the ladder and went to work. But he had hardly started when he lost his balance. And the ladder went sliding out from under him! Instinctively, John threw his body to one side and he landed right up against the whirling shaft. The ladder went tumbling to the floor, but John didn't follow. In the few seconds while he was jammed up against that shaft It bad caught his clothing-be- gan twisting it around and around! In two turns the shaft had taken up all the slack in those duds of John's. Then it began putting on the pressure. John felt his body being squeezed until he thought his ribs would break. His chest was flattened He was hammered and pounded against until he couldn't breathe. the ceiling until he was bruised and covered with blood. And still that shaft twisted, and still it tightened the clothing around his body. There was no one in the room at the time, and John couldn't get enough breath in his lungs to call for help. For a minute he thought he was going to die there, alone, 15 feet from the floor and dangling in mid air. He was dazed bewildered gasping when suddenly his clothes started to rip. Again the shaft began turning, taking up the slack. It tore every stitch of clothing from his back and arm, and didn't stop until it reached his wrist. There the machinery began twisting the end of his sleeve twisting it so tightly that John thought sure it was going to take his hand oft. His chest was free now of that terrible tension. He could breathe he could even have called for help. But by that time John was too far gone to cry out. He hung dangling from the shaft, the blood streaming down his body conscious enough to know what was happening to him, but not conscious enough to do anything about it. It was a thought that finally saved the day. All of a sudden John thought of his wife and child. What would they say when they learned what bad happened to him. How would they get along when John couldn't bring home the weekly pay envelope any more? "That thought roused me," John says. "And then I must have let out a scream. I don't remember crying out, but my brother, who also worked at the factory, and who was to the next room, heard a yell and came running In to see wnai was the matter." Such beauty and personality as a strange girl applying for a job in a small town store possessed I The boss could not resist. Even though she was entirely without experience he believed that she would be a good business getter. Carefully, he instructed her, and as he showed her how to operate her cash register, he added: "Remember now to ring up the result of every sale." He watched her for a while and was astonished to see her go so often to the cash register. He noted that she went there once for even prospective customers. He found that she was ringing up, time after time, "No Sale." Common Sense About Constipation A doctor would tell you that the best thing to do with constipation Is get at its cause. That way you don't have to endure it first and can try to cure it afterward-y- ou avoid having It. Chances are you won't have to look far for the cause if you eat the foods most super-refine- d people do. Most likely you dont get enough "bulk"! And "bulk" doesn't mean a lot of food. It means a kind of food that isn't consumed In the body, but leaves a soft "bulky" mass in the intestines. If this is what you lack, try crisp crunchy Kellogg's for breakfast. It contains just the "bulk" you need. Eat every day, drink plenty of water, and "Join the Regulars." Made by Kellogg's in Battle Creek. Sold by every grocer. All-Br- All-Br- After Last Scream, John Loses Consciousness. h. ls Fattera Beauty Aimed to Give Comprehensive Report Here is Sigma Chi horseplay at University or California. At Minnesota, fraternity and sorority members spend $100.03 and $97.10 students who per month, respectively, exclusive of tuition. don't belong to fraternities and sororities, respectively, spend an average ... Speaker quoted as saying he could name 15 better outfielders than the New York Yankees' Joe DiMaggio. o, there is the chance of a re- Peace was partially restored strategy. In view of the pre-- s fight, and taking the 20 rounds throughout the nation when the old consideration as merely a bluff. "gray eagle" denied bston might send Pastor out the statement It ling at the sound of the opening wasn't so, said Tris. In that case the spectators In fact, he wasn't sure he could name pd be sure of getting home early, even one better garps will merely refuse to co-ocam- le with the Johnston-Pasto- r dener. "I've always considered DiMagone of the greatgio Tun-sang wasn't long ago that Gene est, and this year Bob's praises. Albeit with he's shown the hitThe former champion ting power everyone Pastor credit for being able to expected from him Ik, and called him the only one Joe tne first two." DiMaggio even with today's heavyweights President Ed Baroutside chance of beating Louis. row of the Yankees, when told of the supposed remark, said: ks a Punch "That's a foolish statement for r exverts blow hot and cold old Spoke to make. I've been watch'he vounr New York battler ing them come and go longer than illy cold. He Is fast, shifty and he has, and as a matter of fact, he wise. But he hasn't a danger-puncAnd to step into the can name just one better fielding outfielder than DiMaggio is today. against Louis minus a lethal That was Speaker, himself." lop is tantamount to roping a But Tris recovered promptly, saybull with a daisy chain. ing he thought Joe the best of today's Manager Jimmy was as happy as outfielders, even though he hasn't mpiomat with a new umbrella had much chance to see the National ;n his man went the route with in action. is. That's one reason whv thp leaguers Tris made the remark. Perhaps fight is likely to Dursue the lines. Bob hasn't the mineh. Chances are he made some such statement during an unguarded mof power to trade with thi ehnmn N ment, exaggerating it for the sake of back-pedaunless he away n ooe tie setems doomed to end up argument. me canvas Sn an Speaker's chief complaint was early round. supposed to have been that DiMagPromoter Jarnha cam k. ot. gio doesn't play in close enough. il draw $800,000 at the gate, and With a couple of men like Frankie r'y in Annul rliimiui - 1UV6 i .. wv Crosetti and Joe Gordon in front of dcrs for more than 1,000 seats at him, Joe might well take things easy 7.50 per copy. Professor Jacobs with a comfortable seat in the nndoubtedly ptlrnUtlCt bleachers. w U hav office! ood Irolt is one of the best bo, sport toww the nation, end the event will THE ANSWERS neavuy irom Chicago, St. LoU. 1 Lou Nova. Milwaukee, Cleveland and r;c cities of the surrounding area. t Southern California 7, Duke 3. the loser's end of the purse pen 3 Johnny Vander Meer. oe Dig money, and that U r. 4 Don Budge and Gene Mako. lunate for Bicycle Bob. It 5 may Second Dempsey-Tunne- y His last chance to cut into the fight in 1927. ') swag. Cutwork That Turns Linens to Treasures factory. The factory is in East Northport John's home town and I'm willing to admit they've turned out some pretty good pickles there. But if they keep on making pickles until pickles stop having warts, they'll never turn out a tougher one than the pickle John got in, just from trying to keep the machinery going and the pickles moving out in a steady, uninterrupted acidulous stream. John is a machinist at that East Northport pickle foundry, and it was on January 18, 1935, that he ran into Old Lady Adventure. The machinery in the factory is run by a big Ladder Slides Out From Under Him When He Reaches Top. d BOB PASTOR or roar akote of IS trial withoa HluiMou M soul Hapnaw sea 50-fo- ot six-ma- n I EVERYBODY: shaft suspended just below the ceiling. Belts running from this shaft furnish the power, to the various machines, and on this day one of the belts had broken. John was ordered to replace that broken belt, and he went to work at It. The machinery, of course, was stopped while he was doing the Job. When he bad finished he turned the power ou again to see bow it worked. WeU, It wasn't working so well, at that. The new belt was slipping. Now one way to atop a belt from slipping is to wax it. So John got a can of wax and started up the ladder toward the shaft. But this time he neglected to shut off the power. Sport Shorts 'TPHE highest number of stolen bases in any world series was 18 in 1907 . . . Mickey Cochrane, considered by many the greatest catcher of all time, was fired for losing his first game by poor catching . . . Max Schmeling is no longer so enthusiastic about his comeback. He must defeat Galento, Pastor and Nova before he gets another chance at Champion Joe Louis . . . Last fall, more than 2,000 high schools, too small to footsupport ball teams, played football . . . Max "I will not permit 30 men to travel 400 Schmeling miles merely to agitate a bag of wind," said President White of Cornell university in 1873, when the University of Michigan challenged Cornell to a football game to be p'ayed at Cleveland with 30 men on a side . . . The three men who have driven cars faster than 300 miles per hour are British subjects. They are Sir Malcolm Campbell, Capt. George Eyston and John Cobb . . . The oldest sports contest at the present time is the Cambridge-Oxforboat race. Starting in 1829, the two British universities have met 90 times . . . National hockey league owners would like to add St. Louis to their circuit If the 1939 Notre Dame football team maintains the cycle established 30 years ago, Elmer Layden will have an undefeated team this fall. Notre Dame was unbeaten in 1S2Q, 1919 and 1929. VJ5 sir, here's a yarn that's going to sound a sour note in our adventure saga. When I read it I thought of that old song, "Down by the Winegar Woiks," and I'd be willing to bet that place was right next door to the one where John Mains, of Long Island, had his life's big adventure. You see, the concern John works for is one of those outfits that catch juvenile cucumbers before they get a chance tf grow up, soak them in vinegar and send them out into the world to decorate ham and cheese sandwiches. John has a job in a pickle your knowledge of t ports. Allow 20 points for each correct on answer. A wis nt fJ i,.;- -. good; and 100, excellent. 1 This California fighter, a disciple of Yoga, ancient science of exercises, will meet Tony Galen-t- o in a heavyweight bout in Philadelphia September 7. Who is he? Z What was the score of the 1939 Rose Bowl football game? 3 The National league record for pitching consecutive hitless Innings Is 21. Who holds it? 4 What American tennis doubles team ranked No. 1 last season? 5 What heavyweight championship fight drew gate receipts of more than $2,000,000? Ansuert at bottom of column. PHOTOGRAPHY nOUS DEVELOPED . S Mtau. allk m "Adventure in a Pickle Factory 20. is going ta ret one with the Brown Bomb- sktret opportunity came on L-19S7, in New York, when n, .. --i aw j sal uic uccumois tm which Pastor's sole strate- C retreat. It was Csmt spectacle, to say the tab managed to keep weU toil .. is Bob ed. Or HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELFI Union.) itfcftnt breathing tpell in reight circlet will end any W' l ..V.ti..it k thundering out their bal- the Pastor-Lou- ii heavy' .tmpionsnip ngm in ueiroii it OUESTION-OF-HOUR- How Much Does College Cost?) 'fen o -- John's brother didn't come a minute too soon, either. For after that last thought and that last scream he had lost consciousness. His brother ran and shut off the power and then ran back and picked up the fallen ladder. He climbed to the top. cut John loose with a pocket knife, WNU W 3339 and carried him down that ladder on his back. John's brother rounded up a couple of other fellows In the factory Purity and Truth and they took John to a doctor. John was there quite a while before is the feminine, truth the he Purity had what heard doctor happened just the When to he came again. of honor. Hare. masculine, his to live experience. through simply couldn't see how John had managed And that's a thing John doesn't quite understand either. "I doctor Today's popularity thought that I'd at least lose my arm," he says, "but the of Doan't Pilii. after fixed it up and now it's in good shape again. When it was all over years of worldmany I thought I was the luckiest man on earth. And I STILL think so." wide uac, surely must East at be in out ai eTldenca accepted that Northport. factory They're still making pickles oie. of satisfactory I And favorable But it will be many a long day before they produce another one like publla will. I it At opinion that into. least. Rapport one hope John got that of tbe able physicians (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) who teat tbe value of f Doan's under exacting: and Carrol Lowe, father and son, share books at Illinois' McKendree college. Minnesota coeds spend $5.06 per month for books; men, $5.38. Men spend $6.85 for amusements end women, $1.14, proving the man still pays despite all this talk about Dutch treats. Dental and medical: $1.97 per month for women; $2.16 for men; low, thanks to student health service. Cecil British Guiana British Guiana has a total area larger than England, Scotland and Wales together. Yet the population is little more than 300,000, or about two people to a square mile, except in the cities. Georgetown, the capiof the ental, accounts for tire colony's inhabitants. Sugar, raised in a narrow coastal strip diked against the sea by Seventeenth century Dutch settlers, is the chief product of British Guiana. But the inland reach, penetratAmering 500 miles into the South forand mineral has ican continent, est wealth practically untapped because of the difficulty of transportation. More than 2,000.000 ounces of gold and 2,000,000 carats of diamonds one-fift- to W'j V y IP M Mines Yield Gold and Diamonds h have been brought out of British Guiana's iunele hinterland. Ex ports of bauxite ore for aluminum now rival the value of sugar exports. But almost nothing has been done with reported deposits of manganese ore, oil and mica, because the rivers the only lines of communication into the mountains of the interior are interrupted by a sudden wall-likedge of the interior plateau, over which plunge some of the highest and most spectacular waterfalls in the world, which man has as yet had occasion to see. There are only 79 miles of railroads in a region larger than Kansas. The whole colony's complex river system offers a mere 450 miles of navigable waterway. e laboratory conditions. These physicians, too, approve every word of advertising you read, tbe objective of which is only to recommend Doan's Pills as a good diuretio treatment for functional kidney disorder and for relief of tbe pain and worry it causes. If more people were aware of how the kidneys must constantly remove waste that cannot stay in tbe blood without injury to health, there would be better understanding of why tbe whole body suffers when kidneys lag, and diuretic medication would be more often employed. Burning, scanty or too frequent urina- tion may be warning-- of disturbed kidney function. You may suffer nagging backache, persistent headache, attnrks of getting up nights, swelling, pursues under tbe eyes feci weak, nervous. ss, 11 played out. Use Doan's PSls. It Is better to rely on acmedicine that has won claim than on something less favorably known. Ask your neighbor! world-wid- e |