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Show - - : rr-- " T m IT'S BASKETBALL NOW his opponents a free throw for goal. Goals are the "only way in which points can be counted. The length of the A NEW WINTER SPORr FOR IN- - game is decided by the captains of both teams. Usually two thirty min DOOR PLAYEPS. ute halves are played, but this can bechanced at the discretion of the capSomething About th Simple Tlay Wblch tains. The side scoring" the greatest Is Affording: Gymnasium Frequenters ti n m VaT rf nninfs in the halVeS IS fle- w nnir. If no "DOint nas Throughout the Coon try with Exercise nl tv A "befin snored bv either side the contest Recreation. 4 I i : NDOOR ' A . 3$ A 4 is declared a draw. In playing each player is supposed to cover the opposing man, and it is to his inlerest to keep him as well under cover as possible. The guards will try and stand between the eroal thrower and their own goaL If the interference is good the game will, bblose and exciting. HANDLES THE BOW.' FOOT ball, or, to term it basketproperly, is the thing" ball, live- The now. just ly sport promises to become popular this winter. Ball starts from circle in center. Large cir ' cles Clever Young EngrlUh. Girl Who at each end Musical Reputation. ing I Mak represent the goals Miss Ethel Barns, a very pretty or baskets. Small circles are players young artiste who. was born in London on the team and crosses the opposing1 in 1871, commenced at an early age to -- . players. To James Naismith of the Interna tional Young Men's Christian associa tion training- - school at bpringneld is due all credit for arranging1 a game which is y furnishingCsnch a vast fund of amusement and physical benefit to thousands of young and old men all over the country. .., rrixawi daily were the night was org andiWore control, he ot intoa quarrel within America WbaXtone. who sangcame THE AMERICAN PRIMA DONNA'S 1the ast slasonfad the two men EUROPEAN SUCCESS. within an ace of fighting- a duel. The friendship .between Miss Sander-a to America After Winning: Returning son and Massenet was restored after Applausef in the Operatic Centers 'of while and the lovely American made her Continental Europe Never Iost Her debut at the opera in "Thais," another 4 Head by 3Blattery. opera her maestro had written for her. The opera was not particularly suc- OF SIBYL SANDERSON. - Saddlery Harness and" WIll v V n WW XJUJUXjCXXVX T- - team of basketball players is made up of ,even men.'' They line up with a center, three forwards and three backs. These are called by names similar to football players. The forwards are called goalsor throwers, and are designatedjis right, left and center goals. Th?- - men should be light and agile, good passers and able to throw the ball with accuis racy to the goal, as the basket athmust a be general called. Center lete, and able to play all over the floor. MISS ETHEL BARN'S. , The right, left and center guard should the and even and and of violin, the men team, heaviest piano be the study on the concert it is their duty to guard their goal made her appearance 8 of at Kplatjform team, from the attack of the opposing age. When she years 13 ol she played the the the attained, into far age territory keeping the ball . before lriolm if Joachim, and afterward of the other side, possible the Royal Academy of Music , The game is played with a tf. iallv,nered onVfand studied under Sainton and Sauret. Eusrby or association football, of end the Miss Barns has received eight medals, at either baskets, hung hall, must be large enough to allow two certificates, the Potter exhibition the ball to pass through without ob- prize and the Hine gift for composition. struction. There is no bottom to $e She was also appointed subprofessor at fcasket, and it is hung about eight if eet the above institute in 1892. After above the floor. The accompanying finishing her musical education at the she gave, in conjunction with diagram will give a good idea of how academy Miss Mathilde Verne, the line the men up. three a should be team recitals, which gained pianist, The captain of the for notice of the the of her favorable good goal thrower, as he has plenty London critics. She has also in principal opportunity to leave his position to written several excellent were he If an compositions opponent. covering be a guard he has not' the chance to which have been published, and has move about. The captain has com- assuredly a bright professional career plete and absolute control of the men before her. asMiss Barns has also made a pianist, though it is under him, and his judgment should her mark never be questioned. Usually the most believed that the violin will always expert man on the team is chosen for prove her' favorite instrument. this place. The rules of the game are HE LOVED THE HORSES. A simple and easily understood. Bowie was a Typical American referee, who can be selected by agreeSportsman. ment, is master of the floor, and his The late Bowie's connection decisions are unquestionable. Fouls with theturf was always that of a true are the greatest and most important sportsman. He went into purethings he has to look out for. A foul ly out of his love for it, andracing not with is any intfent to injure a player, run of reward, reaping pecuniary ball (for a player must Jys imgtriTV-thThe MarySujn. - f roTh the ballfthe ;Jeliver spot on land which of he was club, Jockey which h catches it), tackling, and any from the beginning to its unnecessary roughness. A player who president a was club modeled after the commits three fouls in the game is end, was heart. the only big It ruled off. Upon the sound of the club in the country which paid referee's whistle players must relini jockey no to the members, all the dividends quish the ball, and the referee will profits being turned over to the actake it, tossing it up from the spot count of the club. Many great racers where it was held. He will also toss were foaled at Fairvievv, Mr. . Bowie's it if the ball goes out of bounds. home in George's county, but To give an impression of how the none of Prince was them cherished more game is played but few words are highly by him than Crickmore and necessary. The players line up as Compensation and Catesby. Catesby shown in the diagram and the referee breathed his last several ago, years takes the ball to the center of the halL Mr. Bowie a refused $10,000 having tosses it and the centers rush for offer for him. Chickmore the pigskin, Whichever one it he about the pastures of his still canters youth. The will try to pass it t one of his goal ever victories achieved by throwers, to enable him to toss the greatest were Crickmore over those probably ball into the basket. The guards supposed invincible. The cover or block him off if possible, at Hindoo, the horse "Hindoo Maryland the same time endeavoring1 to get pos- three times once defeated m his session of the ball, to get it away from form and twice as a his goal. outran Eole and also sphere can only be passed from Pierre Lorillard's famous horse,Barrett, which hand, to hand or thrown. No kicking was from numerous fresh victories or running is allowed. Each player in just England. This was in the Dixie stakes at Pimlico in 1881. Mr. Bowie had also intended to start Crickmore in the Breckinridge stakes that year, in which ; Barrett was again entered, but Crickmorej pulled up lame, and the Kt&T A l g-oa- well-know- ;. ' AMn IMPORTER OF ...j.-Lnrn- rB D.mi ouy Uhino rJnan Hntrn Pnlf ".pw, Harness, oauuiBiy Pads, Hardware, Leather, otc. n W Headquarters for, Sheep, Cattle)cVMring PROVO, UTAH. 3 Pants to Order, $3.50 to 310,75. , Suits to Ordetj SI4.50 to S45'00l Overcoats to Order SM.00 to S35.00, j Over Three Hundred and Fifty Patterns to select from. Latest HpriBf styles now in. Domestic, English, Scotch and French Goods. FULL DRESS SUITS IN VERY LATEST CUT, E00K PLYMOUTH 172 a STATE STREET, $3000 -- he O J Ltrpj o ' GCL .r o v.. second choice, Compensa- CENTER" X o CN1R GUARD. O o flGrtT G04RD. : . can try to wrest the ball from an opponent by strengthsbut he must not or grasp .the player tackle neck or legs. He can the around in throw the ball anyway. possible, but he should" try to land it in the hands of one of his own sidb--4 possible. The longer one side can keep control of the ball the t safer is their - , 'v' goal. As soon' as one of the coal throwers gets the ball he should try to throw it into the basket or jpass it to one of his fellow goal throwers who is nearer the basket. Of course the guards will try to prevent the caging of the ball by knocking it put of the player's hand or by blocking a throw. He can use his hands any"way possible, except slug-gin-g a player. This is one of the of fouls, and the .referee will greatest rule off such a player. Putting the ball in .the basket counts three points. A foul by any man gives ; V' , J tion, was sent to the starting post. A waiting game had been played by Mr. Lorillard with Barrett, in the Dixie, and to that he ascribed his defeat. He determined to send his horse to do the running at the start in '.the Breckinridge, which was over a distance of two miles, Ke no believing that Com' pensation could catch him. Bar, But Mr. Lorillard was wrong. rett started out like a bird, and when he led by sixty yards at the end of the first mile many supposed the race to be over. Compensation was called upon, however, and responded .nobly, overhauling Barrett and passing nnder the wire an easy winner. The horses of Mr. Bowie were not only highly prized in Maryland, but were respected at all the eastern race once won tracks. The two big stake races in one day the United States Hotel stakes at Saratoga withjOriole and the Produce stakes at Monmouth park with Compensations He had "been in the habit of spending a month every summer at the springs, and probably had seen his horses run oftener at Saratoga than he did on any other track in the country Year after year the faces of Mr. Bowie, Robert C. Hall, CoL Washington Booth, and E. A. Clabaugh were familiar ones at Saratoga. These four occupied, the fame suite of rooms season after season at the Grand Union hotel there. Mr. Clabaugh was the first to pass away, and the three sur vivors continued their annual outing. CoL Booth, died later, and last summer Mr. Bowie and Mr. Hall repaired to pether to their old time haunt at America's famous watering place. f - ex-govern- or ; TO $75.00. PANTS CO. SALT LAKE H1TVUTAB. 1 JOSEPH A. LYMAN General! Merchandise, Has a full line of And is selling down at Panic Prices for Pay Down, Either for Cash or Produce at cost. Travelers and Sheepmen will find me supplied with HATT, - GRAIN - AND - STA?r ''TNG. Highest cash price paid for Hides and Pelts. J Don't forr JOSEPH A. LYMi MILIiAItD OAK CITY, COUNTY, : : : Wm. H. . ""V-T- I;' L. HOLBROOK, Prop. r's I n i 6 Si ! Crick-mor- e j I : re . j i the-ide-a s ; n n g-et- tr on ex-Go- v. t 7 Wholel IUui - Fine Buggy Harne8a Specialty. HEN SIBYL SAN-ders- cessful but Miss Sanderson's part in comes over the production brought her greater ixtensiyely used in Deseret and Ticty, ; tad, Un been have critics Her Our goods from Paris a few than ever before. V- - ..s.wiAnI MaO orders will receive, prompt $ttentie5. . .. weeks hence to join had but one more shaft in their quiver. given me mcbu phh.p.w a made They said: "She has never the Metropolitanin success esCLCOTRIO CALL CEU in anything' except operas Opera company HEATED BY STEAM. New York we pecially written to hide her defects might as well be- and show her good points to he best not gin to call the at- advantage. Let her sing music was test tention of the other written by Massenet." This W'TOH nations to the fact taken intrkimph at the Grand Opera that America is pro last June, when Miss Sanderson sang in Gounod's "Borneo et Juliducing its own prime donne, and --that, "Juliette" f " ette. beauThen it was freely admitted that with the exception of Melba, the teous Australian, the chief songstresses she had "arrived," as the French exof the world's greatest opera company press it. This American prima donna were bom in the United States. San- will sing1 for the first time before an derson is a plump California girl, whose American audience this winter. She in spite has grown stouter than when she went complexion is beautiful of the years of rouge and powder that abroad, but her embonpoint has not the footlights have required. One can yet become a serious matter with her, Men imagine what it must have been some and her beauty has not begun to fade. half dozen years ago when the young While in Paris she has lived with her woman set out for Paris, with a con- mother and sisters, and although soviction that she had a voice. )3er ciety's doors have been wide open for beauty was dazzling then, when she her, she has gone out very little, paywas 20, and the first time Jules Masse- ing, instead, 'the price of success with net set eyes on her he capitulated. Now, almost constant study, rehearsal and DON'T BE A READY MADE 'MAN. since Gounod's death, Jules Massenet care of her voice. She is a type of the has been the foremost operatic com- American girl who will be the acHe is as ardent knowledged ruler of the realm of song-iposer in all France. REMEMBER PLYMOUTH ROCK PRICES. U and enthusiastic as if he were 25 in- a few years. They are cool, deter- f Ex-Go- v. the-rBaltim- f T - to-da- y, to-da- ! SIBYL SANDERSON, THE AMERICAN PRIMA DONNA. Cali-fornia- n. "Ah, mademoiselle," he exclaimed, "it is a heavenly voice that you have, and when it is somewhat more trained I beg that you will do me the honor to permit me to write an opera especially for you, and teach you daily how to sing it." Miss Sanderson is a cool,, calm, far seeing youg woman, who knows that good luck and hard work are kith and kin, and always keep within calling distance of each other; There is a saying in France that Paris belongs to those who rise early. So she worked early and late, developed a style, studied action, and did not permit the composer's favor to persuade her that ' sh knew more than Marches!. The result was that Massenet's musical enthusiasm for her kept pace with his personal fondness, and when she came to him, a finished musician, he kept his word, wrote "Esclarmonde" for her, and instilled in her, with infinite pains, his own ideas of how it' should be snng. Massenet and the cantatrice spent a year working together on "Esclarmonde," and the composer's reward came when his favorite made the opera a far greater success than it would have been without heri 'ti owe it all to her," he told his friends one day when they congratulated him upon the popularity of his Opera. Massenet wrote "Manon" for Miss Sanderson, coaching her as' carefully as in "Esclarmonde," and then came the effort to place the songstress on the Paris grand opera stage, where one must appear if one would be an operatic artist of the very first rank. He wrote "Le Mage"' for her, and the work was Considered suitable for the grand opera; but there were jealousies, and objections were made to his pupil by the management. Miss Sanderson, eo the story goes,t told Massenet if ;him-h$ frankly that she would-cudid not procure for her the coveted He redoubled his efforts an4 her, the engagement, but the manager of; the opera had' his revenge by putting "Le Mage" into rehearsal while the American prima donna was filling an engagement in Brussels, and in consequence the part written for Miss Sanderson was first interpreted by some one else. The first night was a trying one.' Sanderson was exceedingly angry, and her wrath included Massenet. The composer's nerves never very strong, because of the prodigious number of very big; very black cigars he smokes honor. ; at last got t Diana Defeats L.oughrea ILad Championship Stake. in the At Brentwood recently two courses were necessary to decide the championship stake between Charles Robinson's black bitch Diana and John Eagan's red and white dog Loughrea Lad. Diana proved to be the - winner after a hard contest. Ayleen defeated St. Louis Girl and Bob K. in the puppy derby. Thomas Kelly's blue bitch Belle had a walkover in the first course of the sight-do- g stake against Charles Parks white and brindle bitch Daisy B., but Robinson's Willy Willy ran three courses with McElrath's Daisy before the latter was declared the winner. Teeth Scientifically None tat ft : UTAtt COUNTY, Filled or Extractad the Best Materials Used in Making Teeth. All Work Warranted and Promptly tended to. At-- j ? ' ro Hi. A DO YOU BELIEVE i Egan's white and brindle , bitch Loughrea Lass defeated McElrath's fawn dog Beat All hands down, and E. J. Brown's brindle fcitch Swallow defeated Crews' black Shadow. In the finals Belle wondog a place in the final course by defeating McElrath's Ihi ha visit any town in the county upon reqottt of tiM WUif jorreaonaanoe soucitea and promptly a6nwerd TTitt do 1 Of 1 lit lh 124-- 4 Co HOME INDUSTRY? sr. ' If so, use Hewlott Bros'. FlaTor-l- f ing llx tracts, J,mon, Vnnilk, totraw be rryt I'm e Apple, ilansnua, Jamaita Ginger, etc. A ho pur ' j.n ; fTROf TWEE VHttZG . j j Spicts ground to order daily. Our Soda WatqrJ Cider, (lingtri Ale, Mineral Water, etc, rtceitei THttT a l ra ? HigWst Award and! two gold Med-- ; alsfrom Territorial fair and Cacte 1 0 vauty jair, lb'jz.i We also carry a complete tck of Bar Supply goods, jpt ass ware selected cspetiallr for S.iloon traJe, lll'IH , DIANA. Uards, blue bitch Daisy. Loughrea Lass defeated, Swallow, and the final course between Bell and Loughrea Lass had ' f to be postponed. . ATHLETIC NOTES. The Quebec (Can.) Amateur Athletic club, at their annual meeting, elected the following officers for one lyear: President, W. J. Ray; A. Picard and W. B. Scott; F. McNaughton; treasurer, F.secretary, A. To-fiel- d. ' Archie Hunter, late captain of the Astor Villa Football club, and one of the best known experts at the game in England,; died on Nov. 29, aged but 20 years, He had engaged in a number of international contests. ' Edward McCanlley of New York has been elected captain of the Naval academy football team for the season : j ! ' . ; , f , l of thad the THREE -- CROP '. - M ' i 'i rc nfiTnnrm lAKffl ' I , Highest Award and Gold Medal at the Utah State Fair, 18ptt for PUIUI? I Sdld by all the Leading Merchants aav and Highest Leavening Quality. Dealers. H E WLETT 746 State Street, It. SALT LAKE ! 1895.. till etc and You will Use No Other vice-presidsn- ts, of m ported and Domesttc Ctg&rs, Pitying - . MILLARD MEADOW, COURSING AT BRENTWOOD. ir Stott, : T X 3 TV 3T stead of 59 odd, and being married td a mined, plucky and strong enough even charming wife does not prevent him to stand success in the dizzy heights from having an eye for beauty. He of opera. to an introduction the fair sought . AUGUST ANDERSON TRAVELING AG EN" V |