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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 20, 1920. COAST LEAGUE PLAYERS , ARE POPULAR IN EAST; ATHLETES AT FORT DOUGLAS QUALIFY FOR ALL AMERICAN ARMY ' CHAMPIONSHIP MEET W. Hopkins, M. F. Beard, Captain A. J. McChrystal, G. Butler, C. W. Smith and F. I Thomas. right STANDING, leftb left Jk Castellano. Right J, Keogan. , SCORE OF THEM THERE . a. BZED GEORGES . , . Passes Severe Criticism on Their Lack of Alertness"; Burns and Beckett Bout. ' 2 Our Old Friend Are Making Harry Natives .Take Note of Them; Predict Great Future for Bobby Meusel ; Jack Quinn "Would Like to Come Wet Again; Three Former Beaver Shortstops in J Greater New York. , , "VYilliams Say By T. S. ANDREWS. MILWAUKEE, June 19. When Georges Carpentier, the French war hero and champion boxer of Europe, was In IfU" waukea last week, watching the Rich! MttcheU-LeTendler match at th Milwaukee Auditorium, he was amazed at the work of the second in the ring not at the work they were performing, but , rather at the lack of work. Th French , champion Sat near Mitchells corner and when Richie was sent down from a hard; left to the Jaw by Tendler tn tha first round, George remarked to Jack Curley, hie guide: "Do your American boxers! always have such seconds In their cor- - I ners? Why don't tl)ey rub tha boy s lege hard so as to get the flood from hla head? continuing. Carpentier said: In France we are not so far advanced tn the fight game as you are In America! and England, but ws have lekrned some things which are very necessary during a fight, one being the care of a fighter by his seconds Why, after that knockdown . the seconds should have been prepared fo five him a thorough massaging of til egsand upper body. By so doing 1 would relieve the blood pressure onthey' h's brain, which would naturally be confused ' after a severe blow like the one delivered. A bexcr' legs are very Important to hia line of work during a light. Some boxers stand almost sttll and try for hard swings, but most men depend on their footwork to get them out of harms w ay when In a tight place. Therefore, the legs should be given consideration rounds, the same as th face and head. By massaging the legs the blood Is given a better circulation throughout th entire body, and that helps to keep th brain clear, and when a fighters brain Is clear he can better take care of himself. r i By HARRY A. WILLIAMS, for The Salt Lake Then back came the Giants, and I bad a 'chat with Phil Deuglaa and Bancroft. Tribune.) Mohrle Rath and Walter Reuther are forYORK, June 19. Somebody, mer some time or another Reds. Coasters with the championship Ryuther certainly look great I believe It wee- - Ruddy Kipling After dropping two tq. the Giants, Moran to said hlmselfr let Walter do It., and pertinently pointed out that the Walter did In At eleven innings, defeating eaat la east and the west U west, Phil Douglaa gnd Rube Benton. Bancroft and that in his personal the has bolstered the Giants wonderfully, and opinion his fast work Around short has won for twain never would meet and mingle. the favor oh. the critical New York And learned people "all ever the world him fans. stood up. on their hind legs and opined But McGrawg team still seems to lack mathat Ruddy had spoken a mouthful, as the balance of a pennant-winnin- g chine. Right now, Jess, Barnes and Art highbrows speak. Nehf appear to be his only wholly depenNow, there Is no question but that Mr. dable pitchers. The club looked very weak around the keystone, but the comdithe about the had Kipling right dope of Bancroft has Improved Doyle's rections, and where .they are located. ing work. The return of the brilliant youngThat east Is east wont be disputed ex- ster, Frankie Frisch to third bane will defensively. Should cept by those who are prejudiced. The help the club get one more lnfielder, and his same fcqlds true of the west. The west other'pltchers get going, the GIsnts will is where It always was, according to the have to be watched. Even now they up not unfavorably with Brooklvn, latest reports, it Is a land set apart by size In fact, not a few rata there as a better the late Horace Greeley for young men team. Jack Fournier, who was here with to go and grow up In after taking it the Cards, is going good. away from the jack rabbits. Mr. Greeley Quinn Likes the Coast. evidently foresaw the coming of the subIncidentally, Jack Quinn ia beginning to mad was afraid they wouldn't be way cast a longing eye toward the flesh pots the right else to fit young men who of the Coast league. Jack is the leading to grow up without hitting an Iron Yankee pitcher, and appears to be right rafter. Those who may still doubt that at the pinnacle of his but the west Is west may be Interested to the spitter will be takeneffectiveness, away from him learn, that It is the direction In which next season, unless there Is a late the as yet undiscovered star of empire In the ruling, and this would meanchange a tretakes Its course. The star can be seen mendous to him. He told me handicap In the minds eye on clear nights. It has the other day that he would like to wind been taking Its course in that direction up hia career with the and win se long that It Is now believed to be on try to get on with someCoasters, dub there If the ita last lap. rule makers here dry up hla spitter. There Is likely to be quite a scramble for hts services out there. They Sure Do Meet. Owing to the large number of stars on But we pass the point. Ruddys rethe Huggins team, Leftv O'Doul is not mark was all right up to a certain point. getting the chance to which his talents But beyond that It dosnt go in this would sem him. Lefty la a good The twain do meet In these would seem totoentitle country. him. Lefty la a good United States They sure do. They meet hitter and the entitle claim Is made by critics and mingle and mitt each other, and borhere he down to first base as that gets row money back and forth, but mainly fast as Yet Cobb. Lefty Is rusting forth. Bu for the western people living away on Tythe bench. With almost any In the east and the eastern people living other club he would be playing regularly. In the west there wouldnt be much except Indians In this country. As things now stand. Jim Thorpe is in the minor- Bobby Meusel Popular. Ruth has taken this town storm, but ity, thanks to the east and west supplyas a popular Idol he does bynot greatly ing each other with inhabitants. Now take the case of Greater New transcend Bobby Meusel. Meusel was York's three great shortstops. It was given little heed In the spring merely the familiar sight of them which started that transient attention which ia aooorded 200 and aOipe bustiers who each year ,ms off on this geographical gallop. Count the out with the majors, and then turn in em: Dave Bancroft, Giants; Roger try their Ivan Yankees: napkins. But Huggins recqgnlzed a Feeklnpaugh, Olson, Brooklyn Dodgers.- - Wonderful young men diamond In the rough. Now the whole these. Think of the thousands of skilled town Is asking about him. Thirst for Inhands which it takes to steer our trucks formation concerning his early career Is and gas works and to heave coal Into all so great that my editor requested a speour bins, nnd tbs vast number of welters cial feature story about him back to the It takes to throw three meals a day Into day when he strayed across tha street ha inhabitants of this town. And yet from a Loa Angeles high school and asked these three stalwart westerners are do- for a tryout with Vernon. Right now he looms as the best ing all the shortstopping for almost six million human beings, or mainly so. straightaway young hitter that ever stepped Into the majors, or at least In the past dscade. Here Is this lad who has Are Western Products. yet to cast his first ballot among Now and then Olson has some help the leading five. I saw himbattling drive a home from Chuck Ward, of the run Into the left field bleachers against Dodgers. The really remarkable part of the Athletics here which was the longest It is that all four of these Greater New smash ever made to larboard at the Polo York shortstops are graduates of the Grounds, and his homer In Detroit estabPortland dub, and were developed by lished a new mark for Cobb. Welter MeCredle, now boss of the Beav-er- a Jackson and others to shoot at. Strangely, and formerly at the helm In gelt though, his dsfenstve work around third Lake. And counting Ota Johnson, sent is not as good as ft was on the Coast. to the Yankee some years ago, Mae has He filled in at first base during Plpp's sent five short outfielders to the big absence from the club, and ultimately will tewn not only a strange record, but unbe groomed for that position. I asked MeuSel if major league pitchprecedented. The virile west, and the Pacific Coast ing bothered him a rather superfluous league In particular, is represented most question. "No harder than that which I faced on largely on the Tankeee, who at this writing appear to be rough riding upward. On the Coast, he replied. But there Is quite a difference between my first visit to the Polo Grounds It was very much like a Coast league reunion on major and minor league pitching. Bobby is simply developing. Coegans bluff. were Meusel is as yet weedy and The Coasters highly plrased to see yet he Is hitting the ball with almost somebody from home, and Immediately bqgan crawling out of the dugout to hear as much force as Ruth, and oftener. Durcoast. the latest from the Among those ing the next four years he will put on whom I mltted on my first visit were from fifteen to twenty pounds of new Jack Quinn, Lefty ODoul, .Roger Peekln-paugweight the muscle of manhood and maPing Bodie, Bobby Meusel and turity over the now stringy sinews of his Duffy Lewis. Five of these are regulars baseball adolescence. Then we may have on the Huggins machine. another Ruth possibly a greater one. (Written expressly NEW film -- loose-joint-e- d, h. . J & ' -- K-- v t , x t r 3 w-- ? TrjASV J t e , ' 'i ,3 T VV V 1 j . x 4 l'(' Jl 'VfV.V. j;. "f yr? 1 h ?SJ Kr . vV- - -- iv' tom MARSHALL V .V a- 4 X W, .wV tar-haw- 5. ed or d, silver-tongue- or 7 1 f - 4 C. V X Carpentier marveled at th manner fk which th Cream City Athletic club conducted the show and handled the Immense crowd. "It ls marvelous. said Georges, "to think that you can hav 909 people In a Mg place like tbt nearly r ' and not a sign of one person smoking, t never attended an opera in Paris where v the crowd was better behaved than (a the Auditorium. r That Carpentier ha a tender heart was shown when he hit his sparring partner Jules Lanaire a hard wallop In the third round of their exhibition, practically knocking him out. It waa no show plav, but on th square. Georges begged his pardon In the ring and when shot, and stood among the high three all he went to hi private car after the the first thing he did was to look the fights trvouts, through up his partner and again assure him It Captain V J). Rothrock, Twenty-nint- h was an accident. Then they drowned received his early infantry with , the military and email-bor- e training rtfl as a their feelings In coffee. member of the Ohio national guard team. He won the national individual cham- Richie Not Discouraged. pionship In 1810, He was one of the InMitchell, pride of Milwaukee, structors gt the Camp Perry small arms andRichie a strong contender for tiring school during the war, and from Bennyconsidered Leonard's lightweight title until there went to Camp Henning as an in- he ran into defeat at tha hand of Lew structor at the infantry school of arms. Tendler, Philadelphia newsboy chamCommander C. T. Osburn ls one of th will last start all over agam week, pion, best l ifie shots In the world. This will and try to redeem himself in the eyes et be his second trip abroad as a member Richie ls not tnd alike. fans of a United States rifle team, having promoters been a member of the American team In trying to take away any credit from Tendler; Instead, he la praising the 1212 He was a member of the City boy's great work, but askteam at Camp Perry In 1913. Quaker That year Osburn won more than any ing for a return match at th first opother four men. He won the running portunity. "It la not a nice thing to cry ever Uetr match, won two of the three spe- defeat make excuses," said Richie, cial prizes In the team "but In and this case I think there lq reason Os malih,Is and cleaned up In other for match. I had my asking burn only 35 years of age, but has I followed Tendler' another a work against Pink! wonderful record. He has represented and felt confident that T very closely the navy In at least five national would showing He was captain of th Pres- than be able to make a better matches my younger brother, but I did not idents yacht, th Mayflower, for some figure on unforeseen happenings and. f time, but had a destroyer In active ser- course, should not complain now. I saw vice when he went to the tryouts. where Plnkl could have Improved hts Sergeant Usher Is one of the strong work and expected to profit by It myself, shooting marines, which means that he but 11 this was knocked gaily west In Is able to ravel any class In military the first round when Lew caught ms nflfl shooting. to the law that stinging First Lieutenant Lloyd S. Spooner Is which put me down. I made a mistake an Oregon bov. He is one of the famous in arising immediately and going there He shot on the A. E. F. into a clinch. Spooner twins waa mind at befogged My team at Le Mans, France, that won the the time or after receiving th blow, Interallied championship. full I would th taken otherwise have Sergeant If L. Adams. Eleventh nine count so as to clear my brain And ts one of the best shots In the "crittn better shape to fight on arising. It ter soldiery, having been on a number be is a mlBtake many fighters make, It of cavalry national match teams. may have looked more spectacular, tret at the same time it was a foolish mow." Small Bore teiriJ Lt.t t x'?w- all-ar- "1, MANY CHAMPIONS ON OLYMPIC RIFLE TEAM Three Members of 1912 Championship Winners and One cftN1908 Team Among Seventeen Who Will Shoot for U. S. in Belgium. and records follow: B. Castellano, western division boxing championship; J. Keogan, western division JaveM. F. Beard, championship; lin, 141 feet; Captain A. J. McChrystal. 21 feet 8t4 inches; F. W. broad Jump, shot, 38 feet 5H Hopkins, By BE TEE V. CARNEY, Inches; relay team (G. Butler, C. W. L. Thomas. Captain A. J. F. N th ride team that will represent Smith, 400 meter. 47 5 seconds. the United States In th Olympic The team representing Fcyt Douglas at In Belgium said team beliLg of H. the California meet was composed D. McClain, C. W. Smith, G. Butler, K. now on the high seas are three mem- W. F. W. A. Morse, C. Langenbacker. bers of the team that won the champion- Hopkins, M. F. Beard. G. W. Spangler, ship in Stockholm In 1813 and cne of C. A. McKlnsle. B. Castellano, Captain A. J. McChrystal, F. L. Thomas, F. L. Thomas and J. Keogan. O. Helkes (Chler Bald slated bv Roll program Eagle), will direct the. musical At the crest of thea during the outing will March King give fesst. Chief dog tom-torecital, eaid to be his best musical effort, a solo introducing his delicacy of touch, technique, volume and modulated expression, a revelation on the kettle drum. The Okobojis are conceded to be the most ancient, honored and respected In the world. trapshooting organisation Tha charter members were a squad of five Harvey McMurchey. Fred Gilbert, Roll Helkes, Charley Budd and Tom The tribal ranks have now Marshall. 100 grown to a limited membership ofstate warriors, hailing from almost every as an In the Union. To be recognized ri of a Okobojl brave Is the acme n plua ultra o ambitionth Be It known that all scatter gun artists. the casting of one arrow head of obblanket collection Into the sidian (black) forever bars a candidate from memberan Okobojl ship In th tribe. To become bears the hall mark of universal popu-a will be powwow The coming larity. shoot for pleasure, where formality Is The French sidetracked for sociability. will supplant Lick hotel ali tribal tepees. these shooters; was on the team that shot in England Ini 11)08 It Is a team of a team that anv nation champions, should be proud to have as its repreeqn-tnatche- a tat Ives. Her ls k0m information about mcm- sbers of the team that mav interest you- Eirst Lieutenant Thomas U Brown, Infantry, is an experienced FoXty-rfirs- t OGS and DOG FELLERS 1 Jeft-hand- er m esv-alr- rw,- ovewetw ev4ee-5i 6 - years ; ago, El Paso, Texaa. RONALD MARTIN. A. It hsa been eatimated by W. T Hornaday. a recognized authority, that wild birds and quadrupeds have been reduced 88 per cent In the past fifty years This, in my Judgment,' Is very materially The leading cause for overestimated gamq disappearance Is encroachment of civilization with cultivation of swamp or with prospective wild land Landowner 3600 per acre land on their preserve are difficult to convert over to th antldraln-ag- e Idea, thua leaving their marshes for wild migratory bird propagation. Neither are apples or bodock or osag trees sufwill ficiently desirable that hedge fences and not be supplanted by barbed wire old-tlhedge fences are doomed to go No: emphatically, no; there la not as much gam universally distributed as years ago. Th there was twenty-fiv- e theXSpan-tsh-Americ- Kz A Timely Is not so much Question, It what newspapers ssy In their advertisements as what neighbor says to neighbor or friend to friend that has brought Chamber'sln s Colie and Diarrhoea Rmedv'into such general us It Is as natural for people to speak well of thle remedy after ualng It as It la for water to flow down hiTl Have you a bottle of It In your home? (Advt.) V 4 ' scv ' r . VI i V r- - m.i-m- I f t X - v. l t which ssow Do yog consider fish propagation Q feasible? Where could I get some small fish for s start? Have a lake that aould fc an excellent place for fish to breed How long w'ould It require for a bass to grow big enough to bits? R. Y. T. San Antonio. Tex. A. Th propagation of flah ts an unquestioned success in every locality. In almoat every state th state fish and gstne cemmlsslone will furnish you th with Instructions necessary flngerhngs bow to handle. Fish will bit at an early age, but it would require two or three years for them to attain mueb length. ' eS recent treaty with Canada and enforcement of the federal migratory game bird law, stopping spring shooting and limitand evening bag number, will preserve tually Increase migratory birds. The law is In the right direction and should b lived up to conscientiously by every real It la our only reproduction sportsman. hope for game In the future, eifegpt through a line of propagation domesticates. Captain F. S. Hird of the quartermaster's corps, originally an Iowa man. ls also having his second trip on an Amer-- , 9au Olympic team. He was on the 1911 cam and won the small-bor- e championHe shot on a number of Iowa ship 'cams in the national matches. Major E. G. Llndroth ls a veteran Vr'ny shot, having been on many service Kims In the past lawless of Boston for twelve year has been a member of the Massachusetts rifle team in the national matches. He did some good work on th battle fropt, too, and then shot on the A. E. F. te'sin at Le Mans. In the Palma match In 1913 he made In th first two stasis, losing "possibles" out on the 1000. 1, eutenant Jackson Joseph veteran of the marines Is one of the shots of th "Leather Necks, nd has been a familiar Pgure in rifle shooting circles for yearn. He is one ofthe few men who can coach others and get results. Captain William F Brush nor I th oldest man on the team th the point of years and experience, and bis victories would fill a big book. He wtaa member of the American Olympic teartv In 1908 and 1912 and represented the United States on teams away back In war days He la beyond 50, looks 40. and shoots as If be were 20. He has won more victories with the rifle than anv other living man. He Is a New Yorker, a member of th New York national guard prior to th war, and an Instructor at Camp Perry during the wiir. Sergeant Dennis Fenton has been on a number of army teams In the national rnatehps Gunnery Sergeant Ollie Schrlver of tha n ls poteiblv the shot In the marine corps. He was a member of the tmted Stales tam that won tn Argentina In 1912, winning the and was a championship, member of the same team in 191$ at Camp Perry or the Sergeant Ralph M. Henshaw marines has shot in many national matches an 1 at Seagirt and could alwats he found toward the front. JT It has been claimed by a aportemn Is lncreasin be ss muil, that game In this country this right? Will there game here as twenty-fiv- e when I was a boy? I y. Champion. iv f es best-know- Weak Eves No Bar. -- Lieutenant Commander W. I t ft ,'1 tr-c- ... f is ss handsome a As a result of careful breeding, many JR., SANDAL BOY, as can be found ia the city, !poms are less than five pounds in He il a sprightly flttle sable Pomera- - weight, and, in addutna and nian, and is owned by Mrs. Bruce Wedgewood of 302 Moxum hotel. Sandal is 2 years of age. Bov, The Pomeranian is one of the most toy dogs in this country. From his general appearance, including ths Jl, busby tail curled over ths hind quar ters, ha would sppsar to be descended, long ago, no doubt, from ths feamoyed dog of tbs north. Tbeir more recent forefather is the Spitz, and today tbs chief difference between a Spit and a Pomeranian U ia size. , white, include blue, brown, uatde, red, orange and fawn. The coat consists of a deep, soft, fluffy uederfur, through which trudes a plentiful overfur of straight, gldsxy hair covering the whofe bodv, being especially full aud abundant on the throat, chest, neck, rump and hind quarters. The tail is a pompon flowing ovbr the back. The legs are straight and delicate, and the dug in action is exceedingly light and steppy. Want Go With Wilson. , Since Johnny Wilson won th middleweight title from Mike O'Dowd at Bospn there has been little doing In the way of championship matches in that division, but challenges ar getting numerous for the new champion and th chances are he will soon get Into action against one of the real tough birds outside of the former titleholderj- namely, goldler Bart field. The latter, who has been tn Europe tor some time. Is n route home and Daniel McKetrtck. haa his manager, taken off enough time from hla oil business to Issue a deft to Wilson and aU others who aspire to th title. Fa's Uncle Daniel: "Hartfleld ls th leyd- mats contender for ths title, both weiieS and middleweight, and the champ Urn will have to give him a chance cr forfeit their rights to the crowns. In tn past year Bartfield haa won popular decisions over Jack Britton, Ted Lewi. Mike O'Dowd. Mike Gibbons, Harry Oreb and a number of lesser lights. H la ready and anxious to meet any of them, especially Wilson and Britton, he will not kick at giving away wU it to make The middleweight match, as 1 1 followers of the game know he f-- a ; easily make 145 if necessary." Bartfleld has given all th stars a of trouble and there la little doubt tt ' t he will prove a stumbling block to Chi' - i plon Wilson If they meet. . In addition to the Bartfleld chafe"-- , sc In from been aent haa Chi, another Wiggins, ths Hoosier Battler, and a . vi recently fought a draw with Battling l , champt-trisky. light heavyweight Wiggins offers to make weight for V and he will a o son in title match take Levtnsky on again at 175 for t light heavy title. - gd 't e-- . c 1 A cablegram from London conveys 1 new that Tommy 'Burns, former cha -plon heavyweight of the world, ha hr n matched with Joe Beckett, the Brlt-.battle at champion, for a twenty-roun- d When Tommy v -Albert Hill. July 16 1907-8 tted England in htnade ahi rt work of such big fellows as Gunner Molr, Jack Palmer, Jem Roach, Jewey Smith and Bill Squires, although he had previously beaten Squires in on round In California before going to England. He followed this trip with a tour of Auatra met his Waterloo when 11a and there he fought Jack Johnson, losing hla title in fourteen rounds, although he got his price 130,000 the first b.g money at that time for fight of that kind. That was twelve years ago. Tommy was alathlete and took ways a great the beet car of himself, but can he x boxer a like BecH young strong against ett, even49 though he la notto ekl'l-- d, at ths win? Tomrrv years and hope age of was born in 1881 and Jttt turning thd Tne old saying. "louth w'l forty mark. wtU be served." probabiy come true, and , . Beckett should win. A Lee haj unique record, of having won the individual rifle and national Indl- -' dual Pistol match th same vear at the national matches, the only man who ever turned this Le' has been so poor thateyesight he haa worti heavy glHse. and It Is doubt'll If h could sraduat from th naval academy, although be won th matches referred to above L A Nuesslefn of XVashinrton, D C a th jmmsest man on the team, be'ng n the twenties Hie ability ts better rk known for with the SchueUen type nf rifle. Lieutenant Far-- Scofield ts th third Gsn-Perrv Instructor to make th earn. He ts a Massachusetts boy. and EMPLOYEES VOTED DIVIDENDS. hot on several Masachusetts team H GARY, Ind., June 16. FmrLqwere to-of has a world's record string of 144 of Gary etrn'Eht bullseves at 600 ards i com- the First National bank of 14 per cent on He was a member of the 1913 day otd divloends petition same I pa'd rale 'th their salary. team. bO'der on esrmra of their ht '.Ha 1 be the to flist said local bank BRITISH GOLFERS COMING. In the country to aduht thl plan, and di be tan M.rrv Vardon Brltth open- golf cham- rectors mu that th w',,l in the future, with ano'-r- r dii.rfcml tor pion. and Ted Ruv will plav tn the open tourney at Toledo, August emploi-e- s ts be declared at tra end ct lu to 13. the ear. al A1-- tj Opens His EyejL u 1 WINNING over the Presidio, team point in the western division elimination meet, held In San Fran4 June and 5, the Fort Douglas cisco track squad qualified eight men for the which contests, championship are to be held at Jefferson barracks In St. Louis July 2. 3 and 5. The successful contestants from this meet will be entered to represent the army at th final elimination July 17 at Harvard stadium, from whence a team will be sent to represent the United States in Antwerp. The qualifying athletes and their events Xr- - 4 - ' tit r s S V Q cles, worshiped the sun. chanted and walled, Invoked the presence of venomous snakes, supplicating the personal bestowal of favors from the Indian Messiah or Orest Spirit. The laxative springs at French Lick. Indiana, were the accepted Mecca of the feathered warriors, squaws and papooses. on the are Indians again Okobojl THE path with the avowed intention In Annqal Powwow. of killing those defenseless Again those medicinal springs In ths The noble red men will answer the call will valley of hope arp paging the Okobojl of the wild. Again the tom-toannual powsound their wild, weird, entrancing, Indians for their twenty-fir- st Inclusive. monotonous tones, assembling the tribe wow, scheduled for June for either war, hunt or athletic sports. During this Interim of trapshooting divertheir tribal sion, In dances The Hopi Indians (tittle people) living songs chants annual powwow and much-toutthe agM of stone and adobe, built their dog feast will b featured. Tom Taggart, villages on the hillsides. The only en- whose Is name a was synonymous French homes with trance to their through Lick, la caterer de luxe In the roof, which was Immeditrap-doIn those for the "dog feast" A number of Maryately olosed against marauders. milk-fetom-toland conwere canlrus have been junior their primeval day hide located for the banquet. These will be structed by tightly stretching a cow Intonakoshered and served under over a hollow stump. Vibrating ceremonially tions were regulated by the varied else the supervision of Ben Donnelly (Chief and Walter Peacock ) of outer oastnga The beating of those Wealthy-Water-Gold Beater), and a rare treat Is In by the (Chief kettle drums when acoompanitd store. Daniel W. Voorhees, Sr. (Chief lighting of signal fires, was a far call to Tall Sycamore of the Wabash), Peoria's wandering warriors d orator, will officiate at the In those days the medicine men coordinated lgnoranoe and superstition with memorial services for those braves who on have to the happy hunting in passed the healing products of Dame Nature ground within the bast twelve moons their attempts to alleviate tribal sufferthe tribe to lo- Fred Gilbert of SplrttLeke, Iowa, when ing. An annual exodus of waters bubbled a small boy, was captured bv the Sioux calities where medicinal an aperient Indians, when they were on the war path, of the bowels earth, the from raiding homes and massacring the defrom natures laboratory, was ever There the medicine men shook fenseless pale face In northweatern Iowa ' their snake skin rattles, cavorted in olr- - Sitting Bull, the high chief, was attracted by Fred's incessant, babbling line of conversation and adopted tbla precocious little human phonograph, artistically tattooing his arms, legs and body KNOWN with highly colored plgmsnts. giving him DOCTORS the euphonious name of Chief Heap-Tal- k RELIABILITY AND SKILL He became a fSvorlt In th tribe, quickly mastering their language and adopting Look at f their customs: h was taught by the Dr. Shores tribal experts to hunt, flih. shoot, sing, A Shores' dance and fight, becoming a rrular Record of blanket Indian. Hi was located and res96 Years of cued by Chief Albert Bnder of the Continuous who later broke Into thk major 8ueeees a league baseball arena. Thy first mst on , Specialists both In qusst of th remnants ths pistil, In Chronic and Nervous Disease. of a hrd of buffalo. A friendship was eafabllthsd which has developed into th Come mistake! no an and get lake ex. portended opinioncanon your case FR I E and Damon and Pythias brand. be cured or benefited. G'lbsrt will be In charg of the Okobojl if and how you Modern Medicine, Organotherapy, Else, ceremonial and farcy dances, leading the or Call etc. Oflioe. 141 write. chanting and giving a short address In trislty, Main Street, Salt Lake. Hours: 1 to th Indian tongu Lieutenant PhilJohn Evenings, t to I; Sundays, 10 to U. ip Sousa (Chief March King), ably as- - : -- trap-thoote- TRAP GUAIHROD ' v 4 j. ' j W5 de-etr- ed long-distan- . 1 Mo-Gr- op v 1 We-wo- v p h!! al |