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Show THE SPANISH PORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. ITAH Get Your If News Notes ! lte a Privilege to Live in LAYTON &?L. Utah MAE MARTIN pMste crop Is with nme week the BRIGHAM During thousand of pintail ducks havs keen feeding In the grainflrtJa weit of 'hie city, adjourninr the marches. Tha ducks havt migrated here from Canada according to game officials, and are so numerous that an estimate of their No woman would wear dresses, or -rr -rv-T number la almost ImpoMible. Mouses, or stockings of 8 color that's OGDEN Weber counljr peeche are decidedly out of style or faded. If all unusually fret from Insect Inflation us knew bow easy It It to make of and general blemishes this year. Lo fresh, crisp and stylish by tho things In district arieultaml Roy Marsh, of homo tinting or dyeing. magic . quick spector report. Etlmatee of thla can tint or dyo successful Anybody yeara crop la set at 175 carload. The .VV.'.V with true, fadeless Diamond Dyes. orchards of North 0den are tld to he ly with them Is as easy as bluing, Tinting In the beat of condition and w" un takes Just o little longer. and dyeing doubtedlv yield the most fruit, colors appear like marie, New, stylish GUNNISON Tauirower ahinmanta over the old, faded colors, DIs right from the fields at Wtvlew ard Clarmond Dyes never spot, streak or run. ion are Increasing almno? dalle ltd aro rest dyes. Ilk those used They two carloads were sent out Wednewlav. when the cloth was mado. Insist on bringing the total cee shipments ,o them and save disappointment data in to sixteen. The peak o' th" Illustrated book, My new harvest will be reached about Sep'em-he- r Color Croft" gives hundreds of 8. at which time extra forces w'll bints for renewing moucy-snvln- g I be added to handle the big crop. clothes snd draperies. It's Free. Writ J VERNAL The crew of the drep for It now, to Mae Martin. Irpt test of the Aahley Valley Oil company Diamond Dyes, Burlington, Vermont on the Ashley vnltey structure, ttt miles southeast of Vernal, la drilling Earth Net Yet Crowded through the cobble rock du- ined Inn of more than rrohiibly the hole to plug It hack from th d.o! dwell In two of 870 feet to 530 fee for th purtwsg the people of the earth afid India. Filch vast of straightening tb hole. It w'll a countries China areas iis Canada, Australia Sllwrla, Inseveral daye before drilling for and Brazil have populations of not creased depth la resumed. MURRAY Plane for enterine a more than two or threo to the square mile. eounty Guernsey herd In the atate fair thla fall wore made at a meeting of Guernsey breeder heM reradlv at the tome of Arthur B..Erekon, South Cottonwood. A committee Includ ng Mr. Erekson, L. E. Madsen. James G. Burtt, J. B. Erekson and V. L Martin-tacounty agrlruTural arent.Vaa appointed to arrange the matter and select the herd. BRIGTIAM CITY Plans are g.n forward for the community fair to be held at Corine September 7, under auspices of the Corine farm bureau. This is the firet fal of the kind to he J held In the valley. The executive committee consists of Presdi'-n- t Sterling Wright of the Corine farm bureau. C which demand the utmost In steadiness of nerve G. Adney and Abraham Evans. Agri1 use Champion Spark and concentration on the part of the contestant. cultural Agent R. H. Sriwart Is as. Stand back of the firing line with them and watch sirtinr. Plugs because they help a typical scene. Over on the right Is a young LOGAN Farmers of Utah will promake my service to mnrksnmn. He looks sixteen and Is actually on the fit a great deal by revising an old mismore Ms Is he Is first match. Junior side of twenty. It dependable. conception that seed from some other nervous? Not so you could notice It! Nervous farm is better than from their 6wn, Hr. men or boys dont lust long on rifle ranges. But George Stewart, agronomis with the Champion is the better spark plug because It has aa exclusive sills there ls a ripple of comment as h- - hoots a k- - experjn,ent station of the Utah In other words, he hns placed every shot cu;.ra college, stated In answer to manitc insulator spe within the edges of the bull (outsiders call It jnfjUjrjes on "home grown dally treated to wills bull's-eve- ) stand the much higher that looks like a pin point from the However, Dr. Stewart sad, there come firing line. No one cheers. There Is not even the t mes when serd grow-- t on a riven temperatures of the modern higtveompres that greets a tennis champion farm should be replaced by sed from polite si on engine. Also a new on the courts. The boy grins as he gathers up Ms patented solid copper brass" (the empty shells that the ejector of Ills gasket seal that remains rile hns sent spinning to the ground). absolutely gas-iil- it The young marksman walks slowly to the next under high compresrange to fire Ms finnl string. However, lie avoids sion. Special analysis the spectators. There Is a reason for this. Even electrodes which assure the youngest rifleman Is prey to the superstition c fixed rp ark-ga- p under of the range, and It Is bad luck to receive conall driving conditions. And. Is shot fired Inst until the by gratulations the way, dont ever try to take a snapshot of a shooter until he has finished his match. If Ms warning docs not stop you and he cannot run ; 0f so per cent of his crop from worms away, he and his buddies may wreck your camera. jagt year despjte ),js usinfr arserate of SparlCPlugs Mack cots may cross Ills path, mirrors may smash lead in water, as was regularly recToledo, Ohio to hits In his hands, and lie will saunter uncon- - commended. Mr. Marsh says: This year for Every Engine Dependable cemedly under a leaning ladder; but If be Is ie!(S. than 5 per cent of his crop Is Is a match lost that match, photographed during wormy. The smallest of the figure and he knows It he attributes to his use of the oan The Caddie Dig The riflemen are ready to fire the Inst string CEDAR CITY With the aid of MelDub Golfer I suppose you pet a at rapid fire. Several of the young marksman's vin Cropper of Deseret, the American s on this course, good many rivals are crowding him, and he Is doing some bucking horse committeeee will caddie. Legion rapid figuring. He knows, with the lead he hns have at least twenty head of professCaddie Yes, sir also a few weak secured In the earlier mntehes. that If lie makes ional becking horses for the race mnet beginners. Smiths Weekly. 48 out of a possible 50 he Is safe. Even If his and rodeo at Cedar City September nearest rival should make a possible." the young 6, 7 and 8. Some of these horses are Ieople are not generally hunting marksman cannot be defeated unless lie falls well known to rodeo fane. Crooner trouble; theyre hunting pleasure; helow 48. Any score below that figure will make won the riding contest of the i9?fl nnd tile two are so often found side defeat possible, and even probable. Cedar City rodeo agairet older and by side. In rapid-fira shooter must get off Ids ten shots better known men of Pendieton snd within a limited number of seconds. The firers Cheyenne. He is to be a contender take tlielr places on the firing line, loading and the belt this year. Bob Vaughn win locking their rifles against accidental firing. The ner of second place in 1926, will he on walk the firing line, to and here. Buster officers, stationed Vaughn of Pendleton I fro to see that all Is ready. The field telephone opand many professional riders expected erator sends his stand-bmessages to the rifle have expressed their Intention of he nv butts, where sweating men operate the targets. here. Ready on the right," cries an official SAT LAKE Total expenditure of "Ready on the left, echoes another. the state road department from Janu"Ready on the firing line," calls the operator. ary 1, 1928, to June 30, 1928, amounted A gong sounds. Up ride the white targets from to $1,275,309.40, it is shown by a finanbehind an embankment like a company of soldier cial statement of the department for ghosts attacking from a trench. Then the guns that period, which was made public begin to bark. It Is called rapid fire, but to the recently. On January 1 of this year novice the riflemen seem very slow. How can they there was a balance of $10,955.49 of ever get in ten shots with such unhurried ease? road funds in the state treasury, and But these men are able to Judge time In split secreceipts from various sources during onds. It seems only an instant after th? Inst burst the first six months of the year of flving splits the air that the targets sink slowly amounted to $1,986,501.30, bringing from sight the total balance and receipts to Our young marksman hns his eyes turned toward for the period. On June 30. DONT suffer headaches, or any of the butts. There Is a liable of voices around him, 1928, the department had a cash surthose pains that Bayer Aspirin can but he hears nothing distinctly. lie Is watching end in a hurry I Physicians prescribe plus of $774,082.16 and a loaned surwith eager Interest for the reappearance of the plus of $458,638.45, making a total it, and approve its free use, for it target. Up it conies slowly too slowly for Ms surplus of $1,232,702.61. does not affect the heart Every drugLoans rewildly beating pulse. Seconds seem like hours. turned to highway and revolving funds gist has it but dont fail to ask the He has set his heart on winning this match and the six months amounted to for Bayer. And dont take during druggist Now comes the flash of a white disk. That means $289,366,78. any but the box that says Bayer, with V five points a bulls eye! It flashes again, the word genuine printed in red; LOGAN The Cache county fair and again and again. He counts forty points before the disk drops down for a short Interval, and will be held here September 18 to 20, again comes up white. That last, slow flash of one week earlier than has been the the disk Indicates that one of his shots was Inside case in recent years, In an effort to the bull by a fraction of an Inch. avoid the bad weather that has accom Down goes the disk again. Everything hinges on panied local fairs in the past, state--Its next appearance. lie knows he has forty-fivPresident George Dunbar of the Cache points. A miss means almost certain defeat. A County Fair association. Three thou "tree or better assures victory. Up bobs that fatal sand fair programs will be mailed ii disk again. It Is red this time. Indicating a four. the near future to homes of Cachf Our young marksman now has a total of forty-nin- e county and ten large twenty, four-she- o and has wmn the match. And that, as a fastands will he used for billboards ad mous cartoonist would say, Is certainly "one grand JUplrln 1 vertising the crunty fair in Cache val the trade mark of and glorious feeling." Bayer Manufactory ley, Boxelder county and toutlyerr 9t Moooacnicacldeattr of SaUsylleaclu Idaho. r t- 'tr T4 Easiest Way to Keep in Style Utah 1927 totaled 1.700,000 behel market value of $2,228,000, an of 605.000 buthals over 1928. :Yi'sX?-v;::S- i ,v ;; 'r' .V7J d is Kedem "Annie i D-H- I ! - one-thir- d u, The Taxi Driver Fcr the Marksmen of the Country Are Gathering at Camp Perry, Ohio, for the National Agii-slide- Rifle Matches. V,'A By ELKO SCOTT WATSON IME was when a sun was the commonest weapon, utensil, tool, or whatever you choose to call it, to be found In the hands of an American citizen. That wus In the days when there was a frontier, when the West was still to be won. when wild game still formed a part of our dally fare, when there was less law but more Justice, fewer courts but fewer criminals because men carried In their bands u thing of wood and Iron which could, when the occasion denr.nnded. act as Judge, 'Jury and court from which there was no appeal. And of all the types of weapon which the generic term "gun covers, the one which was preWitness this eminently American was the rifle. sweet ancient weapon of our fathers, the American rifle, maker of states, empire builder," writes Emerson Hough In The Way to the West," This engine of civilization served Its purpose across the timbered Appalachians, down the watershed to the Mississippi, up the long and winding streams of the westirn lands, over the Rockies, and down the slopes of the Sierras to the farther sea." Eut with the passing of the frontier and frontier conditions, the American laid aside the rifle for the sickle and the plow," and tests of marksmanship fathered by necessity which had become one of the lending sports for a large proportion of our population became almost a lost art. The sport Interests of the average American today are of a far different type. He plays golf or tennis and he watches others box or play football, baseball basket ball. But of marksmanship he knows little or nothing. Unless he Is one of the comparatively, small number of sportsmen who find recreation in trap or target shooting, he gets no thrill from a sports page announcement that a new record In shooting has been established. However, there are signs that a renaissance of Interest in this form of sport Is under way. The World war, which put rifles into the hands of millions of young Americans and taught them the thrill of puncturing the bulls-eye- , had something to do with It. But more Important in crystallizing the Intel est In the revival of this lost art are the annual National Rifle association matches which for the Inst 20 years have brought to Camp Terry, Ohio, In Increasing numbers the crack shots of the country. Last year 2.G07 participants stepped up to the firing line In the various contests and this year the matches which are being held from September 11 to 10 are expected to draw an even larger number. For many years the national matches were dominated by the military element and the winners were largely members of some branch of the national military, or naval establishment In recent years, however, the matches have attracted more of our nonmilitary population and Canrp Terry has recently been called "the biggest civilian camp in America. It is somewhat like a huge automobile tourist camp with between 3,000 and 4,000 persons from all parts of the country, most of them, however, from the smaller towns and cities of the West and Middle West, living under canvas there during the matches. Many of the competitors bring their families with them and they make it a glorified vacation, which is satisfactory In more ways than one. They are having part in a great sporting event and one that la more con- - ," hnnd-clnppin- On the 200 yard firing lin -- truct!ve than Just a mere test of marksmanship. may be argued that, in the Ir.st analysis, a man learns to shoot so that be may destroy und kill. But you will find. If you investigate among those who attend the matches at Camp Terry, that they are among the most persons In the world. And that goes, not only for the civilians, but for members of the regular military or naval establishment ns well. Tbev are all proud of tlielr niurkmnnshlp and enjoy the sporting element of tills test of their skill, but they have the satisfaction also of knowing that the? are training themselves to be of real service to their country if it slutuld have need of them. When it Is said that whole families come to Camp Terry for the matches. It should not be supposed thut the feminine members of it are there merely to look on as tlielr fathers and husbands and brothers take their turn on the ranges. For If you walk through the "squnw camp," as they facetiously refer to the camp for women, you will find plpnty of Annie Oakleys, both young and old, who are as enthusiastic addicts of Oh, shoot! as the men and boys. They speak the argot of the rifle range, a tongue thut is as Greek to the outsider, but perfectly understandable to those who attend the matches this talk of windage, mirage, a fish-tawind, lands, grooves, dope, swabo and the like. And out on the firing line some of these girls can give Just as good an account of themselves (and probably even better) with a Instrument In their hands against the painted targets as their pioneer grandmothers and and once did, when the occasion arose, against the painted Indians. If you doubt that, ask some of those who attended the national matches last year and watched Miss Louise Thompson, the modern Annie Oakley," pictured above, do her stuff out on the ranges! As for the boys, take a look at the medals which adorn the three Davy Crocketts shown in the picture labeled Junior Champions, 1027. In the center is David MaoDongai, a sixteen-year-olhigh school boy from the District of Columbia, who was the winner of both the national individual championship and the high school Individual championship In last year's matches. On his left is another sixteen-year-olThillp Renfer of Norwood, Ohio, who was McDongal's close competitor in the national individual matches and who won the senior classified match. On his right Is Lawrence Wilkins, fifteen years old and also hailing from. Norwood, Ohio, who won the , match. Any of these three youngsters can go out on the range any day and make a record which older marksmen of another day would be proud of. Although the national rifle matches at Camp Terry are the biggest of their kind in this country, they are quite unlike any other great sports event Usually there are no huge crowds on the range and no thunderous cheers greet the victor. A few devoted enthusiasts stand back of the firing line, quiet and Intent But they are appreciative spectators, nevertheless, for they are watching tests of skill which are not spectacular, but It g il death-dealin- , g d n tight-lippe- Champion week-ender- e fr ' e |