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Show TIIE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SAT URDAY MORNING, JULY 26, 102U 12 Forest Pests Do Great Damage in Yellowstone Park; Spruce Bud Worm Is Most Dangerous Angry Wife Admits Leading Mob Which Tarred and. Then Feathered Flapperish Maiden By rsirsrssi FRHDHRJVlv, Hi, Julr 25 --Mm w?f a of Llovd Mhry Shank, nd Shank of Mysnwlll, fwomptly defiantly told a crowded courtroom In police headquarter here tonight that it 'wae ahe who had beaten, tarred and feathered Mins Dorothy Grandon, 20, laflt night on the state nad fifteen miles from here A mob of fifty bum rf men and leading citine net Mycrwville were merely "helping' her, she said Mrs Shank and eight men were held under bond of $2000 each for the action of the grand jury by Magistrate A. T Manager Ever Optimistic Over Chicago Teams Lauds Eddie Collins. Special Sport Service S Pleaae NEW YORK, July IS for roe that Eddie OH In and I never have been at odds," eaid John J White Sven, manager of thfe Chicago Vila a Sox, during a chat with Joe Stories that we are 14nit few day ago. Warrants are hot working in harmony together fol-Unt for th a Br Tribun without the slightest foundation, not only Is a fin chap personal!, but also a wonderful ball player He la batting, fielding and running the bases as well a he ever did and i hi setting a splendid example for teammates, particularly the youngsters. During my recent atta'k of Collins manared the team wit! faultless!) He inspired the men his leadership and playing, so I hot command to take was able when I runnirg agjkin I found everything of the So, t. amoolhly As captain I have not line la helping me a lot yet recovered my strength and roust not overexert myself (on the coaching ltn,What are tfc chahcea of the White Box'" was asked. Brighter than last year," replied the Trojan. "In fact, the team is Irban day getting better to every the box comes Jus. Faber s return which on His arm, time. at the right an operation wae performed to rein elbow, bone tbs move a splintered bo la growing stronger every tlm woo Robertson, pitches But Charley has been crippled In a similar will not be in shape to pilch regular! y for more than a month, "The remarkable success of Thurston, our leading pitcher. Is due to baseball brains. He knows bow t He doesn pitch to apposing hitters. end often Is record many strikeout I in the he there but batted freely, mean runs hits safe when pinches, be wilt in time I think that Thurston another Joe Bush " is play"How about Barrett, who ing short et op" to learn about fieldHaving much ing hie new position, Barrett Isn t coming a finished player, but he along rapidly. He was a pitcher when Ornnie Mack tried him several year ago. Mark thought h would make a escatbie Inflekler, but when a hard grounder struck him In the faceIn Barthe rett decided that he belonged outfield. He was playing sn outfield International in the league position when Comlsfcsy bought him last year, But we shifted him to shortstop to the benefit of hlf great batting power, and now he looks like a fixture." Archdeacon has heea suffering with stomach oomplaint lately and may have to rest a bit longer," continued the manager of the White box. "He blossomed out ail of a sudden as the teams leading hitter I seldom have seen Archdeacon s equal as a He is one of the fast-espeed marvel. men between the plate and flrd. base ever developed in the majors He beats out many bunts and infield drives, yet he can hit the bail as hard as the average when he feels like H. He Is a brilliant center field-a- r, too. and Is easy to manage. Kamm s work at third base has been fine, but he hasnt hit the bail as well as he did when be first came to the Sox from the Coast league. Kalk, on the other hand, has imso much with the stick that proved he Is leading the American league MostlL too, is playing better than ever. "We have several promising pitchers, including Connolly and Lyons, catcher in Crouse, and a Rav who Is tearing the work with x k. If finish somewhere Behai the In the first division Hi have to be satisfied, but we are not ready to concede the pennant to the Yankees or any other team " According to Evera, Frank Chance will not return to the White Sox as manager. Chance, owing to ill health, has been advised hy his physicians to give up baseball and live permanently in California. citizens ly will be asked tomorrow of at leat twentv more ttvenvtila, State a Attorney har-In- 1 is ona Mra Shank la charged with avaolt and "tarring and featherings testiSonsationad and huiuoi-uujmony marked the brief hearing. Th victim, M3w Gmndon. tojd the court of the assault tn a gripping n&rra live The male witmH f the with Mrs Shank, made light tngthr entire affair and laughed outright at the piteous pleading of Mir Grandon fur redress GIRL TELLS STORY. They beat me and boat me " Mum Grandon ud punctuating her testimony with Mh got down on mv kn and prayed to them luwi Gxl for mercy; but they kept rn They me of aH m riot hen and Mary ponrerl on the tar and rubbed it In with feather.' Her face blot k with bruta and Ikt irmit and ahouldew burned whor the Mi hot tar had trnin don presented livid prird proof of the terrt- bin experience she underwent lat night That the entire population of ''the village, since the arrival 1h Thursday of the Grandon girl, were willing ami ready To adopt a meads that has now been used to run the girl out of town," was admitted in the testimony of the accused men. Mrs. rihank testified that when she saw her husband in a buggy the road early yesterday evening with the arm of the Grandon girl about him, she could stand it no longer " READY FOR ANYTHING." I went out after her with a wick," she said "The men Just collected It seemed 4hey were ready for anything, 1 and know I was I found her about An hour later, walking on the road Rhe shook her fist at me right In my verv noand I hit her over the head with the stick Rhe aaked me to fight like a woman, and 1 thew the stlok , trtpd ln 1 1 et rf M i j ahg j away We fought 1 with our hands for a long time and gut the bettor of her The men just stood around and Australian Sensation watched. It was I who poured tar on her, and It was l who put the feathers on What Wimbledon Plans Aphe got last night was what was coming to hsr " men admit arrested Lash of the pearance in America. that he was In the mob Not one would admit, however, that he touched the woman Where the tar and (Miner feathers came from Is a mystery .Mw Orandon testified that Mre. By Tribune ftpeeial Sport Service. NTJW YORK, July 26 Norman K. the men to' beat her Shn k urgeddeclared morC Sh that the woman Brookes is roralrig here this season inmiMa, as well as tar threw after all The ' When automobiles veteran, went past us h Mary would hoBer, Turn who created a sensation recently by wild, on the light. and look her over, defeating Francis T. Hunter at WimOh! They sh isn t very pretty now moulted me hs I, have never been in- bledon. has changed his mind about , returning to Australia at once, and sulted before will sail for the United States with INTENDED A BEATING. Jutrt. how the plans were bud for the American Olympic players when were men the latter leave Cherbourg July J6. far as the the ajattulL concerned was not rvaied tonight Such was the sews contained in a Mrs Shank declared that she just letter received from the famous tenintended to beat the girl up and UvU untH the tar and feathers were placed nis star at the office of the United Niforrt her she hod no Idea of applying states Lawn Tennis association. th: 5.Jwh Whether h JMl th. loros Of FSThsn. she Australian Davis cup players ami "I saw my hurtand in the tluUHw in one or more of their of tlra woman I saw our home broken compel I saw myself, a good wife, dis- - UrnaUonal cup tics us not known He rnaY confine himself to open tourna- gra-eend fused them "The one gentleman in the crowd " merit play and leave the Davis cup burden entirely to me teem sent hre In Mis referred to ths testimony rf Grind on, toved to be Jamc Whtp, a by th Australian, association who lives a stfmrt distance trson. O Kara Wood, tkhiesinger and Kahus buL in view of the unimprss- from the m ene of the aoaulL Performances of the Daws cup Wilp, who did not mnar at the1' members here to date. It kt not afmen this hearing, tkl new,fpap that he had reaped ths aipot, uely that th veteran wifi get into being attracted by ths girl s nrreama the ties as a doubles player, if not Just as the feathers were being ap- in singles. Brookes, despite the fact that he was not namd by the Ausplied I saw her standing there, miser- tralian association, is eligible for DaA " able, crying add scantily clad TThip vis cup competition this year challenging team has the privilege' of arid f thought to myself, 8h said ' its few I a until took her altering is imtnotxdv 8 darling so personnel days m 5fv rife and h a ere up ak night before the date set for the matches round cleaning the tar and feathers from of Itany particular may be that the slowness of her body and doctoring the bruises." and'O'Hara W ood In approaoh-in- r WAS REAL FLAPPER. their true form, and the serious Of the history of the Grandon girls threat of the French team to replace activities since her arrival Thursday the Australians as opponents of the in MerHv1lIe much testimony was cupholders in the challenge round, to do with given by the aomwed men at the hear- has had something ing Brookes' decision to Join his country'tales of how she demoralised the men here. Brookes s appearance in nuts uhne population of the village, some of our leading Invitation tournayoung and oW. with her bobbed hair ments and championships will lend and f1afpcrtsh wavs, were sworn to additional interest to a brilliant oourt season. by each of the vmde defendants. testified that five Witness brought the crowd to theplaos where MIka Orandon and her two Findings in Tests Tend fnonds were walking A man, who Is to Discredit Old Beliefs Hind to be an and a woman. Mien Mabel Milk acquaintances of Mi Granrinn, wore with the victim A severe BOSTON, Mhm , July 25 when she was attack ad The pair has been handed to the idea, long were told to get out of towa" by tA jolt as a commonplace in medical angry moa and they have not been accepted and athletic circles, that severe athseen or heard of sinoa. In letic training and participation competition, especially in long races, was "hard on the heart" and tended to cause permanent enlargement of that organ The staff of the Feter Brent Brigham hospital have just polished the results of their studies, made cn American and Canadian youths AmerX1u took part in the ican marathon. , The youths had all been training for some months immediately preceding the race, and most of them had prosperity may be determined by the been running be doing plankton Herring on the Atlantic side of Ire- from five to fifteen or more n ears - It land and of Nova bcotia are larger was found that the heart sise of the than in the interior waters on the men was normal, and the Umg ca- other side The warmer the water pacity likewise was apparently unthe saltier the sea. and the greater affected Immediately after the race the amount of oxygen in the water it seems that there was a temporary the faster grow the fish But the oxy- decrease in heart sixe, gradually regen in the water increase with the turning to normal in about one day. atmospheric pressure, so the growth o( the voung herring varies with the Columbus barometer. That is why the biologists of the Monument of marine research stations Woods Completed h the Atlantic and La Jolla on Hoi th Piuifir are continually analysing NEW YORK, Julv K Flana have the Hea water taking the temperature been completed for the proposed of the ovan and patiently counting monument to Christopher the jppxia and diatoms with the Columbus to stand on Torrecllla microscope in Banto ilKmlngo harbor, it point, was announced tonigh-- at a dinner PIONEERS ENTERTAINED. in honor of William . K Ihjllman reSpecial to Tic Trtmue. ceiver general of custom for banto FAIR VI WW, Julv ?5 The Relief Ikmingo, who conceived the memorial xUti v of the North and etnuth wards and has been largely responsible for joined m a program Wednesday In the plan. horxr of the pioneers. The following The mouikment. in the form of program wan given tomb, topped by a lighthouse, 130 feet on talk pioneer hbdher than the Eiffel tower, will100he Singing invocation, I life Mrs Miner, quartet. edecbuilt at an etimated cot of tZ Miss Anna Pehrpon. ooO The money is to be raided undr tiin. reading Je&nle iTRrhett, talk j lano solo Ms plan approved bv the Fan mert vion pioneer, Mrs John I. Bench the unlon in twentv-on- e coi'nr lin diet. Neiia Norman and Adrel two Americas The I nited Maes is k Norman, read ng Mrs Nellie to contribute $40 (HmI expected Many pioneers were in attendance at g Storm said after the he men held, charged with dl in the rum. are ail leading it William I gt Reretre n anto-moMl- es Science Continues Research of Oceans Depths as Source of Food Supply for Mankind The city man has the advantage the country man in that be can of ex- pand his business perpendicularly Our city "squares have become cubes, but the farmer lives in like all his ancestor. When he buys an acre of land ho only gets an acre area; but when the city man buys an acre he piles story on story tiU he gets ten or twenty acres of floor space out of 1L The forester, it lx true, can raise his foliage factory to the height of a house, but then the shaded space beneath becomes Flat-lan- useless. y Plans for But in part of the uorld thcs limitations on life do not apply, and this Is the greater part of the earth a in fact, 71 per icnt of it. for and water unlike soil, its trunspaj-ciutho sunlight, whUh supplies; tin vital to all vegetation, an peneenerg trate the ocean lo the depth of a thousand feet or mon. which beats the skyscraper by far Think of having a garden measuring a thousand feet by a thousand feet full of grew And what a paitun ing vegetation1 that would makt fur ltck able to feed off every cubic, foot of it JSuch garden plots and such Eddie Roush to Tour there are in the sea. but so tar man has done nothing in the wa of His control slops Europe With New York cultivating thni Th Woman Presides Over with the shore modern man CRACK TRAIN DERAILED. e CINCINNATI. Ohio, July 25 merely hunts m the mean as his anGotham Homicide Court Tenn , July 25 The MWNfinTJR, Roush, star centerfieldrr of the cestors did in the forest, uns stemati limited, crack passenger Reds, will make the trip to Kurope caiiy, wasteful, often disastrous!, Panama For the first 1STEW YORK, July 25 train of the Illinois Central railroad, With the Giants next fall to pUvy for destroying what he desires. was derailed near Obion, Tenn , late time In the history of the cUy. a Man has hardly yet begun to them in their series with the White IT. Vorriv Jeon womao the entire train, Magistrate ths conservation of the wild life tonight. Although Box of ths American league, which of the locomotive, today presided in homicide court. She has been undertaken for charity, says of the sea, still less its cultivation. with the exception of none three of cases, holding one the the left rails, passengers disposed a New York special dispatch to the These are questions for the future CioeSnnaU Enquirer. But this future is rapidlv coming, feu was serinudv injured, Che train dis- wan for the grand Jury and dismissing Roush was invited today by Man- each year ths fishing craft have to go patcher at Yukon, Ky told the Asso- two others. and ciated Press over the telephone. One Sis indicated after the sesskm that ager John MoGraw of the Giants and farther and farther ont to sea haul. man and (me woman, whose nsmee she was being considered as the suc- -i he will be the only member of the use more power in getting their W. Olvany, r to Judge George iiwss were now could not be can learned, slightly team who is not at present on the British trawlers get only chieftain, recently elected Tamtnan about half their fish from the North Injured, the dligstfcher said Giant staff. of court sesjvions. the in to the forced general are trawl sea, and they Norris has been sitting IS PESSIMISTIC. CANFIELD of the Faro islands and IceMsgtotrat hanks Best Sticker land It takes eight to leu tons of MIATXTN. W3a, Jtfy 25 ds of In the women's and children court. coal to catch a ton of fish, and the rtacav have been liberally sown in of Malad Ball Outfit trawler gets on the average onlv about government since 1XX). Dr V A j. cents pound for it at the port president of Carroll college to-ofktoarn Waukesha, Before the war a British declared tn. an add.egM 8pctel te The Tribun. trawler of 123 feet in length cud b night before the annual alleged today against The tat11; cf indhtments MALAD, Idaho July 2s In fcan phvfdcian? of the Malad club of the run profitably on less than $2t 0w)00 a he Christian Uorrmerci il Traveler of "diploma mill ting average It costs some $0 Toda o The whole hiMtorv if gov- - Francisco after having been taken to America league, based on the first year nett are twice the prewar miri'RiH from the beginning of time to tftffk a few' dAVS ago bv Superior ten league contests, which eotnpleted Roche for not taking t 178 ore of (xpenrnent and fail ir " Judge Michaelsooner orteiuilf of the schedule, are en fol- - P T The herring fishing cf Gnat Britain he said The indictments from 17X to 1H0 ore f de- - this action lowv Harding, 48k, Glcrd, 42i, In war b hit the .418. Davie. 384. Nielsen, 312. haw ben boldest ohpnient nnl urke, but rm 1 (itwere voted several days ago. , Jom-evurth via.i the nearly lbU iiniuftry .2!H. riav I arson, are being rapidly thi very 2'6, Morris, 2tu, 000,000 a jeur and emplovcd sum Knudeon, .243, Williams, Ho Thomas, t0 U00 than 2 2 0 0O bar.185. peiple Mre d rels of pu.kled h mug mre export GEBHARD BOHN DEAD. But 70 ptr tent of tin s txport ST XUU Minn, Julv 2.Gbhard Defeat "Leans in went to nutria and 2o prr cent St Paul manufacturer, who the German, and now the Russians Bohn A DaSy Lesson tnSfanners for rove from a petmilecn immigrant boy Feature Tilt Malad have locked thtr doors and the Ger Children mans have scant money to ps Poland to wevlth thro gh a refrigerator ti'dnv at a hospital BURGESS' and the United States base curtail d entton died late gpffcisl to The Tribonff BY GELETT n Rochester Mann afer a king MALAD, Idaho, July 25 An inter- the market t putting duties on un H Tin Chlart ltftW. invented the Bohn tOearrtcfct: British Uonsequeatlv of feature ported herring the Pioneer celebraesting itot which is used on tion In Malad yesterday was the ball fishers are asking govermu nt aid and tyctfei tgAaont dining cars in against foreign fish, a sad virtually all rtiltnai game between the fats and th protection for widow and two sons the an industry that ho country captained by R. J Harding situation lean,' and Jake Richards, respectively tao maintained itv proud.iX) udipindeme and three daughters survive. vearn. enthusiastic fans and former baseball and supremat for In 1424 th herring migrated in. mass stars. The fats were on the Ions THREE DEAD IN CRASH. from the Bn'tlc t th Noith sea for score. end of a GAUA'P. N M, July 25 Three some mysterious reawm and this sud killed and one seriously den shift of the shoals built up the pc sons were when an automobile ran off British sea power and mad Germany injured a bndgr into a tout creek fifty feet Exhibition Games and Russia dependent upon British below near Rnardman Place, one mile fishermen. We may hop that even- from here early today Thomas lane R. 8. & tually the financial embarrassments At IsdlftBaooitaand Jamee Wood and Mrs A T 4 New Twk Aawimi 0 3 and the present impediments to of a Gallup hotel, rietrewi So tat 14 17 prof 0 lsdtKmapetlK aseocfatleo mav be removed or readjusted, Batterfea PtpCriM, Mamatu. Rath, Hoff hut until we learn more about cean were killed a a ted Benbough, Eher, Ropaquet and M we shall not be able to make full BACK FROM CALIFORNIA. U tiler. un of th harvests of the aea. We hav token the first step when we gpk444. 1LAN FOR CONVENTION. FAIRVXF7W re is & reaaon for th realise July 25 Mra A. that NEW YORK? July 25.- - Members of such a migration, even though we C3rrteteren and ohHdren have' reOrof council the supreme the Loyal turned from a ix weeks visit to the must admit that it remains "mysteri der of Moose today made final prepa- ous If we open up the stomach of California beaches. anrations for the order's thirty-sixta herring we may find it contains as s REUTRN TO FAIRVIEW. nual convention, which opens here many aa fiO.OOO eopepoda. The BITING FINGER NAILS. Monday. aro primitive crustaceans that gprets! t Th Triton Secretary of Labor James orof (RctHfed by Kcweit Irene fek 2S.) director on the Devts, feed look like tiny shrimps. They j. called the council general Kra. and Mr. FAIRVTKW, July into session the minute plant forms known 2 MAntiel Ailrd and der, wtoo have family, I could tell you nvful talcs Oh, to complete the convention plana Se- thick called "plankton In Idaho and Sait lake for lection of next years convention. It that in scooped up in a tow neL There resided years, have returned to this Of Goops who bite their finger was stated, would be stubbornly con- are 250 diatoms to one copepod. Now twelve nails! tested. Ban Francisco, Los Angeles, the diatoms are extremely sensitive city to make their hocus. Boston and Philadelphia have entered to changes In the composition of the When they were older, they TOURING FARK. , sea water, its aikolihity and the perbids. fen Th Triton were so lime it contains. centage of ssJt-aFATRVTTTWV July 25. Mr. and Mr DRY CHIEF TRANSFERRED. And, of course, the growth of all such John Chrifttenpen and daughter, AHch Ashamed they never dared to WASHINGTON, depends upon the amount July 25. Transferof vegetation show of sunahin that falls upon the sea left Tuesday for a trip to YeHtrwstone of A. K. Harris, divisional chief the California, Nevada and Hawaiian and the depth to which it penetrates park. Their fingers, they were so untem swarm the when prohibition forces, with headquarters The diatoms VISITING IN SALT LAKE. come , at Law Angeles, to the Illinois district perature gets righL With them them sightly. Th 10 Triton. Special was announced today at headquarters ths copepods that browse upon FAmvrEW. July 25 tArgyfo Fehr-so- n Dont bite your nails, not even here. JfMtnes Robb of the Los Angeles The fish eat the copepods and we eat left this morning for a two weeks office wtU act as divisional chief for the fish; so our Friday dinners de slightly l the time being. (pend upon the diatoms and nations: visit In Balt lake. first-cla- ss sur-Lu- , pas-ture- s eon-aid- er -- Harding Gan-ficn- mt I Utah-ldah- Grafted Potatoes Grow on Branches Like Fruit, Instead of Underground ( Science Service Correspondence ) PARIS, July 25 Grafting, a procedure quite common tn tree culture, has been applied to vegetables and flowers by a French botanist who has by this method increased the six and yield, created new species, prolonged the life of plants and Intensified the perfume Fats at 1n-- y n rfrgr , - ... nm-mere- e . T1w- -- h copc-pod- sea-sou- nd Profeanr Dtnld has also grafted tomato branches and bella donna on potato vinea and potato stems on egg plants snd tomato vinea Potatoes, of course, are sanplv swollen stems, or tubers, which develop underground. He was curious as to wtiat would happen when he grafted a potato stem on another plant. Would tubers continue to be produced ? Yes. they were; but not underground. Ijarge, beautiful tubers hung from the branches Uke fruit. These aerial tubers, when planted, yielded a new kind cf underground potatoes, wbidt were more resistant and developed mere quickly than those of which they were the off'ipring. A still more fantastic discovery was the finding, among these second hybrids, of three plants which bora aerial xnd subterranean tubers at the same tuna These tubers, being harvested and planted, yielded a stable new variety, rather late in developing, but delicious in flavor, extra large In vise and very hardy. One of the mot recent experiments is the double grafting of belladonna and tomato Upon a tomato stem, a prig of belladonna was grafted, and then upon the latter again a tomato stem. It was found that the belladonna plant had by this operation hwt its property of producing atrapin poison which is normally found in all parts of the belladonna plant. . A senes of experiments with chrysanthemums and other flowers showed that grafting caused flowers tn many instances to yield a more pungent perfume, a fact of great Importance to the perfume manufacturers of South France. Numerous trials with other plants are now being made, of which the results have not yet been an- of flow era Professor Lodee Daniel of the University of Rennes has performed grafting operations on cabbage, lettuce, beans, potatoes, tomatoes and various flowers. Other botanists who have examined his results concede that the ton'aslic experiments made by Processor Daniel hold much pi action! for the market garden r , One of the Grst attempts toads by Profeanor Iamel was to graft ths LI k Belgian been on a large white S if sons bean. From this combination ; Unt he obtained seeda of an entirely aerw variety of beans which has remained fixed. He took a bitter variety of cabbage u refit for food, but whirl) resists frosts and grafted on it a variety that has a good flavor but suooumbo easily to ooki. The seeds of the hybrid yielded a new variety that tastes good and resists cold Some of his most sensational grafts were made on the family Solanaoeas, to which belong such useful plants as potatoes, tomatoes, tobacco and egg plant. He grafted sections of eggplant on tomato vines. First the grafts produced lha regular ovloid eggplant fruit and later on the same branch yielded other fruit resembling that ef tomatoes. Finally a true hybrid, nounced. round in shape, was crtit&lned. ' I eneration NEW STONE AGE RELICS DISCOVERED IN EGYPT (Srience Service Correspondence archaeology and Journalism for the past two years, will have to soon share honors with earlier and less spectacular monarch and even with unnamed commoners of the age of chipped flints, according to present Sir Flinders Petrie, the indication world s foremost Egyptologist, tells of a number of Interesting, even startling. developments of recent date In fhe Nile country. In the firt place, back of all the. ana dynasties of pyramid-bundin- g g Pharaohs, Egypt, like Europe, had a stone age Flint weapons and household pottery and ornaments have been turning up for some time In the deeper excavations, but the latest finds have been of a pat- tomb-carvin- American Contendere Are Beaten Off Marks in Paris Olympic Games. By TViben. Cpecial Sport Service. NEW TORK. July Herbert Reed, epoetin oritkvenye: The trouble with some at our American run- ners 1 that they are not so liberal about learnln from others. Both tn the last Otymplaa and the preaent they were beaten aff the marks, which is the last thin expected of an American sprinter, who haa always been aupposed to know more1 about the atart than th flyer of any other nation. It waa pointed out some time ago that while Great- BrHaia had not an outstda chance to win tha fame, there wet, danger apeta tn the team. We have sees mm ef thee, dealer spots. Aa It generally turns oat. the strong English runners rut Into the Americana harder as a rule than into any other competitors. They know bow to run tn England, which accounts for ths fact that Albert Hill Is still a dangerous runner sen though nearly 4 years of ago. The Britons ran with characteristic d generalship in the 800 meters. sacrificing himself to make the hot and bring along Lowe. They sre clover indeed at that sort of thing, and it appeal that th Americans were caught Very much asleep. When it was announced that a heavy program had been laid out for Nurmi, the Flan, and that It was considered too much for him, some of the old timers laughed, and harked back to the days of "Ion" Myers, who was Indeed an endurance king. Myers waa born at Richmond, Va , In 18t&, and died In 18HA Hi running career was the marvel of the time,' and remain a marvel for that matter. At the national championships of 1S40 he raa teven times In one day and won th And oundred, the furlong, th quarter e championships. Th followin Canadian week he tha competed ing rechampionships at Montreal and same victories in the puted his events, thus winning eight nations) has championships In one year. There FurBeen no such performance since. of stiff thermore. Myers had- plenty 8tal-lar- half-mil- opposition. In the emirs of th period that Mers competed aa aa amateur he won dourteen American, ten Canadian British championships. No before his time or since' ha rac shown such remarkable Ing ability, and while nearly an hla records hava been surpassed. It must be remembered that the tracks were by no means as good in those days Incidentally, the distances were nothing to him. He ran them all with about equal facility. end tiw-e- n Squadron Off to Meet Round-arid Fliers W tern that dates them as older than the oldest yet found in Egypt. And what is of especial interest, Ahey are of exactly the same pattern as the flints and earthen wares found at Susa, the earliest kingdom in western Asia, and at Solutre in France; and were therefore probably made by toe same race of men This goes hrd with the older theories, which have always assumed that Egypt was always isolated from the rest of the world, and developed its peculiar culture wholly independently Another blow to this idea has been discoveries of records of a Syrian conquest and of two dynasties of feyrlnn kings ruling Egypt, immediately after the building of the grea pyramids One inscription shows a Syrian king (who bore the pleasant name of Khandy) receiving homage from both Asiatic and Egyptian subjects IaUer records show a rare Of kings, presumably from the south, and a disappearance of any reference to It appears therefore Asiatic matters that e.en the earliest days in Egvpt had Mr tie of the iranquHInv th t us to he ascribed to them but that the rich lands of the Nile valley were as tempting to invaders then as they were later ) LONDON, July 25 King Tutankhamen, who has reigned supreme In dark-skinn- U. 8. B. BARRT. July to the Associated (By wireless 'toward the northPress) Steaming west at 20 knots an hour, the deRussell stroyer division. Captain Wilson commanding, on its way to to greet Labrador and Iceland waters fliers the American and assist them on their jump to the wao off American continent, tonight Nov Scotia with th expectation of Halifax by daybreak. making Th voyage thus far has been made In perfect weather with the eea in ' Its calmest mood, but veterans forecast fog before long. According to Information on board, the fliers will hop from Scotland to Horna fjord. Iceland. August 2, snd Th the next day to Reykkjavik next etops will be Ivtgtut. Greenland, and Indian harbor, Labrador, on the seventh. At th Labrador stop th Milwaukee will refuel the plane. It is anticipated that the destroyers will go to their positions between Labrador and Greenland, and poeaibly Iceland. as soon as th flight schedule ta definitely determined. B OH BOARD round-the-wor- ld FAIRVIEW VISITORS. 1 Sp-- ,1 to The Tribene FATRVTEW. July 25 e Alfalfa Crop in West Ravaged by Parasite Th el- WASHINGTON, July falfa IndJBtry in tha irrigated tactions of the west is menaced tqr a widespread and Berlous disease. Reports received here indicate that alfalfa is Wyoming and dying In Colorado, rortham Near Mexico aa a remit of the attack of a tiny wormlike parasite. This alfalfa trouble has also been reported in the past fnofo Washington, Oregon. Idaho and California. of the total alfalfa About produced in this countryIk is grown this crop under Irrigation, and it Which seems to be especially threatened Irrigation water probably carries the parasites from one plant to another sad so sids in their spread. one-thi- VISITING PARENTS. to The Tribvas. Nellie FORVTF7W, July 23 Ml SundwaU, a nurse of the Holy Cross hospital in Sait Lake, ta spending two 1 Hr. and Mrs R. Kehring ef Helper are guests of weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter SundwalL Jr. Mm Andrew Lesson. C S uorexa. giUIlfflB T Tell. Telm, Okie, TUeel. Smith, A Beawey. Bingham. Georg y. Beeaoe, Penmen. . jibvp suits nxnv . Ltek light A TiectieeJeme Doffr ter permeal leromp. nr. to reeerer WTtO to bare bee iwNvod while slWtd jurR paawnger. plaintiff wa by AimWj k. Batewst. a wlntf 1 Ut Mt Samara. guarUtaa, m recover company, Fidelity A Gaarantr on hood of Ora Balaam Harris, nicmcr fuarfmn K u Leads Mm M4 U. mara A my Unvt.r A N cwsra vs. Haris tome a400 MwriT Tt5mas 01 Ov,-en- . . Gar-lic- Ed-di- W ing and attractive forests, and dead tress will soon be seen along the roada The second pest Is the saw fly, which attacks the lodgepole pine. This tnsset also is a defoliator, killing the leaves by chewing out the soft green parts and leaving a dead are Its operations shell behind spreading through the foreat along the road from the entrance at West Yellowstone. Mont.? and will be especially in evidence next season, when many trees will be dead As a means of keeping the epidemics in temporary check, spraying apparatus has been borrowed from the U. S forest service, and poison be used for a distance sprays of 1000 feet In either direction from the roads through the diseased areas. this is recognised by the However, park service authorities as only a relief and not a cure. For permanent results more thorough measures, going wherever the peats have migrated. wtU have to be undertaken as soon as euf Relent funds shall have been obtained. (By Science Service.) YELLOWSTONE PARK, - WfA, July 25. Th great forests of Yelone of tbs lowstone nationaL-par- k, chief glories of this wonderful region, are seriously endangered by the inonslaught of two timber-killin- g sect pests. So far their ravages have been confined to areas so located that th beauty of the perk has tot been greatly marred, but unelss vigorous and thorough measures are soon taken against them they will do Irreparable damage. The first and probably more serious of hee pests Is the spruce bud worm, which is at work in the Camp Roosevelt region. In the northeastern part of the park. The larva of this insect feeds on the buds and leaves of spruce and fir trees, stripping them naked and leaving them to die its area of damage Is mpidiy eating into ons of the most Interest n. A p. Salt IaVff Hardware wnptBf goods sold Uaoffoa to reepyev IlKkAH ' open Kraaeth M Paw, hytUa IP MI divorce P Utley tv LeRoy Utley, Arvetls fr forw r J MBTTD. BUTLDrXG YEUITT8 R. HM g mrae Ago Lnei L. IBcham, ator -- I &iX ESTATE DIPHDa WARRANTY Snmmera to A flelter, lot A block 4k, Sou Mix t Park t J C Kartekssr, Tvorano B A d 4A block 1. Blair lou 4ft L C Lets ambdltn fc V frllDvt b U E. renew. P'et o .Mfholiian to (3. letivti'' toMlTtlot IS. btork 1. rrenkli Georg lot I N sloe Smith to r 1. rllxf. C 1 tooths nertioo 2S, e resite I J Wit.te, H b 8.1b. ar to tat A.. tot S. btort 18. flw-eeStesto.- to , f. K.XT,WooAraff A. re Wet srr IT. ti Wort lot B. V. Pert to W X Aekwltk. 1 IS. eostb, nf errtirt tosatbi, rant 1 reet Uiliaa H. roe ta WllaH Boat, tot Work IVT. pUt D A, K iws!, of ir L Parte to M Aartretr G. I 1 IX AaA.,-- tot A, block AS. plat D .... M. WaleK Joke Gltaaer to Jaa tot . ktork SA, put D Andre. Etociea to Joke B. Ttfltf, ktork IT. fire-.ertot pl.t A. X. A. Jtrae ta H. B. Rleara. tot D B 1. Work M, put B te Jeeper Ptotrber, A. Merkel Jr . tot S. Mere 0. put D . . . . N 1 Itotie te block X B. C. put B Bmrt, tot Loka A Tntot Itoffmek Bistker root pan, to X. Bootoo. tot 4 ead ft. ft. Week Nartb CotuaiW. esbdl- - Street Regent SALT LAKE eUioe D. c. Bebineoa to Bosftrfl, 4 aecttoe (fit toxaahtp port 1 weat raaa aooth. Blllpeter. B. D. 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