OCR Text |
Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS. RANDOLPH, UTAH ssmt fuses SEAR! HY OB, BACEM Merciful Heavens, how my bmett; hurts ia the morning 1 Its a3 due to aa. over-abun- NEWHOUSE HOTEL d- ance of that poison called uric acid. The kidneys are not able to get rid of 'l Such conit ditions 400 ' you can readily ROOMS overcome, and prolong life by taking Anuric can be obtained (anti-uric-acid- WST MODERN BOTE WEST OF CfflCAGO ,2 J" k -- ;Imm Wtk Popular M-(- he rtnm Priced Code Shop Hadonrta fe store, in tablet form. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog, you suffer from back-- 1 $2.50 ht unm $2.00; Tw.m,$3.00 6Kn 52.50; ,S!WA B4 Ok tmm $3.00; 75 ana, Twe Utah, Idaho, Tw.roi$150 Tw $4.00; Twt aid Diaim Wjoain, ftrum $5.00 Room disturbed two or three times at night get Dr. Pierces Anuric, ftl will put new life into your kidneys' and your entire system. Send Dr.i Pierces Invalids Hotel, Buffalo,! N. Y., ten cents for trial package. San Francisco, Calif. I have used Dr. Pierces remedies in my family for fifteen years and have found on every occasion that they gave satisfactory results. Recently I was troubled with my kidneys and my back constantly pained me. I took three packages of Dr. Pierces Anuric Tablets which removed all pain and cleared up conditions. I advise every one to give Dr. Pierces remedies a fair trial. Mas. E. Eve, 422 Brannon Street. people QUEENS, with all their fabled wealth, never had more than is here for your selection. Our reasonable prices ease the way. BOYD JEWELERS BOYD PARK. BLDG 166 MAIN r STREET Francis c. LuKe ly across the sward at his tennis home, the Germantown Cricket club of Philadelphia, certainly did not resemble the tense, brilliant fighter of the Forest Hills court When 5ALTl7Ai(EClTY.UTAH iri If you want biff wages learn viHiilbV barber ibbi WAHTrn trade- - Many small towns need barbers: good opportunities' open formes overdraft age. Barbers in army have Get prepared good as officers commission. in few weeks. fall or write. Moler Barber College, 43 S. West Temple St.. Salt Lake City. ARTIFICIAL UMBS FIT WELL ARTIFICIAL LIMB CO. Write for catalog. 196 W. Third South. Salt Lake City CLEANERS AND DYERS UAIJTY svpvirp OTHES INSURED WORK GUARANTEED We pay return postage. Price list on request. MYERS CLEANERS AND DYERS 114.116 East Broadway Salt Lake City MONUMENTS STANDARD MARBLE AND GRANITE CO. Write for eatalog. m W. Broadway, Salt Lake. TYPEWRITERS Distributors Corona Portable and RoyaL Ail other makes sold, repaired and exchanged. Utah Typewriter Exchange Co. Salt Lake FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS MORRIS FLORAL CO. Salt Lake City. M East Second South Street. . ART EMBROIDERY CO. Expert Embroidering on Ladies Apparel, etc. Out town business solicited. Room 301 Brooks Arcade RUBBER STAMPS AND STENCILS Seals and Ear Tags also manufactured. Send for samples, prices, etc. SALT LAKE STAMP CO. 5 West Broadway, Salt Lake City, Utah. $ALT LAKE BUSINESS COLLEGE Save lodging; work after school; enroll anytime iff Atuilopi, NTS 300 percent; a pkg. Everybody buys. Dodge Bros. Salt Lake. $1 Free. " CREAM BOUGHT Beat prices. Western Creamery Co. 44 W. 4th So. ENGLISH OAK MOST DURABLE Specimens Survive ef It Have Been Known to Preservation for Centuries. In Good The durability of English oak Is the greatest of any known forest timber, discoveries having been made that It is preserved almost as well under water through centuries as It Is When shielded by roofs In ancient castles. Professor Burnett of London possessed a piece of English oak from King Johns palace at Eltham, perfectly sound and strong, which can be raced back for more than five hundred years. The oaken shrine of Edward the Confessor Is more than eight hundred years old. One of the oaken coronation chairs In Westminster abbey has been there for more than five centuries. In Gloucester cathedral there are thirty-on- e stalls of rich tabernacle work executed In oak in the reign of Edward III, and beautifully perfect When the foundations of the old Savoy palace In London, built 700 years previously, were torn down, the piles, many of which were of oak, were found In a State of perfect soundness. A vessel, found In the river Rother, in Kent, said to date hack to the time of King Alfred, was found to be sound despite the fact that Its oaken keel had been buried in the mud. An oak boat was found near Brigg In an almost perfect condition, despite the fact It was nearly two hundred years old. Detroit News. , : ' The Story of SHellae, The useful shellac is the product ef v insect. As soon as It emerges into ie world, the insect looks around for suitable place to commence opera-on- s which consists of thrusting Its ak into the trunk of a tree on which was born. In this manner It ab-ira quantity of the sap which is ;uded from the pores of Its body un-- I it is completely covered. The ln- ets are scraped from the surface of tree trunk and then treated and eaned until the shellac pf commerce the result. ie i ache, dizzy spells,) or twinges and pains of lumbago,) rheumatism or gout; or sleep isi pm, $4.00 Nerada Thill ). at almost any drug lotcfojt Sketch announcement of Its selections for the American tennis team to participate in the Davis cup matches In Auckland, New Zealand, In December has been A WT A made by the United States Lawn I 4 L. I Tennis association, through George VOTfSoai T. Adee, member of the cup com-M mlttee as follows : William T. Til- I den n, world's singles champion; William M. Johnston, R. N. Wil liams n, and Samuel Hardy, captain. Hardy was chosen because of his proved generalship and .. knowledge of the game. While Hardy is being sent as a playing captain, it Is hardly likely he will participate," Mr. Adee said. With the singles champion, the doubles champions, and Hardy we believe the Davis cup will be brought back to this country. Well, what of It? may ask the baseball fan or the devotee of boxing or the enthusiast who thrills over the thoroughbred a good deal. In a decade the popular interest in tennis has Increased amazingly. Take a look at any one of the courts to be seen all over the country. The largest clubs are taxed to the limit of their facilities to handle the crowds anxious to get a glimpse of leading players In action. The final of the American national championship, despite Intermittent rain, was played before a gallery of 11,000 that overflowed the stands. Verily, the sport Is growing by leaps and bounds, and the Idea that the national championship final may have to be held at the Polo grounds or some other large arena before long, is not at all a joke. To this increasing army of tennis enthusiasts William T. Tllden H Is quite as great as Is Babe Ruth to the fans, and Jack Dempsey to the lovers of boxing and Man o War to the devotees of racing, and there is no question that lie Is great on the tennis court. At the recent Tllden banquet William M. Johnston took occasion to declare that Tilden Is the greatest ' tennis player in the world. Samuel Hardy went further In his estimate, for he declared Tilden to be the greatest player the world ever has known, and he predicted that In another season or two the champion would be even greater than he Is today. Billy Johnston ought to know, for its likely the dethroned national title holder is next best. Johnston stamps Mm, in the opinion of the experts, as not only the greatest of all living tennis players, but perhaps the greatest of. all time. The five sets were scored at n This struggle will go down on the records as the most astounding exhibition of g battle tlvit the tennis, the most courts have ever seen. Up to this time, the famous final of 1916, In which Richard Norris Williams H, defeated Johnston for the championship, had been considered the apex of tennis history. But that great match faded Into comparative InINAL official . y 6-- 1, 1-- 7-- 5-- 7, . . rs w new-fangle- able-bodie- 6-- high-kickin- g Tllden-Johnsto- nerve-rackin- significance. Williams and Johnston played five sets of mechanically perfect tennis. Tllden and Johnston played five sets of Incredible melodrama, with a thrill In every scene, with horrible errors leading suddenly to glorious achievements, with skill and courage and good and evil fortune inextricably mingled, and with a constant stimulus to cheers, groans and actual hysteria, so far as the spectators were concerned. To describe that amazing final as the most significant of all American tennis tournaments, a tournament that unquestionably carried with it the worlds championship, would require the superlative of all the adjectives that the journalism of the game has either used Uj.' or discarded in the past It is enough to say that all future discussions of the Olympian heights of tennis will probably , begin with the question, Were you there when ? and the answer will be either You For the proud posbet I was or "Curses, no. sessors of the affirmative no amplification is necessary. For the sad negatives nothing can be done, for It will never happen again, at least not just that way. Praise for the two aontenders for the American championship of 1920 may be equally divided. There Is plenty for both. Tildens victory was a triumph of supertennis.' a vindication of the game which the best judges have for some time considBut, if Tilden is the greatest tenered invincible. nis player thatever lived, Johnston is the gamest man that ever trod a court. The tennis that Tilden exhibited in the opening set was something that stood on a pinnacle of supremacy,, overwhelming In its magniflcance, a unique display of matchless strength and skill that permitted no resistance, and took thought of nothing but its own perfection. . p In short, Tilden in 1920 has carved out a place all his own In tennis. He went down before Johnston in the final round for the London championship, his only real reverse of the yar, but since that June he has been supreme on the courts,, beattouring the best of all nations in the nament at Wimbledon, after Johnston, our then national champion, had been put out, and carrying on to the title here In September. He confirmed his victory over Johnston by again beating him In the East vs. West matches In Philadelphia. Moreover, he won an even greater battle than the one on the courts by controlling his nerves, which a year ago imposed a handicap on his unquestioned skill. So say the students of the game, the experts who know. Like the science of warfare Itself, the science of every game that partakes of the nature of a between attack and fight is a perpetual see-sadefense. Now the one, now the other rules the play and carries off the highest honors. In the fascinating case of lawn tennis the attack at present seems dominant, as it did 45 years ago when pioneer volleyers were the cocks of the courts, the Renshaws In England and Sears and Dwight in America ; or as it did in 1900, when Whitman and Ward and Davis were our champions, and d their service was too much for visitexperts; or In 1914, ing English ground-strok- e when McLoughlins superb attack flared up Into a glorious moment of supremacy, taking the measures of Brookes and Wilding and then left him. This man Tilden is attack personified, through d He is a long, lanky, his service. specimen, with a strong arm, brains, concentration, and plenty of time for practice all of which has enabled him to develop more kinds of delivery than Christy Mathewson ever showed, including one that for the present, at least is his own. Own your own service is apparently his motto. When Tilden wants to follow his service in, he generally does what other experts generally do ball that drags in the air delivers a and yet gives the striker-ou-t plenty of pace to contend with. But when he feels special need of a point he unexpectedly shoots over a nearly ball that travels like a shell straight under-spi- n and proves the late Euclids contention that a straight line is the shortest distance from one point to another. Moreover, the ball doesnt rise. He doesnt run in behind that ball; why should he? If Its good, the other man Is in luck to get his racket on it, luckier to block It somehow across the net and if It does come back Tilden with his fine, sharply-angle- d driving has a pot shot at either side of the court. This unholy specialty of Tilden, his wickedest service, undoubtedly rules the roost at present. It puts attack ahead of defense at this writing. In fact, some thoughtful devotees, including experts of high authority, are asking whether, under the rules as they stand, the player with the Initial attack, which is to say the server, has not more advantage than is good for the game. If the rules should be changed to curb the server It would not be the first time. But heretofore the changes have been comparatively mild, and successive brigades of ingenious servers have con-- : trived to conform to them and still maintain the Anything further done now would advantage. have to be comparatively radical. Some experts say change the rules; curb the Others take the opposite view. server. The brilliant services which are being developed yearly, says Le Roy, add to the interest of the game and the delight of the spectators. It is up to the players to develop equally brilliant defenses to offset the services. Those who have only seen the great tennis player In action .would probably not recognize him in work-a-dahabiliments, writes William Chenery The tall, somewhat in the New York Times. young man walking slow- stooping, boyish-lookin- ' : y g the International matches were being played in England an English paper announced that Tilden was only twenty years old. Actually he but the mistake Is twenty-sevemight easily be made. He has at times the look of a boy. The sketches herewith reproduced show the British idea of Tilden in action. In many ways he Is a boy. But a man does not fight as grimly as Tilden has fought and still retain untouched the face of youth. Tennis has taken its toll of the chamcircles under pion and Its marks are left Deep the eyes and a habit of almost passionate concentration are the unsought accompaniments of the world championship. Tildens nervous organization Is keyed to a tremendous pitch. And yet when he was asked how he trained, without hesitancy he answered: I try to keep a normal mental attitude. I try to keep my mind right. The staleness of athletes, I think, is due to mental rather than to physical causes. Ty Cobb told me that he trained hard for six weeks and then broke training for a day to prevent staleness. After the interruption he goes back to strict system. I dont break training, but I try in various ways to keep my mental attitude balanced and normal. I stop playing for a day or two when it seems to be necessary, and I look for some diversion. A game of 'bridge, music or the theater afford relief to me. I have not got any system of training except the system which attempts to keep things normal. I go to bed early, but not too early, not much fore eleven, and I sleep as late as I can. I think any drinking hurts the tenuis game, and I find that for me very light smoking is best I am not a born tennis player. I am what you I have tennis player. might call a hand-mad- e worked to learn tennis, and any other youngster who wants to work as hard can learn to play as good or a better game. All through my school and college days I played. Until I reached the university I played successfully. Then I realized that the strokes and the system of play which were good enough for boys were not good enough for the larger competition. So I set about learning a better system. It took me about two full years to get it. I was eighteen and nineteen while this was going on and in the university. I practiced the system I finally learned by a process of elimination. Three things I watched the stroke Itself, the position of my feet and the distribution of the weight of my body. If my feet were placed correctly and my weight was properly distributed and still the ball did not respond, then I knew the stroke Itself must be at fault, and so I worked at that. That was the way I learned the game. I practice now as much as seems to be necessary. If I were to make a rule I should say three sets of tennis a day, four days In the week, would be a good average. 'But when getting ready for a match I train aS much as Is needed. You cannot tell how much that involves. The thing to do is to get your eye focused on the ball. That may come quickly or it may be slower. It may be desirable to play 15 sets in one day and then to stop sharply for a day. It depends on your condition and on how quickly you respond. Tllden Is a nervous, wiry man. As with many who are successful in different ways, he absorbs energy from the crowd. His best game Is played when excitement runs highest I will be perfectly frank and honest he said. I love a crowd. In practice I am no good at all.' 'Half or the kids I play with can beat me. mere children whom I coach In practice. The excitement of a tournament Inspires me and makes my game better. William T. Tilden. n, live);, moves and has his being In the realm of tennis. Not only he thinks about his own game, but also he Is Interested In the national and International recognition of , tennis. ' . The future of tennis Is bright, he said. This country ought to produce more good tennis players than any other nation. There are now hundreds and even thousands of boys between twelve and eighteen years who play real tennis. Thanks to this junior system and to the building of nicipal courts tennis is becoming a truly national game. It is no longer a class game thank God for that. &seline . PETROLEUM JELLY - , cuts, all and sprains skin irritations For bums, Relieves dryness of scalp. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES CHESEBROUGH MPG. CO. Vew York State Street (COMSOUDATtO) Stomach on Strike 20 Years Eatonic Settled It! Eatonic is wonderful, says C. W. Burton. I had been a sufferer from stomach trouble for 20 years and now I am well. Eatonic gets right after the cause of stomach troubles by taking up and carrying out the acidity and gases and of course, when the cause is removed, the sufferer gets well. If you have sourness, belching, indigestion, food repeating oijy; any other stomach trouble, take: Eatonic tablets after each meal and find relief. Big box costs only a trifle with your druggists guarantee. Comfort Babys Skin With Cuticura Soap And Fragrant Talcum Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c,Takmn 25c. FRECKLES POSITIVELY REMOVED by Dr. Berry Freckle Ointment Your dnjgifiat or mail, 65c. Free book. Dr. C. H. Bor 29 7S Michigan Avenue Chicei Crystal ihe tions. Gazing Craze. Send stamped env. now for free instrucZancigs Studio, Asbury Park. N. J. Her Turn. "A wife should be a helpmeet, re- marked the Thats my view, exactly, replied Mr. dipping. Only the other day I reminded Mrs. Glipping that I washed our flvver the last time, but she didnt take the hint. Birmingham No Great Matter. "No more brandy on plum pudding No matter. Huh? You couldnt eat enough to get kick. Detroit Free Press. Never Tire.. A womans , tongue ia unlike other engine of action." In what way? It has no exhaust. The Order of the Thistle dates from limited to the King of England and 16 knights. 1687 : It is Night and Morning. Have Strong, Healthy Eytt. If they Tire,Itch, Smart or Burn, if Sore, Irritated, Inflamed or Granulated, use Murine often. Soothas, Refreshes. Safe for Inf ant or Adult. At all Druggists. W rite for Free Eye Book. Kata Etc Kenedy I |