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Show I PAGE TWO A generous heart repairi a derous tongue. Homer. 1 H. Howe. There ere 30,000 written chars ten in the Chinese language. h of the policemen of this country or about 5,000 ere occuwork. pied with traffic-contrOne-tent- We are growing serious, and let me tell you that's the very next step to being dull. Addison. It requires as much reflection and wisdom to know what is not to be put in a sermon as what Is. Cecil. No soul is desolate as long as there is a human being to whom it can feel trust and reverence. George Eliot. The greatest affair in life Is the creation of character, and this can be accomplished as well in a cotIan Meluren. tage as m a palace To prepare Joys for those surrounding us, that especially makes us love life. Everyone has not the calling of a scholar, a deep thinker; but everyone knows how to love. lime. Edgar Quinet. IN A LINE OR TWO Women art not really entitled to use crests or mottoes, which are technically battle symbols and war A man can have his owm way if he liberally greases the ways with money. mean bachelor who advises girl to marry and then fjils to a a propose. Last thing in the perfection of the robot is to make it look like a human being. The average man considers other men wise only when they come to him for advice. Equal discourtesy seems to prevail in motoring and going through a revolving door. man is prouder of things he Hunks he can accomplish than of ti ose he really can. What would the ancient Jokes do without the young people who havent heard them? man admires a woman who talks of his future and makes no inquiries as to his past. About the only function where a man knows he will have a good time is often an informal stag A A party. Trouble seems to be a patriotic It makes ttie eyes red. nflliction the hair white and the feelings blue. You can enjoy night life country by taking a three-milalone along a country road. ing, too. The trouble with some men Is that they work too hard trying to get things they don't need and never ought to want. in the walk Excit- Science knows more of the causes of rainfall, but a seasoned farmer can tell pretty accurately whether it is going to rain or not. FOR THE SCRAPBOOK Great Britains merchant marine SOME FACTS is the largest on earth. This year opened with 1,500 gold and gold silver mines being worked in Nevada and California. A deadly poison can be extracted from milk. Stars rotate the sun does. tires wear out faster summer than in winter., owing to dry, gritty pavements. Automobile on their axes Just as in Monrovia Although seldom used, hitching posts and water troughs may be seen in many parts of the South to- Liberia, was named for Picsidcnt Monroe. day. Both primitive and most modem transportation exists in China today side by side. A survey shows that not more than 15 per cent uf the nations Jews are strict obseivcrs of the orthodox Only about 24 meteorites In world museums were seen to fall and traced and recovered. food laws. area within a radius of seven miles of Tcrhngua, Texas, is the second largest producer of quicksilver In the nation. California is An first. By GEORGE A. BARCLAY By Installing special appliances It possible for as many'as six persons, all in different towns, to talk together by telephone. London Answers Magazine. The reflections of a woman are often as satisfactory as those of her It's Golfs Golden Jubilee Being Marked in U.Se Is ODDS AND ENDS Cyclists in France, wiere one man in every six uses a bicycle, pays 60 cents a year in taxes. Buried 4 000 years ago, the skeleton of a whale was dug up in the Zuyder Zee in the Netherlands. collection of rare old gathered during prints, racing the last 30 years In a search through Old barns, dingy basements, stables, been attics, and curio shops has a the P at exhibit placed on Ind. French Lick Springs. The lithographs featuring famous race bones, trotters and pacer oT their owners and $150,000 The aext time yea dab s drive or one Into the rough, blame it ee slice Bibles are circulated in Ceylon In two fellow fas Yonkers, N. Y. different languages, Engtwenty-si- x la a way, for responsible, Theyre in on list the third lish coming point if they hadnt started playing golf of numbers. back bt 1888 and organised the first club In the United States, yoa probIt costs over 1,000,000 pounds a wouldnt be worrying about par. ably their street year to give London All of which means that golf in and 8,500 men are nightly clean-up- , America is celebrating its fiftieth employed on the work. anniversary this year. It started in John Reid's cow pasMailbags to the number of over ture. Reids friend, Robert Lock40,000.000 were handled by the Post a Scot who had learned the hart, total Of this Office last year. only game in his home land had brought forty were lost or stolen. some clubs and balls with him to If delays are dangerous, lawyers must be brave. mirror. Old Racing Prints S peaking of Sports EXTRA NOTES slan- to pralae The way of the world dead saints and to persecute living ones. days, by-go- trainers represents a rare eport collection. Of the 100 prints already bung la the hotels main corridor, about a third bear the signature of Currier and Ives. The collection was gathered through the years by D. Taggart, Jr., noted Thoms sportsman. Out of a half forgotten Indianap-oll- a barn came "The Jockey s Prayer, printed in 1868 by Rae Smith of New York and such choice relics as B' n Herrings Flying a Brook. A treasured possession Is a reproduction of Proctor Knott, winner of the Fntnrlty at Sheepshead Bay in 1888 and an equine favorite of of that day. Name certain t etir the memories of older horse fanciers Include Ryskyks Hambletonian; Billy D., the trotting gelding; Foxhall; Goldsmith Maid with her trainer and driver, Budd Deble; Sidney Dillon and Major Del-mIn their long remembered Memphis match, and Lucy, noted trotting mare of the seventies. A front yard in Ipswich. Mass, gave up a reproduction of a comLady pleted ateeplechase jump. Suffolk, a print of the famous mare by John Smith and dating back to from a 1852, wai a contribution stable group and from an inn near Saratoga came two lithographs, Disputed Heat and Ready for the Trot Diamond Dynasties Bobby Jones, Golf's High Priest, in the Fabulous ZO's. America in 1887. When Christmas came, he gave them to Reid. He outlined the rules and Reid grew enthusiastic. On the first fine day of 1888, they took the clubs and balls to Reids cow pasture, laid out three holes, swung the new clubs and dug the first divots in American history. Reids neighbors grew curious, then Interested. His pasture proved too small, so they moved to a field owned by the local butcher. They played there all summer. When the season closed, Reid and five of his new golfing cronies met and organised a club. Reid was elected president and John B Upham, secretary treasurer. The others Harry O. Kingman M Putnam and Harry Holbrook made up the board of governors. New members Joined the club. Then the city of Yonkers decided to extend its street system into their course and they found refuge In an old apple orchard. Soon they were called the "Old Apple Tree Gang. Two more moves marked the clubs progress, but by 1894 it was established and golf had found a definite plaee for itself in American life. Steddy advances have marked tlie game's history ever since. Today 50 years after Us introduction golf has berome part of our language and golf bails and clubs ate sold in the corner drug store. By 1900 there were 1,000 golf chibs in America and the game was The rubber-coreball changing succeeded the gutta percha ball and gave the average man an opportunity he had been praying for the chance to drive with the best of them. r.i Take Britishers National pride in the feats of our golfers was a natural development. Waller J. Travis made the headlines in 1904 when he won the British amateur championship and PINTS CODE NO. 253 -- vf (Til 8Y ,1AXKFOKT MSTILLF.HIKS, IWOKPOKATEIJ, ? r macr - at 3? BAUIHCC.MD. , ar placed America on a competitive basia with England. The game was given another push forward in 1913 when young Francis Ouimet beat the famous Britisher, Ilarry Yardon XS&A end. BLENCHED Pre-W- '7 i Also available in Rye Frankfort Distilleries, Inc., Louisville and Baltimore BrookUne, Mass. After time-oin the World war the game came back with a bang in the 1920s, Bobby Jones, still a stripling, was the high priest of that fabulous era, winning the National Amateur championship five times, the National Open four times, the British Open, three times and the British Amateur ence before retiring in 1930. From the little cow pasture back In Yonkers, New York, 50 years ago, the game of golf has continued to grow, until today there are more than 6,000 links throughout the United States. ut CLUB HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE VOURSELFI By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter Hello second-generatio- a sharp-brea- everybody: the magic carpet of adventure whisks us away soldier, India under the command of to L. I. Edward Carnell of Valley Stream, r g curve In MPa?.?., t! IlACHERSjg? Adi f -srri Utlwy MrcUl Mkiceti, ex-Briti- sh Some years ago Ted. as a member of the British Indian rmy.. . stationed in the little Indian town of Maymyo, not far from Mandalay, of a in the mountains of Burma. There he made the acquaintance on In India were who Slack Mrs. and Mr. charming English couple a In a bungalow on the edge of the lived The couple business. government once or twice a week jungle, and Ted used to ride over on hi bicycle lor dinner. On one fateful night as Ted rode along nursing a healthy d meal he got a puncture, and appetite for the coming an hour, half about him fixing the tire delayed . Whaa t RENO ' Nay, BOTBL GOLDEN., TnCHrR8AGFrY0 f.I - a, Bid,: SMITHSONIAN Ord.H. CLAY PRQDuctT UTAH FIRE fLAV CQOI)tlCI, PHOTO 2?r 2 FINISHWe hkTrtwTT - P- home-cooke- the Road to Mandalay. On sir. the Slacks, while waiting for their guest, decided to while the time with a little music. Mrs. Slack was an accomplished away violinist and her husband sang with a pleasing voice. The evening wa one of those hot, sticky ones that follow the monsoons, or raina, when the Indian heat and humidity are at their worst, and the window and doori stirin the bungalow were wide open to get whatever breath of air was house to the narrow the As rode leading Ted Jungle path along ring. he heard the strains of Mrs. Slacks violin playing a familiar piece. Ted sang the words to himself as he pedalled along: On the road to Mandalay, Where the fly in fishes play. An the dawn comes up like thunder Outer China cross the bay. Kipling put the strange charm of India into that little piece, and I, for one, never tire of hearing it, but to Ted Carnell it bring back too vividly the night of horror that be spent on the road to Mandalay. POULTRY SILVER-LACE- Everywhare, Stock S2S. C. Ilis Call for IF - YOU PAINT Giv 1 - WYANDOTUsTT LwWrrvSJL C. Well, n k 8tl U far-of- f ,rr I vlan dou 4th Ba Held Captive by a Cobra Slack T and occupation, WN, Mnwtnwih mS ALCOHOL Cur accomplished or Narcotics under desired if emit ,? INSTRUCTION LIKE TO DRAsTsir Writ, for TREATMENT! without 4rm tupennsioa Utermenutaa . Snuth n4jKastdth BUILDING U. Ssk MATERIAL INTERSTATE BRICK U Building and Fir Brick ru o' Hollow Building Mx Pipe Drain Tile Roof aids - - sum s. ilia e.. sai.t mr--,. OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND USED de,k tM cbm adding wek'v lain, w typewriter, S. L. DESK EX . MU g. Sti. M ATHLETIC GOODS ) GREAT WESTERN ATHLETIC CO Unifem, Bat. Clave, "in'iilk v VallykaUa, Athletic skaea, etc. f IDAHO SCHOOL U'PPLT CO- -bl ICE CREAM FREEZERS SODA FOUNTAINS ICC CUil f TER PREEZERS and lee Cnaa ev Bar Fixtures, Stools, Carboaaim, it Ala reconditioned Table imifi AN MOSER-HART- IS Post Office Mud. Ball Us CO. Place MOTORCYCLES HARLEY Lewd Write for HOUSE OP HOPPFR. US K. Used PAETS-Aereaeari- ea ! Motorcycles FARMER ALMANAC llacDONALDS PARMER AUUIU, Pries hr llUMNov Ready. Atlas Print! Btnffcswtea Co. his FURNITURE New S x It earpet rut 111 It : IM 1 coal range 135 04 ; Laed rnokar km act S39.50 ; Uaed uoriebt men I Bargain Baaenent Weatera hue - Salt UP 1VS South State P-- s They Continued to Play and Sing for the Cobra. parentlv, Mr Slack had heard my footsteps, because I noticed that he was changing the words of the song while making an effort to fit them to tlie music. This amused me until I suddenly realized that he was making an eiT rt to tell me something and at the same time continuing with the tune that Mrs Slack played ceaselessly on her violin. I felt myself go pale as the meaning of it all came to me. Ted, Ted, he sang, a cobra has come Into the house, attracted by the music, and sits in a poised position ready to etrike don't come in the door and dont make a sudden move we must continue to play and sing or we are lost but hurry, hurry our nerves are about to break. Well, sir, for a moment Ted stood paralyzed with horror; he knew the cobra was the deadliest of all snakes, but he felt powerless to help his friends. His hand brushed against his holster and he withdrew his revolver and then crept noiselessly around to the open window. Peeking in quietly he saw a huge cobra a few feet away from the Slacks standing on its tail, as they do, swaying to the music. 2fV;Tf Jim Bagby, Mrs Jr- Athletics. Three sits ( brothers are drawing pay chicss in the major leagues this year. They are the Waners. the Fern IN and the Di Maggios Lloyd and I ml Waner do outfield duty for the P ttsburgh Pirates; Wes and Rick Ferrell are pitcher and catcher, resj ectively, for the Washington Senator. Joe Di Maggio, of course, is the Yankees ace outfielder. His brother, Vince, is for the Boston Bees. Remember When The old Cubs won 118 games In a single season and set a record that even the modern New York Yankees havent approached . . . Big league ball players sat on a bench right out in the open, instead of in a dug-ou- t and when club houses were on the field instead of back of the grandstand. . . Jack Britton and Ted Kid Lew,s fought each other 22 times and alw ays drew packed houses because they gave a great fight each time It took three downs to gam five yards in football, the old flying wedge was used and a field goal counted four points . . . Wtucrn Newspaper Union t VACATIO 0t business to play her violin mechanically, with little or her husband drawled out his words. The snake seemed to be watching their slightest movements of lips and arms and was ready to strike to kill at the first sign of alarm. Ted slowly raised his revolver, and, resting It on the wfhdow sill, took careful aim. but a,s he looked along the barrel be saw that one of Mrs. Slacks legs was In the direct line of fire. Mr. Slack sang on his voice quivering with terror, Take a chance, Ted a bullet is nothing to what might happen hurry she cant hold out much longer. Ted aimed and again held the shaking revolver firm with two hands. He followed that swaying deaths head back and forth, and then, as it seemed to sway away from Mrs. Slack, he fired. Teds Bullet Found Its Mark. A A roar' The music Stopped! A scream, and T a heavy body fait to the floor. The smoke from the shot shut out his view for a few seconds-a- nd then, to his horror, as the smoke cteired he saw Mrs Slack prone on the floor, the snake wriggling in it death throes just a few inches from her body. He jumped through the window, and. with a bamboo pole, beat out the remaining life of the cobid. not knowing whether it had bitten Mrs. Slack or if his own buUet held cut her down flaah' deaufomnB svants the run. and they found unconscious Mr. Slack, too. had fainted quietly Ted s bullet had found the snakes head and the cobra had k fe!L Sl3Ck Mr' bm've qUlckly revived. but his aVhe vwfe Ilay m e several days, and when she finally recovered her hair had turned completely white. Will. sir. thats what hapened to Ted Carnell on the road to Mandalay, so you can see why he turns the dial on his radio when someone sings it. ?ruu7,'t ,the nat!Ve Mrs Si I'0 in ins chair Copyright Stone la Oldest Monument Clonfinlough Ireland in on townland of Clonfinlough. with It church, its school its and its little general store, observes a writer in the Boston Herald Wonder! YELLOWSTONE PtyW GLACIER PARK Cooloefl Western d , Expre- - Laa Acre lea. La. Vegav M PmauB Idaba Fall. a . j flDl au optimist," simply goes through self gold bricks. stone are said to record a fight to between the local cross-me- n and the invading loop-mesays one authority, with victory for the former, and are ainular to rock markings to be found In Spain, proving M. - ,. life seB' i Salt Lake Ckyi Hotel Located THE V How Adams Apple Got Name The Adams apple, which is a mov-abl- e protection or enlargement formed on the forepart of the human throat by the thyroid cartilage of the lta name from the mv;. efr.eceived 1,181 when Adarn the forbidden fruit which la to reputed have been an apple, part of It lodged in his throat The legend was confirmed by the fact that Adam apple la much more inent in men than in women. prom UJ' R THOMPSON Muifir. post-offic- e well-suite- Air a finish near-b- Clonfinlough agricultural area Is small, but grows yearly, the young men finding pleasure In annihilating that wicked of destruction, the furze, and making it give place to growths of value, notably potatoes, which seem to the ground here. . The markings of Clonfinlough " fis W.U Service. suburb of the old town of Ireland, contains the most ancient monument to be found in all of Ireland It is the Clonfinlough that there waa intercourse between stone, which Is said to date back to the Spanish and Irish long before Neolithic times, or, in other words, the days when St Patrick brought the Stone age. It is the the blessings of Christianity to pride of the A y BOULDER DAM "Tie National n CU0 HOLLYWOOD Slack continued no tune, as first major h ague game recently he outpitched Red Ruffing of the New York Yankets. He has been m organized baseball since his graduation from high school in 1935 Another prominent major leaguer whose dad saw fast time is Myril Hoag, outfielder of the Yankees. He is the son of Tracy Hoag, who while he spent most of his career in the Coast league, taw some service in the majors. Then theres Dixie Walker, outfielder of the Detroit Tigers, son oi Evart (Dixie) Walker, the old Washington pitcher, Billy Sullivan, Jr., whose father was a White Sox catcher of 30 years ago and a batten male of the great Id Walsh; Bobliv Mattiik, Jr., of the Cubs, son of Chink Matin k of the While Sox and Cards, and Karl Mag-gerJr., of the Boston Bees. His father was with Pittsburgh and 'the ... PHOTOS New SenaatlonaL 8 glossy print U S A S profeaaional enlargement Pe print Se e. Star Fill Company, Tara He Had to Take a Chance and Shoot. t, Francis Ouimet, America's Golf Hero. ADVENTURERS Help. Sang 'HIS business of sons following Ted and I writes, my bicycle, stepped on the veranda, parked seems in their fathers footsteps which ran around the house. Then I stopped and listened to the song, to be picking up so far as organized baseball Is concerned. In the big not wanting to Interrupt Mr. Slack In the middle of It From where Iof a small hallway. However, apleagues this year are six players stood I could not see them because whose daddies wore up in fast company a generation ago. Probably ttte most spectacular of the crop is young Jim Bagby, twenty one year-ol- d son of old Sergeant Jim Bagby, who won 31 games fur Cleveland in 1920 and was the pitching mainstay of the Indians' successful world's series drive that year against the Brooklyn Dodgers Old Jim was a leisurely screw ball thrower Young Jim, pitching for the Boston Red Sox, specialize on a fast ball with d A Friday, Mart, MAGNA TIMES. MAGNA. UTAH I 4th k "!? Soartj, BELVEDERE ! ss Apt. S3? I I 144 l:r U.. 3 .ad Pat . |