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The Salt Lake Herald from Salt Lake City, Utah • Page 11

Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I 4 TELE SALT LAKE HERALD BUND NOVEMBER 30 1890 SIXTEEN PAGES AWAY DULL CARE Bill Nye Orders All to be Thankful at Once THE BOSS OF PROCLAMATIONS I Be Gives Onr Own Dear Governor Some Proclamation Pointers That He Should Take Under Consideration FOB THE SUNDAY HERALD By special arrangement with the auttorl The following proclamation may not reach the people in time to affect the celebration of Thanksgiving day but if not it may be used as a reverie or a message to congress Whereas it appears by reference to the history of the world and other statistics that the past year has been one unusually prosperous in many respects and especially to members of the legislature throughout the length and breadth of the United States and lifr I HihI t1 hi kf I i I it li lifi fi i 611 4H lf iJ I I I 11 11V flJY A I Whereas No serious plague or famine or war has laid waste the fair face of the republic and Whereas The wages of a crew of nearly thirty men working in a button factory in Vineland Jt have been advanced 15 per cent ad valorem since the I passage of the McKinley bill and Whereas Now times begin to brighten np all over our land as a result of the payment of my election bets and Whereas The man who was on the stump a few weeks ago and now in the pottages has ceased to state that we are jioa upon the eve of one of the most important elections in the history of this or any other country and Whereas Thereception of the literary vorks of Tolstoi and McAllister have given us good reason to believe that the scavenger and the snob must still keep outside of good society and Whereas I feel like it Therefore I Edgar Wilson Nye of the 1 county of Richmond and state of New York do hereby constitute and get aside the Thursday following the publication of this proclamation as a day of general joy and thanksgiving throughout the land The year last past has been one of almost unexampled prosperity from the subscribers standpoint and Thanksgiving proclamations are generally written by a man who is feeling pretty comfortable himself The year has indeed been real prosperous Our growth throughout the length and breadth of the land has been phenomenal and in some cases reprehensible If padding ihad been as high before the census was taken as it is now many United States cities would have been eyether much depressed in figures or hopelessly in debt Another cause for congratulation is that for a few months New York has not been ashamed of her babies bringing out many from concealment and counting the noses of nations yet unborn Over and above all we congratulate everybody and shake hands with voters end ourselves because the election is over The loud smelling torch and candidate have been laid aside till another time and the campaign lie with a large irregular nailhole in it is in the hell box of the country paper There are many causes for personal fjratulntion and congratulation The stout lady who had a room above mine at the boarding house and who was jumping the rope in order to reduce her weight has decided that it is not benefiting her and has ceased We are having a new ceiling put on my room Also to the roof of my head 1 do not find large pieces of plaster in my bed in the morning and soon I can take off the piece I have on my nose But the clearing up of the political atmosphere is the chief cause for national I joy and the greatest Why by the way I I should we have elections so frequently If they were two or three times as far i apart we could almost afford to let congress i pass any bill it wanted to and we could meet it with our savings from gin I and kerosene And to whom does the great shoreless sea of campaign funds I go Does it go to the church or the I etate the widow or the orphan the honest industrious or afflicted Nay beautiful reader with the violet breath nay soft voiced reader with the high intellectual ealskin shoulders on your wrap the grand old ocean of campaign funds steals not up to lave the feet of the starving or cool the brow of the invalid It quenches not the thirst I of the dying and it softens not the bed I of suffering i The campaign fund lubricates the wheels of swift rolling jobs It prints and distributes tracts which nobody reads It buys the services of unmusical I I I bands whose notes are protested on every corner and the juice of whose alto horns is flavored with the demon rum It buys coal oil which seeks to outstench the record of the candidate It buys oratory which would make the auditorium of perdition hiss and create a coolness even among the hands in the a engine room of Satans great exposition It buys speeches that would empty a union depot speeches that would stop a clock speeches that would remove super Rnous hair speeches that would cut holes in a steak speeches that would remove warts speeches that would scour knives set saws remove verdigris grease stains moth patches freckles or wooden buildings Then the great balance goes down the parched throat of men who have no money or physical strength or brains to throw away but who improve this opportunity to raise blood blisters on their souls 1 and Adrift away from their I homes into the dark shadows of doubtful primaries and rum soaked rallies Some day while congress is not tooj busy and while feeling comfortable I wish that a law or joint resolution guess a joint resolution would be best which would extend the term of office of everybody just twice as long and thus relieve the swelling ofthe great political joint and reduce those regular biennial panics on Wall street could go through In saying this I think I voice the sentiment I of many of our best people qn Staten Island Of course I can handle an ordinary Wall street panic myself temporarily each fall if it does not come too early but suppose this regular political panic should strike the country just after I had bought my coal I I There are many other causes for thanksgiving besides the silent tongue of the political orator but none that makes me feel better I heard a man the other day in a political speech tell the anecdote of the boy who tried to sell his pups as Democratic pups I and failed Afterward he tried to market I them as Republican pups charging a rise on them because they had their eyes open now If any one who reads this story here will swear that he never read or heard this story before and that he has not been for the past 800 years with Emin Bey I will send him by reg isteredmail a nice feather bed which is almost as good as new And yet the speaker had been in congress where most of the good new I stories originate A congressman who has served one term and cannot tell his constituents at least one good new story or new at leastought not to be reelected I would as soon think of going to I Duluth and building a big ice machine 1 on tho Irapped bosom of that great I American Bay of Naples as to attempt a I new story in the presence of a member I of congress Boccaccio Arabian 1 Knights or Balzac after a day or two in the cloak rooms and restaurants of the Capitol would go home and proceed to plow corn till called home by tho hand of death I Yes wo are ever glad ever peaceful and contented ever thankful and hopeful I when the timo comes to lay aside I the battered flambeau club and with a sigh of relief throw our old lie nailer into the tool box for another two years Then let us march on and like the I bobtail car driver never look back Let us rejoice that we are spared to tackle I the old thing again for yet another tripLet us look up and press onward like a bright eyed jay examining the exterior I of The New York World building Let us lay aside every weight that doth so easily beset us like a Fulton market salesman and light out like a man who has been warned away from a hornets nest by a committee from the nest itself I I selfThe past year has shown us as a people that honesty is tho best policy and for one I think of taldng out one myself It has also convinced us of the prevalence of evil and its great undesirability in the neighborhood It has shown us that the wicked do of course prosper sometimes but they will one day find that shrouds have no pockets in them Also no vaseline or cold cream for burns scalds etc etc I Let us rejoice that Ward McAllister among sensible people is regarded as a doubtful ward and that snobbery is not society in this country among the great I majority and never will be till money is more plenty Let us be glad that the town of New York has still some good hunting and fishing within the city limits and that within sight of the Statue of Liberty one may still successfully hunt the fleet footed chamois of the Harlem 1 am personally gratified that we are to have a long cold winter which will give a boom to my new Almanac and fur overcoat the latter of which I did not have a chance to show off last season except one evening at a reception 1I hl f44 Wr AMY FUR COATI am also glad that I have succeeded in obtaining literary recognition abroad having been complimented recently by the Prince of Wales by letter for the strength and beauty of my Lines Written on a Tattooed Girl He says he likes them for their sterling worth and says they have been adopted by several very attractive English girls among his acquaintances some in blue ink and others in shrimp pink The prince writes me that should any other girls England adopt the lines he will let me know Now therefore be it remembered that on tho day and date above named at the residences of those to whom these presents may come and in such manner as may seem most fitting and proper full permission is hereby riivwi to celebrate the tay as to best snow an appreciation of the blessings showered upon us in the paSt and to express the hope that the future will be even more abundant I cannot close this proclamation without expressing thus publicly on behalf of the American people the thanks of the nation coupled with my own of course to the president of the United States for various favors shown andfor cigars left at this office My brother was running for office in Minneapolis and so I gave them to him I He writes me that outside of the Eighth ward he does not think the cigars didhim any noticeable harm I The exercises of the day may be so arranged as to best subserve the interests of those who may read this Meals of course will be served at each home according to its own customs and nothing whatever in this proclamation shall be so construed as to jerk dinner out Of the middle of the day and put it into the shank of the evening Done at my place due east of Constables Hook this 20th day of November in the Eighteen Hundred and Ninetieth year of our Lord Qf the Independence or the United States the One Hundred and Fourteenth Dictated Letter stenographed and typewrote by GLADYS PLASTEON REVERS Secretary Stenographer and Plain Cooking SIX BILLIONS AN HOUR The Festive Bacteria Never in Want of Company He Jnst Makes It In this age of wenderful Discoveries when every day adds a score or more new isms obes and cries to our language when every breath of air contains millions of microbes ana every bite of meat a whole menagerie of microscopic monstrosities it will be interesting to know exactly what bacteria are how they multiply and what they look like Tne great majority of these microscopic plants are what the botanists cail bacteria the smallest form of vegetable life So small are they that it would take in some cases as many as 15000 of them arranged in a row to extend one inch They have different forms some being round some ova some rodshaped while others are much the shape of a corkscrew In all cases they are so small that one needs a powerful microscope to examine them and in no case can we perceive them singly with the naked eye When countless millions of them are grouped together in a mass or colony we can see them about as we are able to see an approaching army of which ve are totally unable to distinguish a single soldier These bacteria move about and this is true of most of them although there are some which do not uO P1JI ear move at an DUS remain nxeu wherever they find a good feeding place Those that have motion behave in a very peculiar manner Some wobble about in one place without moving forward in the least others dart hither and thither back and forth at au apparently furious rate rocking and twirling about and turning a hundred somersaults as they move along Bacteria multiply very rapidly and they do this in a very curious way A single one breaks itself into two then each half grows very rapidly until it becomes as large as tho original Then these in turn divide up again and so on until from a single one we have many thousands in a very short time To give the figures such as they are a single one can multiply at so enormous a rate that in fortyeight hours it can procuco something like 2SOOOOOOOOCO of its soecies Great consequences follow this enormous increase of bacteria for while one so small in itself can do but little harm the army resulting from such rapid multiplication makes it possible for them to accomplish a vast amount of damage PAUPER WAGES IN AMERICA Laborites point to the memorial which the Womans National Industrial league sent to the Senate as proof positive that it is not necessary to go abroad to find pauper labor The memorial asserts that in many of our woolen mills children get only 35 cents a day and their mothers 75 cents that the New York women who make trousers get a pittance of 12 cents a pair that a womans wages in the mills of Pennsylvania are from 47 to 55 cents a day and that 70000 girls in Massachusetts working long hours can barely earn enough to keep body and soul tog her ANNOtttCEjJENT EXTRAORDINARY The complete stock of the World store i consisting of all kinds of holiday goods gents and ladies furnishings toys glassware lamps boots and shoes tinware etc must be closed out at public auction on account of moving to Portland I the undersigned public auctioneer will commence to sell single or in jobs to suit purchasers I all of the abovementioned goods without reserve commencing Saturday the 29th of November and continue the same unti closed out Louis BAMBERGEII Auctioneer SAlso one doubleseated carriage one twowheeled cart one single and one double harness Also stoves and other i household goods Sales every day from 1 to 5 and from 7 to 10 until closed out No 70 First South street Job lots lor the trade Opposite the Salt Lake theatre Also the store for rent A WOMAN CELEBRATED ON TWO CONTINENTS In a few wellchosen words tells what 1 1 sue hUUW UL tio eIeuL3eu LiLI June To Mr Wisdom Dear SirI have tried your famous Kober tine It is excellent and I shall be pleased to recommend it to all my lady Iriends Believe me yours truly RUEA SOLE AGENCY FOR Dr Jaegers sanitary woolen underwearof which we carry a complete line Sena for catalogue BASTTEUUY MEU Co Hatters and Furnishers 142 Main St A PREVENTIVE FOR CROUP The discovery of a preventive for croup is one of the most important made in recent years Since first discovered it has been used in many cases and with unvarying success Its being within the reach of all makes it the more valuable It is only necessary to give Chamberlains Cough Remedy Ireely as soon as the first indications of croup appear and it will dispel all symptoms of the disease Full directions are given with each bottle For sale at 50 cents per bottle by I drug department Tucketts fine candies for retail trade Thirty houses and cottages for sale cheap Come in and make the terms We have thehouses Chas Crane Co under Bank of Salt Lake New currants raisins lemon and citron peel at Peoples Cooperative association Our fruits are all cleaned FOOLGER Superintendent Now that the Deep Creek Railway is a go we will renew our proposition to sell Lake City lots at the old prices and easy terms until the road nears that place when prices will be advanced 100 per cent Buy now or you will miss it For particulars call or send to Pratt Bros real estate office No 55 West First South street where maps prices and terms will be furnished free HOW SEVERE COLDS ARE BROKEN UP IN MONTANA From the Virginia City Mont Madisontan I When we find a medicine we know to possess genuine merit we consider it a duty and we take pleasure in telling the I public what it is Such a medicine we found Chamberlains Cough Remedy last winter when la grippe was prevailing We are satisfied that we warded off several attacks that were threatening by the use of this syrup and we have since relieved in a few hours severe colds and in the course of two or three days entirely broken them up by its use as have several of our friends to whom we have recommended it It is all that it is represented to be by the manufacturers If you have a cough and want to stop it Chamberlains Cough Remedy will do the work For sale by I Drug Dept I BUCKLENS ARNICA SALVE The Best Salve in the world for cuts bruises sore ulcers salt rheum fevers res tetter chapped hands chilblains corns aud all skin eruptions and positively cures piles or no pay required It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaotion or money refunded Price 25 cents per box For sale by A Smith Co I A Sure CUre for PlIes Itching Piles are known by moisture like perspiration causing intense itching when warm This form as well as blind bleedIng and protruding yield at once to Dr Bosancos Pile Remedy which acts directly on the parts affected absorbs tumors allays itching and effects a permanent cure 50c Druggists or mail treatise free Dr Bosanco Plqua Sold by drug store I Go toJBarratt 8t for furniture I Angell Bros lumber yard No 625 First I East I I Novelties in full dress shirts BASTTERRY IVIEs Co 142 Main St 1 Tucketts fine candies for ret ail trade The latest novelty of stamping done at Madame Buttons I You have no appetite for breakfast A few doses of Dr Henleys English Dandelion Tonic is what you need THE DESERET SAVINGS BANK The attention of those desiring to open savings accounts is called to the Deseret Savings Bank which allows interest on deposits at the rate of 5 per cent per annum compounded quarterly Money to loan on approved real estate security Its officers are as follows JOHN SHARP President MOSES THATCHER VicePresident A SMITH Cashier DIRECTORS JOHN SHARP BARNES JAMES SHARP PEEKT MOSES THATCHER LITTLE HENRY DINWOODEY ELIAS A SMITH HILLS RITER CUTLER JENNINGS GEORGE ROMNEY The cheapest and the most stylish millinery is to be had at Madame Buttons WANTED 10000 worth of 2nd hand goods Furniture stoves carpets dry goods harness and saddles wagons and buggies at high prices 127 and 129 East First South Opposite City Hall Tel 190 Dont forget that you can purchase tho estJ goods popular prices at the Peoples I Equitable Cooperative association and receive onethird of the profits of the institution every six months Every purchaser i receives rebate checks which represents the amount of their purchase FOTJLGER Superintendent THE WASATCH PATENT ROLLER MILLS Best Grades of Roller Process Flour BRANDSHIGH PATENT AND STRAIGHT Graoes all warranted aa good as any made in TItan THE HIGHEST CAm PBICB paid for Good Telephone to tho JvlUlH iw urnw AM First South Street BVOIiL CO ProplII I BDSIMESS HEH ATTENTION Are your books properly posted Are you enabled to ascertain your financial pqsltlon from your books Are your accounts promptly rendered These things are essential especially where partnerships exist We undertake to ececute all clerical work at reasonable rates As we give the whole ofour time to the above business we guarantee to those entrusting us with their work our prompt attention Collecting accounts a specialty The Salt Lake General Commission Agency Co 157 Main street I a THE CULLEN HOTELS I EWING Proprietor Opened October 3d 1887 THEHNEST flQlEL IN THE WE3T Rates 300 per Day SPECIAL RATES TO TOURISTS 0 HOUSEHOLD WORDS ALL OVER EUROPE VAN HOUTEN COCOA I BEST GOES FARTHEST Now that its manufacturers are drawing the attention of the American public to this first andever since its invention the best of all cocoasit will soon be appreciated here as well I as elsewhere all over the world All that the manufacturers request is simply one trial or still better a comparative test with whatever other cocoa it may be then VAN HOUTENS COCOA itself will convince every one of its great superiority It is because of this superiority that the English paper Health says Once tried always used S2To avoid the evil effects of Tea and Coffee use constantly VAN HOUTEMS COCOA which a STRENGTHENER NERVESanda refreshinJnndnonrishing beverago IE2 11H4H FAUERBACH BRO To December 15th Only Though our sales in all of our Departments have increased enormously over past seasons the enlargement of our premises and the saving onEuropean fabrics which thi McKinley bill offered have tempted us to buy too many goods We Must Unload Before Inventory Time Our CUT PRICES are sure to crowd our immense establishment as Reductions are General through all of our Departments We can mention but few prices only as space in THE HERALD Is too costiy 300 pieces Plush reduced to4234e 67i 95c 120 and S1G5 200 pieces of choicest Silk Velvets black and colored reduced to 65c 95c 143 190 up to 750 a yard 50 pieces all Silk Surah in street and evening shades reduced to 40 62J and 75e One lot of all Silk Whipcords in plain and fancy the newest fabrics in Silk this season at the low price of 125 150 Silk Patterns and Remnants at a Reduction of 1 33 13 PER CENT 4 II For Party and Reception Dresses 25 pieces beautifully embroidered and tinselled Silk Nets and Mulls 43 Inches wide in latest evening shades at a discount of 25 per cent Our entire stock of lately imported Black and Cream All Over Lacesmarked very low ranging from 175 to 650 per yard at a discount of 20 per cent We have seen a Black All Over Lace purchased in New York city by one of our customers at 799 per yard barely equal in quality and richness of design to our 650 lace Our Hosiery and Glove Departments Offer a lot of Ladies 4 and 5button Opera Shade Kid Gloves at 35c a pair cost 125 and SI50 a pair 1 lot of Cashmere Gloves worth 40c a pair at 25c a pair An assorted lot of Childrens and Misses Hose at 20c a pair worth 35c a pair A lot of Ladies fleeced Hose at 12 a pair limited quantity of Infants White Saxony Wool Shirts loc each worth 85c each Ladies Allwool Black Vests with long sleeves 65c sold everywhere at 125 Our Dress Goods Department Offers A Closing Sale of Dress Patterns with trimmings to match ranging from 275 eaclj to 2750 each worth 25 per cent more A line of imported 52inch Broadcloths in all the best shades at OOc a yard Soli everywhere for 135 a yard A line of domestic All wool Ladies Cloths 54inch worth Sac for flOe a yard Only 10 yards to each customer Our Domestic Department Offers Twenty different Bargains in Flannels Towels Crashes etc Come and see them Our Curtain Dapartment Offers Tu rcoman Curtains and Portieres at greatly Reduced Prices 1 lot each at 250 310 375 500 and upwards It will save you money A lot of Odds and Ends in Scrim at 5c per yard Our Cloak Department Bas marked down all of its Ladies and Misses Wraps Childrens and Tnfants Plus and Cashmere CloaksJLadies and Childrens Dresses Wrappers Shirts and Shawls Our 2350 Ladies Matelasse Jackets are the surprise of the Christmas season Our Misses and Childrens Cloaks ranging from 225 to 1350 are admitted the most stylish garments at the lowest prices in the city Ladies Rep Wrappers at 1S5 less than cost of making Our Childrens Clothing Department Offers a Discount of 20 per cent on its Overcoats ranging from 3 to 16 years Gents Unlaundried White Shirts at 3 Kc each Gents Natural Wool Mixed Underwear at 35c 40c Soc and 75c and upwards Boys Durable Kneo Pants at 25c 35c 40c SOc 65c and upwards Gents Latest Neckwear at 15c 20c 25c 35c 40c and SOc Best and cheapest in the city Our Shoe Department will continue its 25 per cent and 10 per cent Discount Sale until further notice Only a few Cirnet Remnants left They must go soon we nd the room A OC I COtnvT OF 10 PER OECI TOn all Quilts ranging iroo Ole to 1500 On all Blankets rang iroin 100 to 125j EXCEPTING PROVO ILLS 1 On all Crib Blankets from 175 to 500 OUR ADVESTISED REDUCTIONS AND DISCOUNTS FROM OUR Ii OKE PRICE CAN ALWAYS EE DEPENDED UPON AS REAL FAUERBACH BRO II THOMAS 26 2S 30 32 East First South St I ii1 PORTANTca Special attention is called to my immense importation of WINPRi CLOAKS he very latest cuts in PLUSH JACKETS as well as the usual staple shapes Big drives in I LADIES NEWMARKETS About onehalf of last seasons prices A large assortment oi CHILDREN9S CLOAKS At popular prices to suit all pockets A special lot of Nobby Styles MISSES NEWMARKETS A New Feature this season is CHILDRENS COLORED PLUSH CLONES In all shades about 500 garments Also a large line of Childrens Plush Hoods Hats and Bonnets In all shades All now being opened in the basement where we are using ten electric lights Great Bargains I in Ladies Cloth Jackets and SilK Wraps lor early fall I wear inspection is solicited THOMAS I Li CADETS IN TilE FIELD The Contest Between Annapolis and West Point THE PERSONNEL OF EACH TEAM Tho Military and Naval Cadets Who are to Meet In the Coming Game ot Foot Ball NEW YORK November 261890 Special correspondence of THE HERALD The game of football that will be played today between the West Point and An nopolis cadets on the grounds of the former is quite a noteworthy event in the history of athletics and shows how firm a hold field sports have taken For the first time in its history the Military academy enters the lists in competition with an outside team It was only last year that the game of football was begun at West Point and the record of the entire season shows but one match game and that an interclass affair This year however a team representing the three upper classes was decided upon The men were selected and have been vigorously practicing ever since To be sure no visiting elevens havo been encountered and the team has suffered in consequence but the men have been carefully coached They are under good leadership and are as muscular a set of fellows as can be found in any of our colleges This fortunate departure from di iI fc NAVAL ACADEMY qhe customary way of doing things at West Point is largely due to Colonel John Wilson the superintendent who has been able to see very plainly how much benefit the cadets can derive from field sports and also that they can be carried out without at all encroaching upon the periods set aside for study and drill To be sure this seasons work must be viewed very much in the light of an experiment and probably it may take until after the return game has been played next yearat Annapolis to fully decide the matter In the opinion however of the young soldiers themselves as well as that of many oftheir instructors who are interested in field sports athletics at West Point has come to stay At the Naval academy the view taken of the subject of outofdoor sports has for years been diametrically opposed to the one hela at the sister institution and baseball football and at one time boating I have received the greatest encouragement i When the classes were larger sufficient excitement was as a rule found in interclass contests varied by an occasional game with a visiting team but as the numbers decreased a team composed of picked men from all four of the classes has been depended upon and many a well fought game bears witness to the good material to be found within the academy I walls Never before this year have the midshipmen been allowed to visit another team but when the West Pointers finally decided to raise an eleven Captain Phythian the superintendent who has I WEST POiNT always been a keen admirer of sports like I all thoroughbred ICentuckians gave his consent and the challenge was passed The game put up by the Annapolis boys last season was considered an admirable one and when the term began this fall there was more or less dismay when it was found that there were but three of the old team left and that among those who had gone was the captain who had proved a veritable host in himself A careful selection from all four classes followed by a judicious system of weeding has resulted in I the choice of the following to sustain tni honor of Neptune Irwin 91 is centre rush 1 and is a strong active player but came to grief in the game with the Columbia Athletic club in which he gave his knee a most unfortunate twist Should he not play in the game at west point Lane 91 I left guard will take his place Lane is an excellent rusher and a fine tackler but is some twenty pounds lighter than Irwin French 93 right guard plays strong game holding his men and breaking through in grand style Back of the line come Hartung 91 Althouse 91 and Johnson 94 all new men on the eleven but the trio would be hard to improve upon Alt house will however probably play fullback instead of left end replacing a very strong member of the team who recently resigned Beurot 92 or Peason 93 will probably take the left end Macklin 92 as right tackle plays a good stiff game Emrich 91 is captain of the team and plays half back He is one of the veterans I of the team and while having always been i considered a strong player he developed wopderfully this season Laws 91 plays at right end and Ward 93 left tackle are both very reliable players cool and active In the opinion of many this years Annapolis team is the best one that has ever been brought together at the Naval Academy The average weight of the rush line is 174 pounds while that of their competitors is about ten pounds heavier averaging a fraction less than eighteen pounds I I and it is made up by the following cadets 1 Adams 92 tefW String aggressive fill player and will prove a very strong opponent for the middle who faces him Crabbe 191 right guard and Clark I 93 left guard are remarkably quick particularly the latter who tips the scales at 205 pounds Schooffel 91 plays at right tackle and is thought to be the most powerful man in the corps Gleason 92 at left tackle plays a pretty game and an exceedingly strong one Prince 92 at right end although new at the business plays with a clearheaded coolness worthy of veteran Moore 92 plays at left end and will be hard to beat as ho is avery fast runner and an excellent tackler as well Walker 92 is quarterback and is one of the lightweights as he only brings down 145 pounds but ho is a reliable active player who manages always to bo in the right place when he is expected to be there Timberlake 93 plays right halfback and is the fastest runner and cleverest dodger on the team Michie 92 is the lightest man on the team weighing 142 pounds and is an ideal captain and the best dropkick on the eleven To his I excellent leadership the success that has thus far attended the playing is in a great I measure due His men have every confidence in him and he directs them easily I and intelligently Ames of 03 as fullback I plays with great skill and dash as I though his whole soul were in it and ho seems to have a thorough understanding of 1 I the game The substitutes for the rush I i line are Murphy 91 Heavey 91 and Ely 91 and for the backs Wilcox 92 Pat I I tison 93 92 Horn 91 Morrow 91 and Cavanaugh I.

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About The Salt Lake Herald Archive

Pages Available:
100,984
Years Available:
1880-1909