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Show j : f THE BINGHAM NEWS ... A : Autographing Largest Golf Ball in the World IISf' 1 ? -SFLl- - - - nJn'-:- r7i fix v ' f y44U iJ i v' I ' I rJJY lX $ f3 jlMfc? Av Vh d Johnny Farrell, young Tumpa golf professional, Is shown here autogrsphlng the largest golf ball In the world, U at the siime time presenting It to D. P. Davis, chairman of sports at Tampa, Fla. From left to right in the group jj are Abe Mitchell, British professional star; Johnny Farrell, George Duncan, also a British golf star; Voc Hawkins and Mr. Davis. Green's August Flower The remedy with record of fifty-eig-years of surpassing excellence. AU who u(fer with nervous dyspep-sia, sour stomach, constipation, Indi-gestion, torpid liver, dizziness, head-aches, comlng-u- p of food, wind on stomach, palpitation and other Indica-tions of digestive disorder, will find GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER an ef-fective and efficient remedy. For fifty-eig- years this, medicine has been successfully used in millions of households all over the civilized world. Recause of tfn merit and pop-ularity GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER Is found todny wherever medicines are old. SO and 00 cent bottles. Adv. SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST! Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism AcceP on,v "Bayer" package flfjfir which contains proven directions. 9 Ilsy Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggist. Anilrta to the tnde mark et Brr MuafuUr at MutioUccltatr at SallcjllcacM Hairs Catarrh Medicine SL rid your system of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. , Sold by druggist for rr yrn P. J. CHENEY &. CO., Toledo, Ohio Children Cry for AOmVViiyi MOTHER :-- Fletcher's v fTrf.Jr Castoria 13 especially pre-s- ff pared to relieve Infants in arms an Chi,(lren aH ases Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea ; allaying Peverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of.VJl Absolutely Harmless - No Opintcs, Physicians everywhere recommend ft. Cuticura Soothes Itching Scalp. On retiring gently rub spots of dan-druff and Itching with Cuticura Oint-ment. Next morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Make them your everyday toilet preparations and have a clear skin and soft, white hands. Advertisement Feel Stiff and Achy After Every Cold? Do You Have Constant Backache? Feel Old and Lame and Suffer Sharp, Rheumatic Pains? Then Look to Your Kidneys! every cold, chill or attack of grip It's little wonder, then, that every cold DOES you worn-o- ut and utterly misera- - leaves you with torturing backache, rheu- - ble? Do you feel old and lame, stiff matic pains, headaches, dizziness and annoy and rheumatic? Does your back ache with a ing bladder irregularities, dull, unceasing throb, until it seems you just , . . , ', can't stand it any longer? Dont Get, f .bo - ' . . ... it Give your weakened kidneys the help they I hen look to your kidneys! Grip, colds need. Assist and chill, are them. aW by dr.nk.ng pure mighty hard on the kidneys, They fill the blood with poisons and impuri- - wter f'eat,n Wj and getting plentr ties that the kidneys must filter off. The kid- - of fresh air and rest. Doan t Pllh have helped neys weaken under this rush of new work; thousands and should help you. Aikyour become congested and inflamed. neighbor! " Use Doan's," Say These Good Folks: I ALBERT COULSON, fruit farmer, 697 I MRS. GEO. C. PHILLIPS, Thlrtf East Sixth East North St, Nephl, Utah, says: "My Sventh South St, Nephl, Utah say,: I twinging pains seized me in my back wbrie about M . kidneys got out of order and they acted too my hoU8eworU. xiiere .a a heavy, dull ache I freely. Mornings ihere was a lameness and sore-- through my kidneys and I became so diwy that B nesa through my back. I began using Doan's black epots blurred my sight. I also La I head- - Fills and after I had fuished taking one box my aches and my kidneys were weak and acted too j freely. I used a box of Doans Tuls. My kid- - kidneys were acting fine and I warn t troubled I ney and a lh(j othcr any more with my back." left." I Doan's Pills Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys At All Dealers, 60c a Box. Foster-MSbu- m Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y. :' . Much Coal in Old Canal The Morris canul In New Jersey, abandoned for years anil now drained, has turned out to be a veritable coal mine. The dry bed of the old water-way Is thickly sprinkled with lumps of anthracite that fell from putting barges In years gone by. In some places there are little mounds of coal, as If a barge hud tipped over. I'eopln In Hnekettstown and 1'ort Murray are getting In their winter's supply. The most valuable egg In the world Is that of the great auk, a bird once common In the regions of tlio north Atlantic. Bigger Railway Car$ Railway passenger cars of the fu-ture will carry eight times as ninny passengers as now. Divided in Thought She Are you married? Con Armed Iluchelor Unfortunately, no; thank heaven! A bank Is run on a cash basis and occasionally a cashier runs thut way also. Some men look for work with about as much enthusiasm as tbey would look for a case of smallpox. 1 BAN JOHNSON MADE START AS REPORTER First Big Job Was Sullivan-Kilrai- n Fight. The sports world In general may not know It, but Byron Bancroft Johnson, who occupied the executive chair of the American Baseball league for over twenty years, passed Into baseball through the editorial office of a news-paper. More than 40 years ago he received his baptism as a cub reporter on a sheet In Cincinnati and soon gradu-ated Into the expert class which en-titled him to some of the big assigu- - fg& A $ It ?' I Ban Johnson. ments that In those rough and ready days provided experiences seldom found by the writers of the present One of Johnson's "Jobs" In those dark days of sport was the covering of the now fumous John L. Sullivan-Jak- e Kilraln fight, at Rlcbbnrg, Miss., July 8, 1889. That was one of many real battles witnessed by the present head of the American circuit, but the Sulllvan-Kll-rai-contest stands out most vividly In his memory because of Its prelimi-naries. and aftermath. Ban remembers vividly that Sullivan won the bruising contest In 75 rounds, but a round under the London prize ring rules lasted only as long as both men were on their feet and, as John-son explains It, "Kilraln was on the grass most of the time." Johnson's recollection Is that Kilraln was the last man to leave the arena. With the place deserted, the defeated fighter was sitting In his corner crying like a baby. His body was the color of raw beef. 11I I I III Ml I I I I I I I I I I I I Ml : : Robert Commodore : : Has Fine Pedigree Kobert Commodore, young pacer that sold recently for a I long price, certainly has the ', breeding to become a consistent '. '. performer, for both his sire and '. '. dam raced long and often over ! ! ; the tracks of Ohio and adjoin- - ; . . ing states with remarkable con- - . . I sistency. The sire Is Bob Com- - ; . . tuodore, 2 :08, an aged stallion . . l that is still being raced, having " . mnde a campaign over the half- - ; I mile tracks In 1024. The dutn Is ; the noted old mare, Florence Mc-- ; ; Kinney, 2.08U. that started rac-- '. Ing as a three-year-ol- d and kept I', it up for several years, winning '. many ruces for her owner-drive- I " i Oscar Vallery, Derby, Ohio. '. '. I II I I I I III I I I I I I I 111 I III I I I I M I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I :; Fans Like Action : : in Football Game : : ! ' Football coaches will agree '. with the major league pitcher . . who, when asked to name the '. hardest batter he had to pitch ! ! to, answered, "They're all hard. '. There ain't a 'soft one. In the . . league. Any of 'em Is liable to 1 ! ; ; kiss one off of you." The mighty are bowled over frequently In . these days Itf teams coming un- - der the general heading of prac- - tlce elevens. Unexpected re-- vertes are chiefly responsible ! '. for the widespread Interest In ! ; ; football. What the public likes ! ! is competition. They want to ! ; ; see a fight and as football fur-- . . nishes more and more competl- - ! ; I tlon so the crowds increase In ' . . size. .1 I I I 11111111111111111111111 Some Value in Name The name of a Wyandotte county (Kansas) man saved him tax money for ninny years. Albert II. Held bought some property six years ago on time payments and received the deed this year. He asked the amount of taxes and vus told that be did not owe any-thing, for the land was listed as M. E. Church, and church property Is not taxed. Then Held said "M. E. Church Is the name of the man I bought It from, and there isn't a church within six blocks of the property." Lord Mayor's Coach London's fumous lord mayor's couch was built In 1757, weighs nearly four tons, and Is not very comfortable to ride In, an It Is suspended on leather braces In place of springs. London Answers. A radio course In educational psy-chology carrying college credit Is be-ing broadcfcst by the UnlversUy of Kansas. Only fools and brave souls sacrifice the certainties of today for the uncer-tainties of tomorrow. Men are tormented with the opin-ion they have of things, and not hf (lie things themselves. Tex Rickard May Stage V Dempsey-Gibbon- s Fight California promoters are shooting at the moon if they think they have a chance to pull n match between Jack Pempsey and Tommy Clbbons on the Faclflc coast next spring, according to Promoter Tex Hickard. "If Pempsey fights Gibbons again," the Garden Impresario said, "It will be at Madison .Square Gardeu on May B, next, or at Boyle's thirty acres In .," Jersey City. "I had a talk with Jack Kearns be-fore he left," he continued, "and he told me if Gibbons made an Impressive showing agnlnst Norfolk and beat him decisively we would have no .trouble . . cowing to terms, and that Dernpsey y wanted to finish up his career In the ring boxing for me. will have our Inst show in the next year on May 5, and I told I would like to have the match I"We on that day. I also told him I outbid any other promoter for Credit Clark Griffith With Creating Phrase Perhaps there is no more used ex-pression In sports than "getting the breaks." In doping out any sporting event, the experts always wind up with the crack that since the teams are so evenly matched, the one that gets the breaks Is sure to be returned the winner. " Harry Davis, In his day one of the game's greatest first Backers, and for years an assistant to Connie Mack at Philadelphia, gives the credit to Clark Griffith for creating this phrase. "Get the break, get the break." Grif-fith would shout to his base runners as he directed them from the coach-er'-s box, says Davis. "By getting the breaks he meant for them to start with the wlndup of the pitcher and take every advantage of his motion. "As an expression used by Griffith In coaching his runners, it has spread to every angle of sport "Griffith was the first man I ever heard use It. I regard him as the j Cullop Plays Soccer originator." Nick Cullop, bought by the New i York American league team but farmed out to Omaha, the 1924 cham-pions of the Western league for the ' season, played first base for the Omaha team, batted 42 home runs and had a batting average of .318. He Is wintering in Omaha, playing soccer football with the famous 'Vikings." He will Join the Huggins aggregation next spring. Professional sports, except In cyc-ling, scarcely exist' in France. The first annual regatta of the New York Tacht club took place on June 6, 1848. They'll never end that Chinese war unless both sides quit fumbling on the d line. W. S. Caldwell of St. Louis" holds the record distance for driving a golf ball 489 yards.... The Rochester club of the Interna-tional league will return to Savannah, Ga., for spring training In 1925. By winning the Norfolk open golf tournament Walter II a gen Jumped Into the lead early as a winter star. The rubber-core- d golf ball was used In America some five years be fore Its adoption by British players. Coach Knute Rockne of Notre Dame has over 400 students of the South Bend Institution playing the gridiron game. There are probably more than forty professional baseball players making their home at Fort Worth during the winter. Hansen, Syracuse end, playing his first year, looks like the makings of a great player. He almost went to Notre Dame. J. C Long of Charleston, star tacklt on the South Carolina football team, has been elected captain of the 192S 'varsity. ; No major league club Is weaker In reserrs inflald strength taan Wash, lngtoa, the champs. Uanagsf lUrUg to wall awars of it Favor Change in Scoring There will be more agitation for the abolishment of the goal after touch-down, it Is believed, after the results of this season have been reviewed. Georgia recently lost to Tale officially because Its kicker did not put the ball between the posts after a touchdown had been made and Yale's did. Some advocate the abolishment of the try for point entirely. Some claim that the team should have to .make it from the scrimmage or a pass, and thut no kick should be allowed. The only feature of the try for point is that It probably keeps lots of games from resulting in ties. . Bush and Shocker Compared Contrary to general belief, "Bullet Joe" Bush, Yankee pitcher, sent to St. ' Louis In the trade by which New York gets Urban Shocker, was a greater nemesis to the Browns than Shocker was to the Hugmen. Records reveal that Bush conquered the Browns In 17 consecutive games he pitched against them over a period of three , years. He beat them seven straight In 1922, six times W 1923 and four In a row last season before the Browns finally broke tbs streak. Shocker, on the other hand, lost bis jinx bold on tbs Yankees , last season, losing flvs fames to team whll visaing onlj two. Baseball by Radio Radio Is bound to Increase the terest In baseball and especially In the world series. The man who couldn't afford to travel to Washington or couldn't i spare the time heard it all over thel radio. He cvild hear the cheering nd follow the 'lays. All tie needed v$s a good Imagination and the plctu was complete, for not only were thf plays announced ss they took place, but tbeJItUen-betwee- a occur rsnces vstfS ITsonoted, r . |