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Show THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH Thursday, October 4, 1928 The Bingham Bulletin j Entered ai second-clas- s matter at the postoCfice at Bingham Canyon, Utah, wader the Act of Congress of March 3, 18?9. Subscription Price, per year, in advance $2.00 Published at 446 Main St, Bingham Canyon, Utah ; ? HOWARD A. JAR VIS, Editor i ; different Tale From Wisconsin , , ' ( 4 W'T TlSCOKSIN'S football team was able to defeat only one Big ; I VA Ten PPnent lttBt faI1 DUt !t wlu cntlrely different J I i, V V tale this season. The Cardinals have an abundance of expei- - ' !I enced material, and wise ones around the conference predict a big ! I year for Wisconsin. J J 3 ! Rube E. Wagner of St Paul, whom Glen Thlstlethwaite regards as the best tackys prospect in the Western conference, will captain the Wisconsin team. He la a senior this year. ; t Wagner has been one of the outstanding football and track stars - J I at the Badger school for the last two years, despite the fact that he J J has worked his way through college since the day he enrolled. He ! I intends to coach after graduation, and for Jhat reason has confined bis 1 1 activities to athletics. t Glen Thlstlethwaite will coach the Badgers. It will Je his second , , season in eharce there, and he 4i i ' I VV t$ f j: fBii-i- : thinks it will be a far. more successful one than last season. ThlBtlethwalte graduated as Z an honor student from Earlham college lu 1908. After coaching at Illinois college for two years J and for four years at Earlham college, he went to Oak Park high school in Chicago, where the teams under bis tutelage established such a remarkable record that Northwestern unl-- ) I varsity hired him as head coach. While at Northwestern, bis teams made the best showing of any eleven In the country against the powerful Notre Dame ) I teams of that period, losing three games, it is true, but by J I very close scores. He Is regarded one of the sue--J ! cessfui younger Big Ten coaches. Here We Have Glen Thlstlethwaite. GRIDIRON SPORT VERY EXPENSIVE Missouri Tigers' Equipment to Cost $100 a Man. It cost the University of Missouri athletic department $100 per man to fully equip the members of the Tiger varsity for competition this fall, It was disclosed, following a final check of all new equipment received for the coming football campaign. The cost of the complete outfits, much higher than In any previous year, la based upon the various equipment necessary, in-cluding wet and dry weather outfits. Gwlnn Henry's desire to lighten the burden which his Tigers must carry has resulted in Missouri's discarding the traditional old gold and black sweater for a lighter garment of air- -' plane cloth, which is several pounds lighter than any previous Missouri team has ever worn. The new sweat-ers are of solid old gold. Should the Tigers encounter snow and cold weath-er in any of their late November games this fall, they will find among their equipment a heavy sweater, much the same style that they have been compelled to wear from the open-ing of practice In September until Thanksgiving. The Tigers are also wearing a new type of shoe. The cleats are much the same as those on other shoes, but the ii0m - J Gwlnn Henry. construction and material used Is much lighter, yet it gives the proper protection to the feet of the wearer. Complete new outfits of hip and shoulder pads, both lighter In weight than the old ones, are also In use for the first time. Here Is an estimate of what the varsity Tiger candidate drew from the Missouri storeroom: Shoulder pads 112.00 Coat , 8.00 Hooded Jacket . 4 00 Belt 50 Head guard 12.00 Hip pads 12.00 Pants E 85 Cloth hlrt 9.00 Heavy jersey 6.00 Medium jersey 4.85 Knee pads ,. S.00 Shoes 15.00 Stockings ... S.00 Socks 60 Supporters , 1.00 Total $98.80 f Salts Fine for Aching Kidneys When Back Hurts Flush Your J Kidney as You Clean Your Bowels ; Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels, sometimes get slug-gish and clogged and need a flushing occasionally, else we have backache and dull misery In the kidney region, evere headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleepless-ness and all sorts of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active and clean and the moment you feel an ache or pain In the kidney region begin drinking lots of water. Also get about four ounces of Jad Baits from any good drug store here, take a tablespoonful In a glass of wa-ter before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts la made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com-bined with lithla, and Is Intended to flush clogged kidneys and help stimu-late them to activity. It also helps neutralize the acids in the urine so they no longer Irritate, thus helping to relieve bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent lithla water drink which everybody should take now and then to help keep their kid-neys clean. A well-know- n local druggist says he sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in trying to correct kidney trouble while it is only trouble. I We Are Ready j To turn out that job J 1 of printing when ' J a ever you need it. c Oar Prices Are Right Our Advertising t Service Y Means More Sales for You, Mr. Business Maa When you begin advertising In this paper you start on the road to more business. There is no better or cheaper me-dium for reaching the buyers of this community. We can also provide Artistic Printing of every description. O'DONNELL & CO. Bingham Stage Line Bingham Depot Main and Carr Fork ;. v Phone 41 SCHEDULE Cars leave Bingham at 8, 9 and U a.m. 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m. ! Salt Lake City Office Semloh Hotel 107 E. 2nd South" Thone Was. 1069 .. SCHEDULE . Cars leave Salt Lake City at ' 7, 9 and 11 a.m. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 p.m. FARES One way $1.50 Round Trip $2.50 Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon Utah Phone 17 r . Wasatch 6461 Salt Lake Phone j Coolest Place in Town j TOE OXFORD I Full line of cigars, tobacco and soft drinks. American Beauty right off the ice. I SOFT DRINKS f ; Delicious Budweiser, Cigars and I Tobacco at the ? I Opposite the Safeway t ! ' Hjv Standard If' Nk. tnce w, , 1915 Choice of Millions xSLr InUnnmqham RADIO TUBES 0 1, CITIZENS COAL & SUPPLY CO. COAL, ICE, HAY and GRAIN AGENTS FOR BECCO Phone : : : : : 39 8!! S! K 'i lp, tlli - HOTEL Newhouse SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH On ol Salt Lak City'i flnnt hotels, where gueiU find every comfort with a warm hospital-ity. Garage to connection. Cafe and cafeteria. 400 Roonii, EACH WITH BATH $2.00 to $4.00 BHI & GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast daily merchandise cars from Salt Lake City in connection with the Union Pacific System. USE COPPER Brass piping for $4500 cottage only costs $48.87 1 ! more than galvanized iron piping and will H LAST FOREVER ' T. II. PERLEYWITS, H. L. DAVIDSON i Asst. Gen. Freight & Pas. Agt, Agent Salt Lake City, Utah Bingham, Utah HTJMTEKS.'i Have yoarTrophiea mounted bran expert A lifttimm 4mfd to thA rlin Taxidtrmy makea ot r mounting! euperior to o thera A. C l.AUNER, TaxldermUt farmtrttftuh Mumm 0 Natural flistory, N. Y. 4)1 Bait llroadway Salt Lk City, Utah ' WKiTB rOR PRICE LIST KODAK FINISHING , We employ to ilnipnhrofessional ptaotographera jrour Kodnk fllmn. IKIPLERS COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS 14 Sow Main Salt Lake UU. tuJ Small Boy's Logic Several gaudily colored steins ar-ranged about the railing in a tea shop caught the eye of a youngster breakfasting with bis par-ents, sedate Hooslers. "Mom, buy me one of those things," the lad pleaded. "Why, son, I can't; they're decora-tions," remonstrated the mother. "Well, get me one for Decoration day then," rejoined the as his parents made wry faces and others within hearing distance laughed heart-ily. Indianapolis News. .Resumption of Football Relations This Fall Resumption of football relations be-tween Chicago and Minnesota this year has Gopher fans excited even it this early time. From advance re-quests for tickets for the game it is expected that the Minnesota stadium will be filled to its 55,000 capacity for the contest. An additional urge for Gopher grads is that the game will be the homecoming affair on the Minne-sota schedule. Minnesota and Chicago have not played since 1010 when the Gophers won, 49 to 0, with the famous for-ward passing combination, Wyman to Baston, one of the first really great passing pairs in the history of con-ference football and still rated with the Friedman to Oosterbaan duo which performed at Michigan for three years. Five thousand tickets for the game have been allotted to Chicago. Foolish Communist Representative Albert Johnson said to a Washington reporter the other day: v "It's an 111 wind that blows nobody any good, and the Sacco-Vanzet- ti V business is going to olean the United States of Communists forever. "'What Is a Communist?' a lady asked me in Boquiam. "A Communist,' said I, 'is a man who looks down on those above him.' " Jporffoie Bobby Jones doesn't like this best ball business at all, if anybody wants to know. Edwin F. Ilunt, a twenty-four-year-ol- d from Nashville, Tenn., is the checker champion of the South., When Indiana plays Illinois this fall, It will be the first meeting of football teams of those two schools since 1014. loung Stribling of Georgia, at twenty-f-our years of age, may make trou-ble for various aspirants to Gene Tun-ney'- e crown. Helen Meany, champion diver, is the oldest of a family of 11 children, all of whom are engaged in swimming competition. "Rosy" Ryan, former Giant pitcher, who was purchased recently by the Yankees, got his start In baseball at Holy Cross college. " " Turner Barber, veteran outfielder obtained by the Mobile team from the Birmingham club, has been given his unconditional release. Billy Bayne, with Cleveland, is one of the hardest hitting pitchers in baseball. He has been around the .400 mark all season. The greatest distance a golf ball ha9 ever been driven is 470 yards, made by Jimmy Gullane, Colorado Springs, Colo., in 1925. Clyde Barnhart, veteran outfielder of the Pittsburgh Tirates, has been re-leased to the Indianapolis club of the American association. Edward Cuccinello, inflelder of the Danville club of the Three-Ey- e league, has been purchased by the Columbus club of the American association. Bruno Sznpes, the tall Magyar who was second In the Olympic Javelin throw at Amsterdam, Holland, Is also an artist, a a dancer and a linguist With only the great Morley Drury missing, the University of Southern California football team is expected to be one of the best in the country this fall. When George Lott, third ranking tennis player, enters Brbwn next fall, it will be his third college. He pre-viously attended Chicago and Michi-gan State, The highest percentage ever made by a pennant-winnin- g club In the Na-tional league was made by the Bos-ton club In 1892. They had an 830 percentage. , Because he couldn't stand the growl of the fans in hia own home town, Shortstop Horace Kibble of the Fort Worth (Texas) league team quit the club recently. British writers say that British golf Is handicapped because all the young golfers who do something while in college are never beard of after they leave college. " " - . Athletes at Cornell university, ac-cording to a study of the records of the class entering In 1921. maintained a higher standing as students than nonathletes. Sixteen players on the roster of the Brooklyn club come under the head of "cast-offs,- " although some, no doubt, would be welcomed by the teams who let them go. More than 30 greyhound racing tncks have been licensed In England, and some attract crowds of 30,000 to 60,000 nightly. London has eight tracks all running successfully. Meadows Is Back S ?! ' V . t - 1 i V" Lee Meadows, veteran bespectacled hurler of the Pirates, who was placed on the voluntary retired lift this summer, will be back In a Pirate uniform next spring, Barney Drey- - fuss, president of the Pittsburgh club, announced. If there Is no marrying or giving In maniagfc In heaven that must ac-count for its being heaven. The snn shines for all, but the por-ter does it for a quarter. . Doc Gautreau Anxious . to Assist Any Rookie Doc Gautreau, the tiny inflelder, formerly with the Boston Braves, but who is now playing in the Eastern league, was a helpful eort of a fellow to rookies breaking into the big leagues. The story Is told of the re-partee he had with one young man whose hair was not without its hay-seed, but whom Gautreau wanted to see get . an even break. Chumming up to the kid in the ho-tel lobby one night, Doc broke the Ice. "Have you decided what you'd like to do tonight?" he asked the innocent one. "Well, let's think hard," replied the rookie. ,fNo, no!" snapped the little Gau-treau. "Let's do something that you can do, too." But it was wasted on Grid Captaincy Means the subject at hand. Great Deal to Player We understand that to a football player the captaincy means a great, great deal. But we know that to the public it means nothing. Not 1 per cent of. the people who attend foot-ball games knows nor cares who cap-tains the football team. The captain of a football team Is supposed to be In command but it Is the coach who looks after things, writes II. G. Salsinger. In the Detroit News. The coach selects the lineup, makes the substitutions and directs the plan of play. The coach tells the captain and the Captain tells the boys who did not happen to hear the coach tell the captain. Then,, when there Is anything to say to the officials, the captain says that He generally does It with the assistance of the players, Harvard-Yal- e First to Use the Forward Pass The forward pass first came Into being in the year 1900. It was not until the Harvard-Yal- e game of the season of 190G that a great forward pass play appeared. In this struggle P. L. Veeder of Yale late In the first half flung a long forward pass 30 yards down the field to R. W. Forbes, and end, who caught the ball and was downed on Harvard's three-yar- d line. From this point, in a single plunge, the ball was carried across the line for a touchdown, the sole and winning touchdown of the day. This spectac-ular victory Intensely popularized the forward . pass during the following winter and raised great expectations for its use In 1907. Reds' New Player Gives Coaohes Much Credit Joe Stripp, the hard-hittin- g young third baseman Cincinnati grabbed from Columbus not long ago, gives credit to Johnny Rawlings and Nemo Lie-bol- d for much of his success. He says Rawlings gave him many valuable pointers, about fielding, spot-ting his weaknesses and telling him how to correct thera, but it is to Lle-bol- d he gives credit for helping him in his hitting. He says he thinks he had some nat-ural ability as a hitter, but he also had many faults. Liebold watched him carefully and coached him. and his Improvement was noticeable. Stripp say. If he makes good s major leagroer, he will owe much to Raw-lings and Liebold To Play Navy-Californ- ia Game at Yankee Stadium The Yankee stadium, never greatly favored by the larger college elevens, as a site for football games, has just landed one of the greatest plums of the season. Army athletic officers an-nounce thst the Stanford-Arm- y game, scheduled for New York on December 1 would be played at the home of the Yankees, where a seating capacity of almost 100.000 is In prospect The Army, particularly, always has contended that seats at the Yankee stadium were nnsulted for a footbtll game, although the cadets played Notre Dame there In 1925, 1926 and 1927. Officials of the Polo grounds thought they would get Xfce Array- - Stanford gema. i |