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Show : ' THE BINGHAM NEWS " I CAREY OF PIRATES IS TOPNOTCHER ifvv ' rrf ' ' fX 1 id ' j 'I ' I S L . t . ' - v 'j2$z 1 1 Max Carey, veteran outfielder of the Pittsburgh Pirates, still is on the Job after many years of big league service. Carey has always been a topnotcher among the base runners, Is a mighty hard hitter and clever fielder. The photo-graph shows him In action In the field, catching a fly ball and returning it to the infield. MomeAPIlMj W AFFAIRS ft British Honor Our Unknown Soldier Tribute was WASHINGTON. when a wreath was laid on the tomb at Arlington by the members of the "80 club," composed of British newspaper and advertising men, who were in the city as guests of the Washington Advertising club. . The English visitors were deletes to the recent convention of the Adver-tising Clubs f the World at Atlantic City and succeeded In getting the next convention to take place In London. John Cheshire, president of the club, and who had five sons In the World war, placed the wreath on the tomb as the members of the club stood for a minute with bowed heads In silent re-spect for the soldier. Leaving Arlington, the party, In 17 automobiles, drove around the speed-way and to the Washington monument, the Lincoln memorlul, up Seventeenth street, past the build-ing, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Conti-nental Memorial ball and the Ited Cross building. Passing up Sixteenth street and viewing the famous homes and embassies, the party swung down Columbia road and drove past the res-idence of former President Wilson to the British embassy, where the party stopped und culled to pay their re-spects. r , The British visitors and guests were received by President Harding at the White House. Much favorable com-ment about America's capital city was voiced by the visitors. One member of the club said, "Certainly the hospital-- , Ity here Is wonderful, everything for us and even arrangements have been made with the local weather man to provide some real English weather during our short stay." One of the half-doze- n ladles of the party declared she thought things In America were perfectly ell right and the only objection she had was that "your dollar bills fly so fast." The members of the Washington Advertising club expressed themselves as fairly captivated with the pleasant and affable manner of the visitors, and are all anxious to fulfill the "On to London I" slogan next year. Herbert Hoover was the principal speaker at a luncheon at the New Wil-ls rd. . Make Decisions of Great Importance brought to determine the CASES of the maternity act were dismissed for want of Jurisdiction by the Supreme court, which refused to pass upon the validity of the law. Justlee Sutherland, announcing the court's opinion that the cases could not . be considered on their merits, pointed out that the cases in which the court hitherto had assumed Juris-diction differed from the muternlty cases, which presented only political and not judicial questions. The highest court, Justice Suther-land said, was without authority to pass upon abstract questions. He as-serted that a state had no right to bring suit to protect the rights of the dtliens of the United States. The fed-eral government must look after the rights of Its cUIzens, he said, taking the position that there was nothing presented to distinguish the citizens to such an extent as to give the state a right to act for them. P.eferrlng to the claims of a tax-payer, s represented in the separate case brought by Harriet A. Frothing-ham- , the Justice asserted that the ef-fect of the law upon future taxes was so remote that no basis was offered under which any court of equity could entertain the complaint. The Supreme court will not assume Jurisdiction over the authority of an-other and branch of the government, the congress, the Justice said, and will consider the constitu tionality of a law only when there Is a direct Issue presented In which the legal rights of a citizen would be Im-paired by some enforcement which he Is unable to escape. The government's Injunction suit to prevent dealings in sugar futures upon the New York coffee and sugar ex-change was advanced by the court for hearing on November 12. At the same time it was announced that It would consider at Its next terra cases questioning the Jurisdiction of stste courts to try damage suits aris-ing out of interstate shipments of cat-tle, as raised in a case brought by the Great Northern Hallway company against the Galbraith Cattle company and other shippers of cattle from Cody, Wyo., to Seville, Mont. States cannot compel national banks to surrender to them the deposits made In the name of persons who, under the state laws, are "considered dead," the court held In a case brought by the First National bank of San Jose against the state of California. In 1880, P. A. Campbell deposited $1,102 In the San Jose bank. Since then he has not checked upon the ac-count nor made an addition to It. His present address is unknown. California claimed that, under two laws passed In 1015, the money es-cheated to the state and that the courts of the state also took that view. The bank contended, however, that the na-tional banking art and not the stats laws controlled In such cases. U. S. Army Tanks Mow Down Trees SAM'S herd of UNCLE were on display anny tank school, - Onmp Meade, Md., In a dem-onstration put on for the benefit of some seventy officers and Instructors from the staff school at the army war college. ships surged forward reslstlessly, tear-ing great swaths as they passed, as though twin, narrow-gaug- e cyclones had cut parallel paths of wreckage through the woodluml. Towering trees went down before them like reeds, the tanks grinding them remorselessly Half a dozen of the huge, lumbering "Mark VIII" giant tanks developed during the war, but too late to share In the fighting, and a whole flock of the six-to- n French type which did get Into action, participated In the show. The demonstration Is one of the series of educational exhibits for the staff college students, all of whom are experienced officers whose military In-struction Is being" rounded out to In-sure an adequate supply of general off-icers and men with general staff quali-fications. The present class will com-plete its course In time to go-v- ut to the summer training camps as Instruc-tors In the higher branches of military work. To Introduce the student officers to the possibilities of modern tank war-fare, Col. S. D. Itockenbach, com-mandant of the tank corps and school, sent two of his huge 40-to- n "Mark TUT monsters skirmishing through the heavy woods on either side of a narrow roadway. When the signal to advance was given, the land battle- - under the steel-sho- d runners. At times each tank was knocking over half a dozen trees at the same time, literally rooting them from the earth and lumbering forward over prostrate trunks a foot or more in diameter. The sheer power of the geared Liberty engines overcame every obstacle of ditch or bank or brush or tree clump, and not an Inch to right or left from the selected course were the monsters forced to swerve. Later a miniature tank attack was delivered over the rough, sandy field that Is the playground of the school herd. Three "Mark VIII's" led the drive, their guns narlng and machine guns snarling as they crept forward behind a smoke bar-rage hurled from their guns. Tliej looked like crawling dragons, breath-ing smoke and flame, as they shoul-dered their way over ditches and sand dunes to disappear over a ridge be-yond In clouds of dust and spouts of flying debris Hung up from land mines that gave a realistic battle picture. See Great Evil in Forest Exhaustion by the INVESTIGATIONS show that added greatly to the cost of construction. Lumber production has been decreas-ing for 13 years In the face of an un-paralleled building need. Of 37 east-ern and southern lumber-producin-states 36 showed a decreased cut, and only one a slight Increase In 1020; while Pacific slope states all report substantial Increases, showing that the center of production Is shifting to the western states, the lust of our soft-wood reserves. Thirty years ago, after the depletion of New York and Pennsylvania white pine sections, the American lumber market was drawing Its supply from the Great Lukes states. When the source In those sections became ex-hausted and the forests were no longer able to supply the demand or furnish enough to keep the mills In operation, V e industry moved to the soutivrn yel low pine region, and Is rapidly dupli-cating the same procedure there. The result follows that the country may be wholly dependent upon the Pa-cific slope. Not only Is this the only remaining domestic source of soft-woods, but a recent survey of the world's supply discloses that there are no foreign forests of this character thut America may draw upon when its own are exhausted. A bulletin Issued by the department miys: "The uverage rate of decrease over the Inst 13 years has heen about 2 per cent a year. The figures for li20 are about 27 per cent lower than the hlj;r production peak that was reaohe In lit07, when we produced about ) feet. We have passed the high point and the present tendency down ward Is permanent. Since this Is th case there must be Some active stepj taken to insure permunent local sources of timber for the future" TO RELIEVE PAR I AND BACKACHE Women May Depend upon 1 Lydia E Pinkham's Vege-table Compound Minneapolis, Minn.- -'! had heard so much about Lydia E. Pmkham'B Vep- - . itable Compound that ijilHIIilUU:' I when I realised I" "j Iji needed to take some-- W " A thing to relieve my .""N. t pains and backache, . and to help build m up I began to tako R4V.Tl tat had been sick oflf and on for II years and barely W ' w weighed a hundred -- i pounds, but now I M r.jr have had such good &-J- IwBiiltJi that I am 18th Ave. South, Minneapolis, Minn. Finds a True Friend "Every woman who values her health should be jproud to have a true friend like the Vegetable Compound," says Mrs. W. E. Shaw, 8227 Walnut Street, Chicago, Illinois. '1 had female weak-ness so badly that I could not stand on my feet. Half of my time was spent in bed and I had pains in my back which were unbearable. I tried everything I could think of to help myself .and when a friend advised Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-etable Compound I began taking it at once. I recommend it without beat tattoo." WATCH THE BIG 4 Stomach-Kidneys-Heart-Li- Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world's standardreme.dy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles LATHROP'S HAARLEM OIL M The National Remedy of Holland for centuries. At all druggists in three sixes. Guaranteed as represented. Look far tK nam Cold Modal oa oroiy bos and aoeoot no Imitation (Bad Breath) la Uaually Due to Constipation Whtn you are constipated, not enough of Nature's lu-bricating liquid is produced in the bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol be cause it acts like this natural lubricant and thus fee urea reg-ular bowel movements by Na-ture's own method lubrication. Nujol I a lubricant not a medicine or laxative so cannot gripe. Try It today. A UUBRICANT-NO- T A LAXATIVE I f As the days lengthen, so the cold strengthens. BABIES CRY FOR "CAST0R1A" Prepared Especially for Infants and Children of Ail Ages Mother I Fletcher's Castorla has been In use for over 80 years as a pleasant, harmless substitute for Cas-to- r Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups. Contains no narcot-ics. Proven directions are on each package. Physicians recommend it The genuine bears signature of WTiere you cannot climb over must yoa creep under. 1 Is moptTilied h Uit riarantewl S exterminator (or Rati. Mica, Aiita. t'wkroachei and Waurbugi. f tton't wait time trrlne to kill them pnta f whh powdori. Uiiuldi or anj xuerlmautal I prDartloiii. j Ready for Use-Be- tter than Trap f Ka. box. S5o z. box. XJ0 f SOLD gVERWHfWB r --JZZZZT f Comfort Your Skin With Cuticura Soap and Fragrant Talcum Sop 2St, Ointmtot 25 inJ 50c. T.Icm 25c N. (J, 6t Lake City, No. 2X GIL DOBIE VISITING ZUPPKE OF ILLINOIS Famous Coaches Will Exchange Views oa Football Game. Ther are no more famous and suc-cessful football coaches In the United States than Gil D'-bl- of Cornell aud Bob Zuppke of Illinois,, and they are going to have the time of their lives this summer. Dobie Is to spend s'x weeks teaching football in the Illinois summer course in athletic coaching, which opened June 18. That means that he and "Zup" will spend a lot of time exchanging views with each other. And it will not be surprising if Cor-nell strategies show a trace of Illinois Influence and If Illinois plays have a little Cornell In them. It's a novel thing to bring two coaches of such prominence together. But.the Illinois Idea is to give the stu-dents most of them coaches with ex-perience a broad course. They may take either course, or both, as they desire. Most of Ihe men who have al-ready enrolled write that they want to take both courses. Both Dobie and Zuppke are real en-thusiasts. They like to talk football. It Is their ment and drink. That means that there will be many Inter-esting discussions this summer. Athletic coaches of the new day spend the summer seeking to widen their knowledge. TMs Is demonstrated by the growth in attendance of the Illinois summer course, which was es-tablished In 1014 and was the first to emphasize the coaching of competitive sports. Nearly ill the students are men who have experience as coaches and In athletics. For the high school h'Mr Coach Gllmour Dobie of Cornell. graduate who wants to become a coach there Is a four-yea- r course In athletic coaching and physical educa-tion which leads to an academic de-gree. Football with the Dobie-Zuppk- e com-bination is the high spot of the sum-mer course, but most other subjects are listed, lth the following staff of Instruction: George A. Huff, director; Gllmour Dobie, football; Robert a Zuppke. football; Carl L. Lundgren, baseball; Harry L. Gill, track and field athletics; J. Craig Ruby, basketball George L. Stafford, medical gymnas-tics and physical diagnosis; Ernest E. Bearg, football, basketball and organi-zation ; Burton A Tnan-ono- fmftk.ll and basketball; Seward C. Staley, calisthenics and mass athletics; David M. Bullock, training and massage; Carlos J. Warner, gymnastics; W. Sterry Brown, swimming; Paul Prehn, boxtng and wrestling. Small Admissions Cause of Soccer Popularity The prices explain why the soccer games draw so well In Great Britain. At the English cup final in the new Wembley park, adjacent to London, In which Bolton Wanderers beat West Ram United, two goals to none, there were 24,686 seats in the grand stand selling from five to 21 shillings, 8,779 front ring seats at five shillings, 38,151 standing room In lnclosures at three shillings each, and 57,606 standing room on terrtces at two shillings, a total of 125,201. Nearly 200,000 fans tried to see the games. Baseball Notes Managing a ball club Is a great Job If you don't weaken. Princeton alone has beaten Holy Cross In baseball this year. Brooklyn today continues the sensa-tion of both major leagues. The Athletics continue to be a dan-gerous young bunch of athletes. Sam Crawford, former Tiger center-fielde- r, has Invented an unbreakable bat. The Indianapolis club released Pitcher Lee Bartlett to Terre Haute of the Three-- . Shortstop Ezrey of the Swarthmore college team has signed with the St. Louis Nationals. The first bsseball league In Austra-lia was organized this year. It con-sists of eight clubs. Dallas has protested the sale by the Pittsburgh club of Pitcher Harold Carlson to Wichita Falls. Parry O'Brien, outfielder of the Ver-non club of the Pacific Coast league, has been sold to Grand Rapids. The consistent batting streaks of leading veterans has been a feature of the early season baseball play. To fill In the gap caused by the to Manager Bert Ntehoff the lo-bi-club has obtained George Fedor, recruit second baseman. The Pirates have released Clarence Jonnard, reserve catcher, under op-tional agreement to the Wichita Falls club of the Texas league. When Kansas City asked waivers on the veteran pitcher, Gus Bono, the desperate Indlnnapolis club put in Its claim and thus gets him. An alumnus gave a pair of shoes for every home run knocked out by a Knox college taeball player In s varsity game this season. Joe McGlnnlty, fifty-tw- o years young and manager of the Dubuque team In the Mississippi Valley league. Is tak-ing his regular turn In the box. Marvin Goodwin continues his good work as a pitcher for Houston, Indi-cating that his sore arm has come back strong In the Texas climate. Ty Cobb began his baseball career with the South Atlantic league. He was a member of the Augusta (Go.) club, and first played April 20, 1004. Fred Merkle, former New York Giant player, now at first for the Rochester International league team, ran his hitting streak through 32 games before he was checked. ' Don't make any rash predictions on the way the clubs line up at the pres-ent time. Some teams won't hit their stride until the sun Is hot enough to bake a pancake on the home plute. Connie Mark is well pleased by the latest baseball machine he has con-structed after eight years of real ef-fort. The crowds show that the Quaker city will support a winner once more. J. H. (Tarinn) Marsh, University of Oklahoma athlete, star In football, baiketball and baseball and famous li the trai'k, finishes Ills school short-ly and will it" a tryout with the Okla-homa City Western league t Terry McGovern Was Tricked by Corbett Toung Corbett, an unknown when he tackled the great Terry McGovern, at Hartford, pounded on Terry's dressing room door ss he passed, shouting: "Come on out, Terry, and take your beating I" McGovern, accustomed to having his opponents scared to death at the very prospect of meeting him, was dumbfounded. He bounded from his cot, hurried Into the ring and re-ceived the first humiliation of his bril-liant career. Corbett knocked out the rattled Terry in the second round after a furious encounter. Annual Yacht Races to Be Held in August Dates for its annual International championship have Just been an-nounced by the Star Class Tacht Rac-ing association. The series will be sailed on Long Island sound on Aug-ust 28, 20 and 30. Following the sys-tem employed so successfully, last sum-mer, the Bayslde Yacht club will man-age the first race. The second regatta will be held under the auspices of the Port Washington Yacht club. The Manhaaset Bay Yacht club will man-age the final race of the series. Major League Teams Pleased With Florida The Washington club has signed an agreement to train in Tampa for the next five years, and all the cities in Florida now entertaining major league clubs are endeavoring to line them up to long-ter- contracts, as part of the plan for that spring "Co-coan-league." President Ehbets of the Brooklyn club has bought property near Clearwater and piuns to spend his winters In Florida, which prob-sbl- y ruenns the Dodgers will be ten-ants at Clearwater for some years to come. Woman Is Champion CI C Set fey Virginia Wagner of ls Moines. la., tweuty-one-year-ol- senior of Drake N'ty. is the woman's loo-yar-collegiate champion of America, and In addition one of the best girl athletes. Miss Wagner won the title In a national meet negotiating fhe century (iimh In the remarkable time of 12 3 10 seeondi. She also v..u P piuce In the high Jump, and "be high hurdles. Sporting Squibs of All Hinds Falconry is still practiced in Eng-land. The regulation distance for a mara-thon race Is 20 miles 3S5 yards. Ireland for the first time In history presents a tennis team as a nation. Rutgers college of New Brunswick has won 10 consecutive dual, track meets. The world's record for pole-vau- Is 13 feet C indies, held by Hoff, a Nor--' wegian athlete. ' Pete Layhnck Is the name of a fight r In New York. Even at that, they say he'a pretty good. Hawaii Is sending a picked crew tor contest In this country for the Davlsj cup, supreme trophy In lawn tennis Eddie Kaw, Cornell's great fullback, who has Just graduated, will coach the St. Lawrence university eleven next fall. Tommy Murphy, who has driven more trotters and pacers to world'sj records thsn any othpr man. states that he would not think of bringing a horse to top forn without at least' six months of training. The city of Baltimore appropriated; J2.0iXl townrd expenses of the nation-a- l aninteiir rowlnir rsrnttn, to be held August 3 and 4. The fnnwu Lenndep crew of London, It Is suld, will be en In the evvut. ' |