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Show THE BINGHAM NEWS. BINGHAM. UTAH I ImMERICANS ARE VICTORIOUS IN ENGLISH TRACK SPORTS I fir " i?LJ fl to wi m i: Tbis remarkable action photo-graph v 'jfgH 'J-- ahows Tevls Huhn of Prince-ton ''-- -' r' fj of the athletic meet, held on Oct' clearing the bar first In the . , Af't 27th. T. Huhn and W. El Steven-flnlsh of the 120-yar- d hurdles In the IX son, both Princeton men, won three Oxford University Seniors sports In VS. V' 'JSSfiH - events, the former taking the 120-yar- d England. The success of the Ameri-can nN, hurdles and the latter the undergraduates was the feature quarter-mile- . 16799 DIED In New York CHy alone from ki. ney trouble last year. Don't allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard against trouble by taking . LATHROP'S HAARLEM OIL Theworld's standard remedy for Iddneyj ' liver, bladder and uric add troubles. Holland's national remedy since 1698. All druggists, three sizes. Guaranteed. 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Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOBIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the tf yTST Signature of Coel?Vc2tSw& In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Joe the Plodder says some fellows always grab n stool when there's a piano to be moved. Tt seldom occurs to the low-price- d mnn Hint the high-price- d man Is prob-nhl.- v pai ning his sulary. Refreshes Weary Eyes pT WhenYour Eyes feel Dull f V. end HrivT, ue MuHn. It In- - Hl um!yRehvMcht7i"d?tetlna l L Tl M.kt them Clear, BrMu nj (, t, fpiikllng. Hrmlei. Sold and I J ,' , Recommended br All DruMlite. , lA bad CHrLKrars P CHRISTMAS is a story of last day; and I will you right away that it flilS happily. But It sadly. It was day up at the North pole, and as usual oa the day before Christmas, St.' Nicholas had been hurried and rather grumpy. Only this time, Mother Nicholas thought to herself that he was Just a bit grumpier than she had ever known him. And at suppertlme she found that she was right. He came Into the kitchen, closing his workshop door with a bang, and Bat down with all the little Nicholases to his porridge. "Well, I've said It before," he driving chem back t tha stablea ra-ti! this night's work U done." she said. "If you're awake when we get back, you may do It as always." How the children stared l "Was little old mother going all alone on that long, wild drive over towns and for ests and oceans and up and down chimneys, and goodness knows where, without asking St Nicholas If she might? Yes, that was Just what she was going to do I "For, when a good thing needs doing," she said brightly, "no permission Is needed." "Keep the fire going, be sure that the baby has the fur rug well up around his chin, and give your father a good breakfast when he wakes," she called over her shoulder and was away out of the door almost before they had realized that she was going. They heard the scampering of the reindeer hoofs, faster the dimmer they got, and then Just the stillness of the North pole. That was last Christmas Eve, And If you ask any child who lay awake to see St Nicholas, and peeped out with one eye, all the time pretending to be fast asleep, he will tell you that It wasn't St. Nicholas he saw et all. It was Just a tiny, sprightly old lady with frosty white curls and a red hood, who filled naughty Willie's stocking Just as full as good Marguerite's, and growled, "but this time I mean It The children down there in the world will get nothing from my pack this night. It's time they were taught a lesson." All the little Nicholases gasped, but Mother Nicholas only asked calmly: "Why, what is the matter now, fa-therly After you've been working for them the whole year, you wouldn't go and disappoint the poor dears would you?" "Yes, I would," declared St Nich-olas, swallowing his porridge In great gulps, and pretending that he was not a saint at all. "Half of them go around saying that there Isn't any St. Nicho-las, poking fun at me, and toughing In their sleeves. And the other half think It makes no difference whether they are good children or not, I'll fill their stockings Just the same. It's a thankless Job, I te'.l you. And I'm too old a man for It So I" "Come," said Mother Nicholas, sooth-ingly, "here Is a plate of griddle cakes. When you have eaten you will see things differently." "No, when I have eaten I shall go to bed. That's where an old fellow like me belongs, an old fellow who children don't believe In." Mother saw that he was determined, and that there was nothing to do for It since griddle cakes wouldn't help. So she put her finger to her Hps to motion the children silent, and went on quietly about her work. And when St. Nicholas had finished his supper, he' did roll away to bed, only telling the little Nicholases to be sure to hang their stockings, for they had been good children all the year and still believed in him. The minute the door closed behind him the little Nicholases burst Into excited chatter. "Oh, what a pity! Those poor children I Surely there must be some good onest Oh dear, what fun will Christmas be to us If all the children in the world down there are unhappy I" "What Indeed I" Mother Nicholas shook her head and looked often at St Nicholas Welcomed Her Back Aft fectlonately. left many more bon-bon- s In both than was usual. That peeping child will also tell you that before she went back up the chimney, she gave baby a kiss on his pink cheek, a thing St. Nicholas (who is as afraid of babies as a burglar Is, and for the same rea-son) has never been known to do. And mother, will you believe . me. In spite of having stopped to kiss all the babies, was back at the North pole a whole hour earlier than St Nicholas had ever been able to make It, even In his younger days. Her work was well done, tool But In spite of the early hour, she found the children and her husband waiting for her. St. Nicholas welcomed her back more affectionately than the children. "I woke In the middle of the night," he said, "out of such a horrid dream-- all about crying children and sad mothers. Bless you, good wife, for not letting that dream come true I" "Oh, don't mention it," said Mother Nicholas. "It was no trouble at all. Indeed, 4t did me good. I think, fa-ther, since you are getting so old, I will take over this Job myself from now on." St Nicholaa looked thoughtful at that lie paced up and down the floor. Then be came and stood in front of Mother Nicholas, straighten-ing up and looking almost as young as In his early days. "No, mother," he said firmly. "A "'WW woman's place Is In the home. Til at-tend to the business hereafter, thank you." And mother, who, after all, only wanted everybody to be happy, made him some griddle cakes for his break-fast But that was last year, the year you got a stocking full, even though you hadn't been so very good. This year you had better watch out, for It is old St. Nicholas himself you have to deal with. "Yea, I Would," Declared St Nicholas. the closed door, behind which St Nich-olas could already be heard snoring. "And the reindeer I" cried the old-est boy, "what will they do without their yearly exercise? It seems as though father might have gone, If only for their sakea." Mother Nicholas thought so, too. vnd at that minute they heard the elndeer's little hoofs beating on tho iard snow crust at the door. Wise tit-le beasts! St. Nicholas had never leluyed the Christmas Eve journey so ong before, and so here they were o save Mm the trouble of going for hem. The Nicholas children felt that hey never could face the poor little elndeer's disappointment. But what was Mother Nicholas do-n- g so busily over there by the cup-onrd- ? Tie children looked In amaze-ue- nt It was seldom that mother ft the snowhouse at any time of day. vnd hire she was, after dark, and lirlsttnas Eve, too, putting on her ood and cape, and pulling on her auntlctst "Are you going to drive the reln-ee- r back to the stables?" asked the dest boy. "Oh, please, let me. Pa-le- r always bts me, you know." Mother sboik her Lead, "I'll not be NAP LAJOIE LEARNS GOLF IS DIFFICULT Star Finds Way Up Is Pretty Hard. experience Has Taught iKing of Key-stone Backers to Pay More Atten-tion to Movement of Wrists and Actual Accuracy. Nap Lajole, former second baseman and manager of the Cleveland ball club and champion batsman of the big leagues. Is finding the sledding in golf ao easier than the hundreds of other auners. " Nap, one of the regular visitors at Highland Park, the municipal links, bad en awful time eventually breaking 100, and has just recently mastered the trick of negotiating 18 holes some-where in the 90s. Bt the ex-kin- g of swat Is advancing rapidly. When Larry first started to play regularly he walloped the' ball for fur-ther orders. He apparently had in mind his home run clouts of the rare old days of baseball. Putting all hla mighty strength In the swings occa-sionally did give him a drive of 250 yards or more, but the bnll was seldom straight. Invariably he hooked or - - -'- "- sliced into the rough, and he was al most constantly in difficulty. Experience taught Larry to forget all about supreme power In hitting the sphere and to attnfh more stress to the movement of the wrists and actual accuracy. It taught blm also that the main thing Is to keep one's eye on the ball from the start of the upward - swing to the follow through. Lajole is driving 'em out around the 178 mark quite consistently now and his shots are more frequently than otherwise straight down the course. Like all beginners be la bothered with such combinations as a good day with the woods and off-col- with the Irons, and vice versa, but all his associates admit that Nap is getting there and at a real lively clip. jp College Rowing Dates for Season of 1923 John Arthur Brown, chairman of Penn's rowing committee and member of the board of stew-ards of the American Rowing association, announced the com-plete college rowing schedule for 1923 with the exception of the Poughkeepsle regatta as fol-lows : April 2S Chllds Cup regatta (Columbia, Princeton and Penn-sylvania), Schuylkill River, Phil-adelphia, May 5 Harvard, Navy and Princeton triangular regatta, take Carnegie: Princeton, Tale, Columbia and Penn, triangular regatta, Housatonlc River, Derby, Conn. May 19 Yale, Cornell, Prince-ton triangular regatta, Lake Ca-yuga, Ithaca ; Navy, Syracuse, Tenn, and possibly Columbia, quadrangular regatta, Severn river, Annapolis. May 20 Harvard and Cor-nell dual regatta, Charles river, Boston ; American Henley, Schuylkill River, Philadelphia. t! NEDDA NOW TROTTING QUEEN Trots Mile at Lexington In 1:58 One-Quart- er of Second Faster Than Lou Dillon. Oa9 Interested In harness racing points out that the sporting world has become so much interested In other things world's series and football games that not enough ordinary Americans know that since the meet-ing at Lexington a new trotting queen reigns. Her name Is Nedda and she trotted her way to the place of cham-pions by going a mile at Lexington In 1:58V. That's one-qilart- second faster than any other mare has ever trotted. The queenly honor before ber was held by Lou Dillon. HUGHIE JENNINGS IN LINE ' I lljT--1 -- ?5SSi'' Hugh Jennings, the old Oriole, who won pennants for Detroit from 1907 to 1919 Inclusive, and who is John McGraw's right bower, again is the right man In the right place. The Giants' reins are gradually being turned over to Jennings and manj close students of the sport believe that McGraw eventually will step down and out as an active pilot of the world's champions. INTERESTING SPORT NOTES Jess Wlllard la again talking come-back. Cornell association football squad numbers 250 students. Minnesota's cross-countr- y team won the dual run with the Iowa barriers.. Goshen, N. Y, is said to be a sure member of the grand circuit In 1923. Battling Sikl, It seema, la some-thing other than a fighter. He is a dumbbell. r - Cornell university basketball team will play 19 games, December 21 to March IT. Aa American boxer In Germany won 1,000,009 marks, almost enough to buy a bottle of arnica. Tom Kelly, former Maroon player, has resigned as head football coach at the University of Missouri. a a Iowa State college, at Ames, la., won the annual cross-countr- y run of the Missouri Valley conference. The bettor on the races will be found with more money In bis band-boo- k than be has In his pocketbook. Jrl,e fighters we less bruts! taa tl once were, but even yet they oc-casionally exchange punches between clinches. a a a Johnny Buff, former flyweight cham-- plon, has said good-b- y to the ring for good. lie has gone Into business in Jersey City. As a result of the Reds' fine work the past season, Cincinnati fans are looking forward to pcnnnnt-wlnnin- g vstuff next year. a a President Goelzer of Bloomlngton announces the sale of Third Baseman Andy Woehrs to the Philadelphia National league club. The Chicago American leagtie team announces that it has signed a left-han- d pitcher "with superb control." There alnt no such animal. a a There Is more evidence that there is something In a name. Wilbur Good will continue as manager of the Blues, running on the record he made last summer. a William J. Bingham, Harvard track coach, will visit England and begin preliminary preparations for the track and field meet between a combined Harvard-Tal- e team which will oppose Oxford aad Cambridge next July In London. Minus the Sporting Instinct "How much is this stock?" "Thirty cents a share. In sixty days I'd guarantee It to go to $1.50 a si i a re." "If you will also give me a written contract to find a purchaser at that price when the sixty days are up 111 take a block." "Ah, sir. I've misjudged you. I see now that you are not the type of man who'll play the game." Birmingham Age-Heral- d. I JOE WOOD AS COACH kv sr. rvj-- j 'A ' f The photograph Is of Joe Wood, right fielder of the Cleveland Ameri-cans, who has been signed ns conch of the Tale varsity pitchers. Wood was known as "Smokey Joe" when twirl-"Jf- ,. Ing for the Boston Americans some years ago. But his arm went bad, and he became an outfielder. Besides hav-ing charge of the Tale pitchers, Wood will take hold of the Tale freshman team. CARD STAR FROM SANDL0TS George Toporcer Played Around Nw York for Many Seasons Without Attracting Attention. The wonderful playing of George Toporcer at short for the St Louis Cardinals this season reralls the fad that George played about the sundlotf of Greater New York for several sea sons . without drawing an notice t speak of. Like many other stars, hf had to go away from home to get e name. In the East Toporcer was p star with the St Agatha's Cathrtllr club of Brooklyn. The Meddlers. Meddlesome people are not neces-sarily malicious they may even be g but the harm they do Is none the less real. Knowing how to run other people's business Is not always so much a gift as an ,aQllc tlon. Party Supper Boxes. Where, there Is seating room at the Chrlstmas-tlm- e party refreshments are appropriately served In small boxes covered with red paper or holly pat-terned paper, and tied with gay rib-bons In holiday color. Eafh box con-tains a sandwich, slices of cake, nuts and candles daintily wrapped in wax paper. A tissue paper napkin, in Christmas design, is folded In each box. When each person has received his or her supper box the coffee and ice cream are served and tho contents of the box are eaten with it Ths pretty boxes can be retained by the guests as souvenir, or "favor," if l hey like such things. WETZEL WOULD BE MANAGEF Chronlo Pennant Winner In Bus1 Leagues Is Out for Something Good Next Year. Burs Wetzel, chronic pennant wlnne: In the Mint and other Class B leagues Is out foe something better next season if he can land It and he thinks there It a chance. He has Class B offers In plenty, but has set his mnrk for a Class A Job. Three pennants is bis Mini league records-enou- gh to entitle a fel-low to consideration. Choosing the Molly. Superstitious people assort that one should be careful ubout the choice of the holly for the decorations. Part should be smooth and part prickly. Then providing both kinds are car-ried Into the house at the same time all will be well. But sho'ild the prick ly variety be taken In first, tt.eo the husband will rule the household dur Ing the coming year; If the smooth Is brought In first the wife will bf "top dog." SUCCESSOR TO FRED MERKLE Manager Hapgood Announces J err) Belander Will Play First for Rochester In 1923. Business Manager Walter Tlrpgood of the Rochester club annormces t.ha' the deal has been cloned by whlcl. J!Ty Bolnngcr, who played first bn.v In tho Eastern league the past season will be with Rochester next year, sue ceedlng Fred Merkle, who, though h did grandly for Rochester, la ronsW. ered too passe to go further. RICHARDS GOES TO COLUMBIA Youthful Tennis Star Expected to Matriculate In February, Will Strengthen Team. Vincent Richards Is expected to matriculate at Columbia university in February. Richards prepared at Ford-ha- m prep. The youthful tennis star ; wtll strengthen the New York lnstltu- - Uon's tennis SQuad, which Includes frank Anderson, holder of the Cana dian singles championship. Christmas Spirit Needed. None of us can have too much Jk Christmas spirit |