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Show u THE BINGHAM NEWS. BfNGHAM, UTAn ;,-:v- i TENSE MOMENT IN NAVY GAME i iw-A-x v4l - f Is One of the tense moments during the ?iuy ot me avy-Ueorg- Tech at An-napolis when the Navy triumphed over the southerners with a score of 13 to 0, The photograph shows McDonough of Georgia carrying the ball after the kick-o- ff In the second period. . ; Cm -i- .i- MANY CHANGES MADE IN BASEBALL RULES rientjr of changes were brought Into baseball during the season of 1880. Ia that year eight "called bolls" entitled the batter to first base. Sunday baseball was prohibited by law. The first professional ball park In New York was opened September 29. And the rule was Introduced de-claring a baserunner out If hit by a batted ball. v Two years later the number of balls on which a batter was entitled to first base was re-duced to seven. Another change was the adoption of the three-fo- ot line beside he path to first base. Western Brevities from f Mary Western States Ashland Residents of an outlying district within the city limits are per-plexed as to what procedure they must take regarding deer that nightly in-vade their orchards and gardens. The chief offenders are does and fawns, which are protected during the t)pen ienson. Salem, --Nearly a down Indian boys from various points in Alaska, Wash-Ingto- Montana and other states must be turned away from the Salem In-jla- n school, according to Superintend-ent Hall, because under the govern-ment regulations they do not possess the educational qualifications that en-title them to admission to Indian ichools. San Francisco An armistice In the war 'of milk dealers which has been waged here for some months past in fixing, of a price ot 13 cents l quart for the fluid. . Seattle A lady sophomore at th University of Washington, Is out of athletics at that institution for the rest of this quarter, it is unofficially reported because a newspaper Sunday printed a photograph in which ah was teen wearing running trunks Just like those affected by male track protagon-ists." Los Anogels With the arrival here )f a group of San Francisco and Utah :apltalists announcement will shortly m made, It Is expected, ot plans for ;he 120,000,000 merger of Pacific coast iteel and coal resources, a merger that vlll mako the west entirely independ-ent of eastern mills for lta steel sup-ply Ashland Among other . interesting people elected to office November 7 Is Charles L. Loomls, popular citizen of ills mineral spring city, who literally A'as ruled Into office by the urge ot leavy majorities of voters who wanted lira for mayor. The new mayor of Ashland has been confined to an In-valid chair for twenty years.. San Francisco Through a recent xmfesslon ot a Chinese steerage cook in a large Cliimse passenger liner, vho was arrested when found in pos-leswi-of $75,000 worth of cocaine and pium, the federal agenta believe they lave found the key to the smuggling. Mexico City. Water peddlers, quite i common sight In the capital 13 years igo, have reappeared as a result ot the rrater famine due to the breakdown in :he machinery ef the clty'a water plant. The peddlers are charging from 25 to centavos a gallon for the fluid tfhlch is daily becoming more scarce, Los Angeles A Jury In th superior ronrt awarded $17,100 to Russ Avery, tdminlstrator of the estate ot the late lacob Charles Denton, mining opera-jo-t, after hearing his suit against the Employee's Liability Insurance com-pany of London, Limited, to recover ;he amount tor which Denton's life 'as insured, with interest. Mrs. Louise V. Peete is serving a life sentence in San Quentin penitentiary for the mur-Je- r of Denton more thaa two years igo. Oymphia, The governor has so to change the date ot execution jf James E. Mahoney, ot Seattle, to December 5, from December 1, to await :he action of the United States su-preme court on an application for a rlt of error In Mahoney's conviction if the murdVr of his wife, Attorney leneral Thompson has advised Acting overnor Coyle. Eugene The establishment of co-operative stockyards and a packing house in Eugene In the near future ll l probability, according to farmers and auslness men of this city, who have Deen discussing the project for some time past. Vancouver. Oaa hund'-ct- l end twen-ty carloads of dried ptunes will be shipped this year by the Washington Growers' Packing Corporation of this ;lty, which controls about 8.v per cent of all the prune ecreuge In Clarke county. Butte. The Sheridan State bank at Sheridan, Mont., was robbed by yeggs who escaped with $107 in rnsh and the contents of 27 safety deposit boxes. Tacomn A record prife for eircs ia this section was established whoa H. M. Lenthors of Woodland sold twenty tgtfs from "Lady Jewell," his champ-ion White Leghorn hea for $r00. "Lady Jewell", laid 31R egs for the year endlme November 1, at the offl-- 1 rial eeg laying contest conducted by the Western Washington Experiment station. Venture. Bounty on male mountain lions should be raised to $.'0 by tho state, and to &"0 on females, In the opinion of Edwin L. Iladdcrly of the California fish and game commission. Mexl.-a'i- . The bollef was expressed j by officials here that the two Mexicans who shot find killed Richard Newton nnd perhaps fntnlly wmihded Imn Mc Klnnon, both of Williams, Cnl., near Mxlcall, had escaped into the lnited Elates SPENT HALF HER TIME III BED Fanner! Wife Tells How Lydia L Pinkham'i Vegetable Compound Made Her a Well Woman f Carter's Creek, Tenn. "Three years ago I was almost an invalid. I spent Tiki lit-- - 1 1 1 I ll half f m? time fa r ! bed, being afflicted IP . "1 with a Uonhl which 'f j women of a certain y Xh age are apt to have. V"j 1 took Lydia E. r Pinkham's Vegetable i'f'V Compound. Tabled ? and used Lydia E. Hf TV I Pinkham's Sanative h ' V, '"I Wash-- 1 Rm aweU JU1-- s woman now and have 4 ' J?- - ' been for two years. any one who ia younger and as 1 am a farmer's wife I have plenty to do for I cultivate my own garden, raise many chickens and do my own housework. You. may publish this letter as I am ready to do anything to help other women as I have Seen so well and happy aince my troubles are past "Mrs. E.T. Galloway, Carter's Creek, Tenn. Most women find plenty to do. If they are upset with some female ailment and troubled with such symptoms as Mrs. Galloway had, the smallest duty teems a mountain. If you find it hard to keep up, If you are nervous and irritable, without ambi-tion and out of sorts generally, give the Vegetable Compound a fair trial. We believe it will help you greatly, for it baa helped others. :SureRelief''-:;'v;- FOR INDIGESTION fcaffiNT-- S 6 Beil-an- s , XAkWJ-- M Hot water is.uPI Su re Relief :8EU.-AN-S Z5 M9 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE , I,,,. r ii hi in - ' j ja'i ' ' --hT,''. " ! Is Usually Due to Constipation j When you are constipated, not enough of Nature's lubricating liquid is pro- - duced in the bowel to keep ' . the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like ; this natural lubricant and thus replaces it. , Nujol Is a lubricant not ' fV "i ,ne'ic'ne r JkiSrrM Iative so f3 cannot gripe. Vl A LUBWCANr-NO- T A 1J Cuticura Soap -- The Healthy - Shaving Soap CURES COLDS. -- LA GRIPPE in Z Hour 3 r OSCAW QUININE i Standard cold romedy world over. Demand box bearing Mr. Hill's portrait and signature AtAUDcut4ist30Cenf Mn "HABLA USTED ESPANOL? (DO YOU hl'EAK ttfAMMIf) Eutly. quickly iearnad with "buobsr'a Rkp14 Haiit puatpatd for $1.40. TIMF.I.Y HINTS O. 1 185 IJnroln 1W Brooklyn. N. T. RepremntatlvM Wanted fr Thl Territory. Oeod poniUon tor ao.lve man or woman, whole r part Uma HoHltla Flaherlaa, Benttla. Waah. Help That Bad Back! you tortured with constant bac-kachetired, weak, ll unstrung fter the least exertion? Evening find 'on worn out and discouraged! Then ook to your kidneysl When the kid-neys weaken, poisons accumulate in the system and cause nagging backache, stabbing pains, headaches and dizziness. You feel nervous, irritable and "blue, and likely suffer annoying bladder ir-regularities. Don't wait. Neglect may lead to serious kidney sickness. Use Doan'$ Kidney Pills. Doan's have helped thousands and should help you. Aide your neighbor t A Utah Caae ay. m. William Nielsen, I Wi prop, of black-- 1 ""Tiif smith shop, First i vA, Bouth and First I V P East Bta., Mantl, .1 j&V Utah, says: "My "HtJCJ5IX back ached and FNlf?9 when I stooped ?yj 1 ;i I could hardly Ol .liyv T Btralghten. Sharp f3iUi 1 Pns stabbed ma tlM"Mr r through my back IftVi::" Sat the slightest tS2? - mve-- My dnejr; were weak the secretions passed too frequently. I uaed Doan's Kidney Plus and soon fett like myself again." Cat Doan's ai Any Store, 60c Boa DOAN'SIV POSTER .MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y. Important to All Women Readers of This Paper Thousands upon thousand of women have kidney or bladder trouble and aover suspect it. Women's complaints often prove to b nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result ot kidney or b'Hdr disease. II the kidneys are not in a healthy con-dition, they may cause the other orgaos to become diseased. DON'T DESPAIR if you are troubled with pains or aches; feel tired; have headache, indigestion, insomnia; painful passage of urine, you will find relief by regularly taking LATHROP'S Tht world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles and National Remedy of Holland sinca 1696. Threa aizas, all druggists. Guaranteed. Look for th nam Cold Mdl on ovary boa and aceapt bo imitation You may suffer pain in the back, head-ach- e and lose of ambition. ; Poor health makes you nervous, irri-table and maybe despondent; it aukes any one so. rL hat hundreds of women claim that Ur. Kilmer's Swamp Root, by restoring health to the kidneys, proved to be just tha remedy needed to overcome such ooni'l-tinn- s. '" - Many send for a sample bottle to see what Swamp Root, the (treat kidney, live nd bladder medicine, will do fir them. By pnclnning ten rents to Dr. Kilmer & Co, Ringhamton, N. Y., you may receive sam-ple size bottle by parcel post. You can purchaxe medium and large size bottles at all drug stores. Advertisement. S crX'T HKPTlf IN KKBT IOX 'KRnM'l'A''l a n.."ll-t- l in.. white eream IhnKl.i wondnn tt t complexion. loi.nrwi ln.riK.t-tiaO-- plnipl-,ro!":.- 'io- ""t-fn- l faR bixni'h. WhII si A t hM iWKl.ur pa, c, h, Bf v CO.. "Wm avw. CMitanc towr. Pure to aw s wlr. Make "' '""' """ t Ju. At U g.l dnlKKl". r.U. or lir'l froB Hl.hblU fcI.LW. .l.cailu. M uiylus, ffuo. Peautiful Eyes.like fine .Ui"rM Tth, te ihn r.:u!t of Cnnnnnt If ' v Cure. Iht daily w of M""n .;: " J I:ve 'Wr nd Ra iint. fiilorable. llm.u.r. fiolj and H- i lUccranveruled by All DtuagUW. ' '- - GOLF MARKED BY ITS MOST RAPID CHANGES Modern Weapons Make Game Easier and Enjoyable. Years Ago Scots Played With Feather Balls andJJsed Only Few Clubs Every Modern Convenience Was Quickly Rejected. There are better golfers now than there were 20 years ago. There were better golfers 20 years ago than there were 40 years ago. Golf Is a game that has lived and thrived for ages, yet modern weapons have made the pastime easier and more enjoyable. Tears ago the Scots played with leatner balls ana used oniy a lew clubs. They played over short courses and their scores ran htgh as a rule. Scores then would be ridiculously high compared to the scoring done to-day. Courses were about a third short-er than we have now. ' If the old conditions prevailed feather balls, clumsy clubs and short course golf would not be half so at-tractive. - In the old days there were few conveniences, as the clubhouses were tot built on the magnificent scule (hat they are at the present time. Getting to and from the links was not as easy, nor could the golfer trav In such comfort. There were no caddie bags, either. The caddie bag has only been used lit the last 40 years. Up to that time the caddie carried the half dozen clubs under his arm. Those who used the first crolf baes were thoueht to be snobs and It wae considered faddish. The old-tim- e golfers tamed hp their noses at the man who wanted his clubs packed in a sack. The Scots insisted that It was "na goff." When the rubber-core- d ball came Into existence the Scots Insisted that It was harmful to the game, and It was cried down In the leading golf centers, just as the gutta percha ball had been when it was first introduced. Every modern invention that has been a help to the golfer has been rejected at first thought. The bamboo shaft has been barred In Great Britain, a was the steel shaft recently. INTERESTING SPORT NOTES Alfred Shrubb again is coaching Ox-ford university, England, track squad. Princeton material appeared to out-cl-the Pennsylvania squad this year ' In size and strength. " Well, if Mr. Slkl beats Joe Beckett he will be Just about champion of the ring where It happens. George Cutshaw, second baseman of the Detroit Tigers, Is in Los Anyeles. He will play winter league balL A London newspaper will renew its offer of $5,000 next year to the swim-mer who crosses the English channel. ' There la a possibility that the Dor-v-race track at Montreal may rent out the Infield section of its course fr golf links. At thirty-four- , passe as a catcher, Bill Klllefer has made good as man-ager of the Cubs and la given a two-yea- r contract. ' Miller Hugglns by again accepting the management of the New York Americans, proves that he la a glutton for punishment. - "Good I" shouts the football fan after he has gotten out of bed and found it a cold, raw day with raiu falling; "there'll be a game 1 The consensus of opinion Is that e .senegalese who trains on brandy can hardly stand np to a gentleman who iialns in a shipyard. W. F. Crocker of McGlll onlverslty. Montreal, is Intercollegiate tennl champion "of Queen's university In s dve-se- t match recently. Referees In New York state are for bidden to talk to newspaper men, an indication that the life of the reporter Is getting softer and softer. At eighty-thre- e, Edward Payson Weston, pedestrian. Is quite an ath-lete. But he says he Is about ready to quit the exciting competition. Looks very much as If Catcher Schmidt of the Pittsburgh NatlouaU uad a press agent. It's a quiet duy when he doesn't break Into print. Honolulu plans a swimming stadium ,is a war memorial. The ikm1 will measure CO by 110 yards. Seutlug for 0,500 will be pro-vided. The fact that thousands of his couu trymen bet on him In his last fight may nave had something to do with decision to go into the fishing buMliCo. West Side Tennis club of New York jonteniplutea constructing a new con-- rrete stadium to seat 20,IMK), If assured uf the award of big tennis fixtures for a number of years. A western college football guard who surrounded 13 watermelons at a sit-ting la to be used as a regular, ou the theory that If he can't stop the opposi-tion any other way he can eat It. Cy Young and Amos Rusle, star pitchers of other days, Insist there Is one sure way to stop home-ru- n hitting, use high balls. Present-da- y pitchers ask where are you going to got 'em. Tete Donohue, Cincinnati pitcher, didn't go barnstorming when the sea-son ended. He hiked straight away for Texas, where he - resumed his studies In Texas Christian university. After looking at pictures of the champion, Jess Sweetzer, making a full approach shot with a maahle niblick, the process Is a complete mystery, so far as actual accomplishment Is con-cerned. Walter llnpgood of the Rochester club while at the World's series sans the praines of Chick (iagnon, the u tho botroit elub loaned to , (iagnon, Riys IlapgM-d- , In K-Ing to Le a wonderful bull puor. BURLEIGH GRIMES TO STICK Right-Hande- d Spitball Artist Will Not Ba Disposed of by Brooklyn Management. Unless President Ebbets of the Bob-In- s changes his mind Burleigh Grimes, his right-hande- d spltpall expert, will not be sold or traded during the win-ter months. ' "Grimes will pitch ball for the Brooklyns next season, or attend to his automobile business in Minerva," tald lr-'-" Oill Burleiegh Grime. the Flatbush magnate. If Ebbets does decide to get rid of the pitcher he will not have much trouble In finding an-other club owner who Is willing to ob-tain Burleigh's services. Ignorance. Senator Medill McCormick said at a dinner in Washington: "The League of Nations has failed. To champion It is to show an lgnor- - f ance equal to the copy reader's. - "You remember, I am sure, the es- - cape of A. Savage Landor, the explor er, from Thibet? Landor escaped, you know, but he bore the marks of brutal tortures. "This happened back In 190D or s 1010. There was a ropy reader In ' Chicago at the time who had never heard of the Explorer Landor, and t when the dispatch about him came In, the poor Ignorant copy reader edited i it so that It appeared In his paper In the morning like this: "A savage landor has made Its ap-- i. , pearance In Thibet but the beast es-caped after bejng badly : mauled. " Delng good Is the only certain happy action of a man's life. Sir Philip Sidney. ( Don't be In a hurry to see life if you aould live long. ' The early fish catches the worm hoek and all. ONE IS BORN EACH MINUTE Here Is Gold Assayer Who Bought "Gold Brick" Believing It to Be the Real Thiny. The fact that gold Is so scarce now-adays Is responsible for an expensive mistake which a St. Louis assayer, made recently. When he was ofTered SO pounds for $7,000 he Jumped at the "bargain, thinking he had made a rare good buy. lie cautiously assayed the offering. It assayed like gold, so he bought It. Later It struck him as being strange that the gold was in the form of a brick, and he decided to aielt It Alas, for the bargain I The nice shiny gold plating run off, leav-ing brass beneath. The next time that assayer is of-ar-a gold brick for sale, he will sot decide that no swindler would be foolihh enough to sell near gold to an expert assayer, nor will he purchase before he has made sure that he as-sayed deep enough. Detective Story Magazine. Roberts Is Biq Star M ,iiiiff i ilwiaailUlftl HOW tfU jtk The photograph shows "Ited" ltol-ert-stalwart right end of the Centet College eleven, vho, since the depar ture of the great Bo McMillan, Is the brightest Individual star among the members of the "fraying Colonels." RENTED CUSHIONS TO SIT ON University of Detroit Athletic Officii Displeased With Actions of Spectators. Stadium cushions are to be sat on, not to.be thrown. At lenst this Is the Idea of University of Detroit athletic officials who have ordered the cushion privilege at the new U. of D. stadium cancelled. It appears that near the end ef the U. of college name spectators who had rented cush-ions fell Into a playful mood and started tossing the soft seats around the stadium. Many of the cushions were scaled out onto the gridiron and returded piny. For this reason uni-versity officials decided It better to have no cushions. OVER 300 TEAMS COMPETING Ers'fsh Soccer Cub Taking Part li Preliminary Games for Cup Losers Eliminated. Over 300 soccer teams of England are competing In prelhnlaary round games for the famed cup. Losers are eliminated until two qualify for the final next April. This country has two similar fixtures, the National cup com-petition with 132 entries, mostly in the Eust and Including the Middle Wst, and the American Football association Challenge cap tourney, composed of eastern and western teams. Kounda are played monthly. After the Wedding. Jones What did you do with that old typewriter of yours? lrown Oh, I married her. TENNIS UMPIRES ORGANIZING Association In Japan Being Formed by Arbiters Similar to One in This Country. Japan Is to have a natlonnt lawn tennis umpires' association modeled after the one which has functioned so successfully In this country for the last several years. Mikl Mlho, who was prominent in furthering the In terests of the Japanese Davis Cup team hero last season. Is in charge of the movement. He Is already en-rolled as a member of tho United State Tennis Umpires' association, being the first Japanese to hold that dJatla "tion. Miho expects to leave here soon for Japan with a national championship cup to be offered for competition by his countrymen. The trophy is the gift of Japanese real-1e.n-of this country. Mlho, accord-- to his rime friend and associate, nr,o Shlmidr.it of Inst Bummer's ciinllenxlDg I 'avis Cup team, Is au ex Mlkut ciillo of teuoia. a Confidential. Advices to lovers of advanced sea-son corn-on-cob- : The first hundred fir- - nre the hardest. Life. . 3 Drop-Kic- k Record Herbert Covington, quarter-back ! on the Center college foot- - t ball team, In a game with the T University of Louisville, made i six drop kicks, one In the first " period, three in the second and two in the third period, l'lg-- ures on four of the kicks showed one from the d hue, iwo ,, t from the d line and one from the line. Otllcials ., J who presided at the pune wild the fent constituted u world's j record and that Ine van lie ; t let previous perfonniUTe in a ! single ganio. |