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Show i ... ; M THE BINGHAM NEWS Huggins Still Upsetting Dope I fx 1 L ; - 5 I ffJ f l 1 Hugglns and Hornsby, Former Master and Pupil. Miller nugglns has brought the New York Yankees to the top of the Amer-ican league playing heap four times since he Joined the club as manager In 1910. Twice the team ran third under his management ; once It fin-ished fourth, the first year that he was at the helm, and last year It bogged down to seventh place when the team cracked and crumbled from sheer old age. The feat of bringing the Tanks back to a pennant from a seventh-plac- e club In one season might establish Miller Hugglns as a miracle man. But the Yankee pilot Is still plain Mister Hugglns who alts back In the dugout and simply manages. Hugglns eschews the limelight; Is rarely seen on the coaching line and, as he seldom talks for publication, baseball funs know little of him. When things go wrong Hugglns gets the blame; otherwise the credit goes to Babe Ruth & Co. Hugglns Is a student of baseball. Small of stature, he made his mark as a smart bull player when he made his debut with the St Paul club In 1901. Three years later Hugglns found himself with Cincinnati, his home town, where he remained until 1910, playing second base. Traded In 1910 to St. Louis, Hugglns four years later succeeded Roper Kresnuhan as manager of the Cardinals. He Developed Horntby. His success with second-rat- e ball players was the talk for years In the National league circuit where he twice brought his club up to third place. It was while Hugglns managed St Louis that Rogers Hornsby came to the club, a youngster from a Texas town.' Hugglns saw at once that ha had a star In embryo. He personally corrected Hornshy's bnttlng stance and saw the young Texan rise to baseball stardom under bis own guidance. Hugglns this year confounded the experts. Few picked the Yankees to Bnlsh even In the first division. Two holes In the infield to be plugged up, shortstop and second base, arul with a rookie first baseman with less than a year's experience, the task for the midget Miller looked hopeless. "Bruins" Stranger to Rookie of Washington S Joe Bush, now with the g S Pirates, thinks the boat one he 8 g ever heard pulled by a rookie g X happened when he wan with the 5 g Washington team earlier In the g $ season. The Washington had 5 g boy pitcher who had never been g 5 very far from his home, and he $ g made the first trip with the S team West. g 5 ' One evening In Chicago the S g kid glanced at one of the early g 5 editions of the Windy City news- - 5 x papers and saw the line: x 5 "Bruins Win Overtlne Game." 5 g According to Hush, the kid's face g 8 took on a blank expression and 5 g then popped this one: g p "Is that guy Bruin right- - 5 hander or a southpaw?" 8 i it J I Salts Fine for I If . Aching Kidneys II When Back Hurts Flush Your I Kidneys as You Clean 1 f j j yup Bowels j ft Moat folks, forget that the kidneys, I like the bowels, sometimes get slug- - J glsb and clpged and need u tluNhlug I occasionally, else we have buckuche J and dull misery In the kidney region, I ievero headaches, rheumatic twinges, I torpid liver, ncld sloniuch, sleepless- - I ness and all sorts of bladder disorders. I You simply must keep your kidneys 1 active and clean and'the"nioiiient you I jsfeel an ache or pulu In the kidney I region begin drinking lots of water. 1 Also get about four ounces of Jad I Salts from any good drug store here, I take a tublespoonful In a gluss of wa- - I ter before breukfust for a few days I and your khlneys will then act fine. 1 This fatuous salts Is made from the 1 acid of gru;vs and lemon Juice, com- - I blned with itjhia, and Is inteuded to 1 flush clogged kidneys and help etimu- 1 late them to 'activity. It also helps j neutralize the acids In the urine ao I they no longer irritate, thus helping I to relieve bladder disorders. Jad Suits IS Inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent llthla water drink which everybody should take Dow and thehjto help keep their kld-- . neys clean. j A well-know- n local druggist soys be sella lots of Jad .Salts to folks who believe in trying to correct kidney trouble while It Is only trouble. (uciru u$Uu SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN- "- ermine Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin prescribed by physii cians and proved safe by millions over 25 years for Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART7 Cn Accept only "Bayer" packaga Tlifr which contains proven'directions. t V n,nd7 "B7r" " of 12 tablets, Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. Avbla It tk into auk ft Bajrw MuBfMtun of UoooaetttewlOMtor kltcyUcaela DEMAND "BAYER" ASPIRIN Take Tablets Without Fear If You 8ee the Safety "Bayer Cross." Warning! Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 20 years. Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous. Adv. Prominent Pueblo Man Quickly Restored to Health WellknountContractiyraVictimofNervoMlndigestion, Loss of Sleep and Dizziness. Strength Restored. Praises Tanlac Pioneer blood flows In the relna !S&""",v of Frank Good, a prominent fi fc75a Pueblo, Colo., contractor. But f ,r$$K even his brawn, muscle and eplen-- I 'ki--: did health broke under a strain. I S-;- ;f "Flu" left Its mark and threat- - J tfW ened his life. IVf "I bad almost given up hope of I r,M ever getting well," said Mr. Goad, V ?VVj when I began taking Tanlac. My hffif strength had vanished, sapped by J mm the poisons that raged through my ,Av Wv system eattog away brawn, under- - T"w mining health and leaving me a "rCI human wreck. My arms and legs 'v& were eo weak they were almost I !CA 1 useless. When I walked dizzy I M v 1 spells made me reel. My stomach f n'f I was so upset that I couldn't eat Tanlae often banishes pain that - without bloating' and suffering ravages health and builds up from tormenting indigestion. strength. It helps free the system "I followed the advice of a of poison caused by constipation friend and began taking Tanlac and sluggish liver. It is nature'! I recommend it to anyone ailing. own remedy made from roots. This tonle worked wonders. barks and herbs according to the Pain vanished. Quickly my old Tanlac formula, strength returned. I began to have Banish sickness from your life, a great appetite and ate every-- enjoy the benefits of strength and thing without a sign of pain. Tan-- golden health. Begin, taking Tan-lac certainly put me on my feet, ' lac. The first bottle often brings made me stronger, gave me better surprising results. Ask your drug-heal- th A Lady of Distinction than I have bad In years," gist for Tanlac today! Is recognized by the delicate, fascinat-ing influence of the perfume she uses A bath with Cutlcura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores followed by a dusting with Cutlcura Talcum powder usually means a clear, sweet, healthy skin. Advertisement. A good doctor has to know almost as much about medicine as be knows about human nature. Many children, many cares; no chfl. dren, no fllclty. Bovee. It is thinking that makes what we read ours. Shakespeare. Every man swells up after uttering I big word. Among the drugs that are not hablt-formln- g is castor oil. WOMANHOOD Salt Lake City,- - Utah. "I was m frail, delicate health before I married, pains denoting Dr. weakness Pierce's restored me to perfectly well twtthnormal so that suffered, I no these troubles. I married, I Dr. Prescrip-tion Pierce's as special tonic and nervine dur- - Ing expectant periods. Then, in later t. years, my health went down and I don't believe I would have come thru at all W had it not been for Dr. Pierce's Favor-it- e Prescription." Mrs. Jane Lee, 567 S. Second St . West Send 10c for trial pkg. of tablets to Dr. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y. vrMip vSi mther:-- Fietcher'8 V usJ Castoria h especially pre-- J Jx Pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness 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 &&&&&m Absolutely Harmhgs-N- q Qpfates. Physicians everywhere recommend ft. CTOP THAT ITCHING J Yon won't have to wait relief follows the first comforting touch of Resinol Breast Stroke Is Hope of Germans in Olympic In an effort to regain the swimming laurels won In the 1912 Olympic games at Stockholm, the last In which Ger-man athletes participated, the Nation-al Swimming association of Germany Is attempting to enroll every swimmer of promise In preparation for the 1928 games at Amsterdam. The most promising candidates for the team have started training under Walter Blnner and Kurt Behrena of Madgeburg, both Olympic veterans. Blnner doubts whether he can product a free-styl- e star to compete success-fully against John Welsmuiler of the United States and Arne Borg of Swe-den. On specialized strokes. In which Ger-mans have always been more prof-icient BInner's hopes are pinned on such veterans as IS. Rademacher, who two years ago set world Indoor breast stroke records for 200 and 400 meters, and Helniich. Frauleln Erna Huneus, . a seventeen year-ol-d swimmer, who re-- renuy set a worms inaoor oreasi stroke of lm. 20s. for 100 meters, la considered the better of the women candidates. In the 1912 Olympics German swim-mers won the 400-met- breast stroke ; first second and third places In the 200-met- breast stroke and fancy div-ing; and second places In the back-stroke, the relay and high diving. Fish Travel Far to Escape From Storms That fish are capable of swimming , hundreds of miles seeking refuge from storms has been proved In the waters of St; Andrew's bay, at Pana-ma City, Fla.', according to a dis-patch from that place. Some of the local fishermen returned with an enormous catch of a kind of mullet that Is never seen in these waters. Its habitat Is the Gulf of Mexico off the southernmost shores of the west coast, a distance of 300 or 400 miles. . Large schools of various kinds of fish foreign to this district have been seen In the gulf outside the city In the last few days swimming in this direction. In an apparently exlmusted condition. Another Interesting oc-currence, but one which preceded the storm, in this section, was the fact that hundreds of thousands of gulls flew Into the harbor and Its connecting bayous for several days prior to that event. ! I Captain George Thayer ar - J r The photograph shows Capt. George C. Thayer, who plays at end for the University of Pennsylvania . football team. Radical t Diner These sardines are terrible I Waiter But they're Imported, air. Diner Well, they ought to be d, every one of them. Needs It All P, W. writes: "The seashore never could stand what it has to If It didn't have plenty of sand." Boston Traa-scrip- t. He gains wisdom in a happy way who gains It by another's experi-ence. I'lautus. There Is nothing to be gained by be-ing a knocker. Riches have wings, but they dont seem to have any tail that yon can put salt on. The happiness of the wicked passe away Ifke a torrent. Racine. B Coffroth Raises Big 9 Purse for Handicap S g The Coffroth handicap, the 5 8 richest race for three-year-ol- 3 and up anywhere In the world, 5 5 will have an Increased value 5 next March. The added money S 5 will be $75,000 Instead of $G5,- - 5 S 000, as last spring when Curlarls 8 S won. S 5 There will-b- e $5,000 for the S 6 winning jockey and trainer, $5,- - aj x 000 for the second horse, $3,000 ? 5 for the third and $1,500 for the S S fourth. James Wood Coffroth, S g president of the Tijuana Jockey 5 5 (lub, authorizes this announce- - 5 aient. ' S An Increasing Interest In golf is be-ing displayed In Italy. Word has been received here that Paavo NurmI, Finnish runner, would again be seen on American tracks this winter. Upward of 480,000 caddies are em-ployed on golf links In the United States. Ed Griffin, a right-hande- d pitcher of the Memphis club of the Southern as-sociation, has been purchased by Brooklyn. Lieut. Richard Cutts won the Pacific coast division honors of the Marine corps rifle matches with 776 out of a possible 800 shots. Kikl Cuyler, star outfielder of the Pirates, now owns some Pittsburgh real estate and plans to make his home In the Smoky city. Purchase of Bill Cook and Fred Cook from the Saskatoon hockey club for $15,000 Is announced by the Ottawa Hockey association. The mystery woman who failed to Rwlro the channel remains a mystery, at any rate. Which also shows effect of failure. Orvllle Menard, d shortstop of the championship Bay City club, has been sold to the Roches-ter club of the International league. Freddie Hoffman, first-strin- g catcher, and Pewee Wannlnger, regular short-stop, have been sold by the St. Paul American association club to the Bos ton Americans. All baseball records were recently broken when Frank "Red" Partain of the Brownsville club In the Lower Rio Valley Baseball league of Texas, made five home runs In one game. Lee Fohl Is to be ousted as manager of the Boston Red Sox and "Lefty" Llefleld, coach, put In Fold's position, according to reports current In base-ball circles. While the Chinese have fallen be-fore the Invasion of western sports and have taken enthusiastically to baseball, tennis, soccer, running, cy-cling and basket ball, the game of golf has no appeal to them. Fernandlna, Fla., boasts the only natural ocean-fron- t golf course In America, the beautiful sand dunes forming fairways, bunkers and traps, the greens and grass having been planted on the government reserva-tion Immediately adjacent The first organized baseball league was formed back In 1871 and was known as the Professional associa-tion. Including teams of Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Rockford, Troy, Fort Wayne, New York and Brooklyn, with the Athletics winning the pennant. Coach Yost Gives Reply to Foes of School Sport Opponents of lnterscholastic ath-letics get little sympathy from Field-ing H. Yost, director of athletics at the University of Michigan. When asked of the relation of ath-letics to high school, Yost said the country needed the wholesome Influ-ence of sports to keep civilization from slipping. "Athletics In high schools," he said, "teach participants the lessons of en-durance, skill, e and the necessity for constant work in order to excel. "Athletics tench the student body lessons In loyalty to their group and when all are Imbued with thorough good sportsmanship, this loyalty la as dear in defeat as in victory. "In these days, when every stratum of society Is pervaded by gross mate-rialism and Immorality, we need such wholesome ' Influences as athletics to keep civilization from slipping be-hind." Tree Both Good and Evil The nipa palm, which Col. Carml Thompson, President Coolldge's emis-sary In the Philippine Islands, recent-ly learned lnny become an Important source of sugar, has long been an Im- - portant factor In the economic life of the people of the Islands, says the Minneapolis Journal. It supplies shel-ter and food, but It also furnishes the basis of "vino," one of the most brain-corrodin- g liquids produced by the tal-ented amateur distillers of the Orient. It Is thus a tree of both good and evil fruit. Lew Fonseca Appears to Be Brittle as Athlete Second Baseman Lew Fonseca Is certainly one hard-luc- k athlete. Just when be Is sold to Cleveland for $50,-00- 0 by Newark, he turns around and dislocates a shoulder. It was a simi-lar accident that was responsible for the Portuguese Inllelder being waived out of the National league last win-ter. In his previous accident It was his right shoulder that was Impaired, but fortunately it is his left shoulder this time. The first Injury made Lew's throwing arm so uncertain that it re-duced his value. It was thought at the time that the d and I'hilly would never re-cover his old-tim- e skill, but the maimed shoulder responded to treat-ment and was as good as new this season. The result was that Fonseca never looked better In his career. The lat-est Injury, though, verifies the belief that Lew Is still a brittle athlete and a dangerous investment Richards Is a Pro Y VI "'"I Vincent Richards, who ranks next to Bill Tilden as a tennis player, has Joined the ranks of the professionals and Is now In the same class with Lenglen, Mary Browne and two others. Play will begin In the Madi-son Square garden as soon as th world series gamoa are out of the way. I Those Dear Girls Madge Are you going to return the poor fellow's ring? Marie (who has Just broken her en-gagement) I haven't decided. I sup-pose he'll propose to you now, and I thought fd Just hand It over to you to save the bother. Wrong Dope Police Captain What Is the charge against this man, ofllcer? Officer Voting in this btate, sir, when be admits he votes In another. Prisoner Excuse, please, Mr. Gen-eral, da man he say when I'm natural-ize, "You can vote In any state now." Help Allston Recorder. "Does your daughter help any with the housework r "She washes her dog." Army's Sport Step Very Pleasing to the Navy Satisfaction over the decision of the Military academy to confine member-ship in its varsity teams to students who had completed one year's scho-lastic work was expressed by Com-mander Jonas H. Ingram, athletic di-rector, and other naval officers. Commander Ingram said that the one possible source of unpleasantness between the two branches of the serv-ice had been removed by the action of the Military academy. The action was not unexpected ; there having been strong Intimations that the Military academy was pre-paring to put Itself upon the same basis as the other leading athletic in-stitutions on the matter of eligibility. Best Year for Lyons Ted Lyons, White Sox hurler, who turned In a no-hi- t, no-ru- n game against the Red Sox, had the best year of his major-le- a gne career In 1925. Lyons worked 42 frays that campaign, win-ning 21 and losing 11. He was one of the few blg-tlm- e hurlers to reach the e class In victories. Ted Just missed getting a no-h- it tilt last year, Veach of Washington, going to hat as a pinch hitter In the ninth with two out spoiling Lyons' record by poking eut a safety. |