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Show Tharsdnaary o, 192 y Till-- : BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH The Bingham.Bulletin , Entered as second-class('mltt- er at the postoffice'at Bingham1 fiCanyon, Utah, under the Act'ofCongress jof March 3, 879. j j Subscription Priced per year,1 in advance ....$2.0() Published at 446 Main St., Bingham Canyon, Utah HOWARD A. JARVIS, Editor I H I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I K ' g 1 " 1 If 'j ' ' l . s ' tllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllll ; J Football Most Brutal Sport t - J f , .a , f"ttOLLLGB football is more brutal t I than boxing," Gene Tunney, T heavyweight champion, told I members of tlie Men's, club of the V Lafayette Reformed clmrch In Jersey t City. Tnnney was the guest of Gov. A. i Hurry Moore of New Jersey. 4-- . utteuded jo .football game In X Washington ' recently." mild Gene, "and I saw five liun knocked otlt clean. "All1 I of tlipiu required tlie attendance of sur- - j fcons ii li (I were revived. I never saw i! such a fpectaele In boxing." t The champion declared Hint Injuries i Cen Tunney. T i. received lu football were often apparent V ' twenty years later. "Injuries sustained In Bcrlmmnge. he said, are T " vnore permanent than those received in boxing." J T The reason whv brutality goes unnoticed in footb;:!!, according to X X too bflsy watching tlie bull to be Tunney. 'Is that the Fpectntors are f worried nhout what happens to the men.' In boxing, lie ald, the' eyes . . of the crowd Were upon tlie men; hence staggering blows and subse- - I ijuent Injuries were thrown Into the spotlight. , ' X J . In football, ncconhng to Dempsey's conqueror, the men followed I the coaches' ideas or were removed from the game. In boxing It was f up to the Individual to rely on himself, he said. I When the champion had nub bed contrasting football and boxing Ji to the detriment of the former he launched Into a discussion of the .. $ history of pugilism. Appropriately enough, he began with mention of ;; J. pugilism bv Homer In tlie "Iliad." From this point In remote antiquity f he followed tlie sport through Pompeii und tlie Koman days to the X II present. IV fore going to Jersey City Tunney turned out to be the lion of .. '.' the eviiiiiig at mi entertainment featuring H.me of tlie highest ? luminaries of the literary and theatrical worlds given by the Authors' .. League of America at the lioosevelt hotel for tlie bench" t of the league's ;; " fund for needy writers. " Impeccably attired In evening clothes, with a dress tie knotted Just ". ight over u gorgeous expanse of white shirt front. Tunney fought a battle with woman novelists nnd short story writers who seized hit " 7 hands and tugged at his arms or coat lapels and pulled him about the f room while gushing introductions to their friends. i m i 1 1 1 1 : 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 i ) 1 1 m m ; n i t ;wh-'-:h-h-- DR., P. S II A F E R Dentist ' i i No. 2 Woodring Building t t t i : Phone 258 W. E. ALEXANDER ) PLUMBER AND STEAMFITTER Estimates Furnished Bath and Lavatory Installation 228 Main St. SHE WENT FROM BADJTOWORSE Down to 98 Poundi Finally Restored to Health by Lydia E.Pinkham' Vegetable Compound Cleveland. Ohio. "After having my Hi ni baby, I lost weight, no matter . wnat 1 dld-- Then a A'v ' doctor told mo I li H wou,d be better 14 jf t I ' 1 I had another baby, Li i M which I did. But I r got worse, was al- - ways sickly and , $ yfj went down to 98 ff pounds. My neigh- - prmttt bor told me about -- k filXti Lydla E. Plnkham'B LJjjjlMftS Vegetable Com-pound, as It helped her very much, so I tried It. After taking four bottles, I weigh 116 pounds. It has Just dono wonders for me and I can do my house-work now without one tit of trouble." . Mbs. M. Riessingeb, 10004 Nelson Ave., Cleveland, Ohio. If some good fairy should appear, and offer to grant your heart's desire,, what would you choose? Wealth? Ilarpiness? Health? That's the best gift. Health is riches that gold cannot buy and surely hcaltli is cause enough for happiness. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-pound may be the good fairy who offers you better health. Bunions fJW Quick relief from pain. jS. a Jf prevent she pressure. Wfj I DlSclwll's &arfSS3 fm 0 Put ont on tkt When in Salt Lake Stop at THE METROPOLE HOTEL MODERN. CLEAN, QUIET Rates: $1.00 day and up SAM LYTE Manager 35 East Broadway fDo We.-r- e 1 anxious to . I lUlJ have you ir find out lUOW about them About OUR They will h p , interest rlCGS you when I KYk you're in I jr need of I q printing P(rintin)G; For Colds, Grip or Influenza end br a Preventive, take Laxative BKOMO QUININE Tablets. A Safe and 1'roven Kemerty. The box bears the signature of E. W. Grove. 30c. Adv. n , wi When in SALT LAKE Stop at the REX HOTEL 253 So. State Phone Was. 6781 Bingham Stage Line Bingham Depot Main and Carr Fork I'hone 41 SCHEDULE Cars leave Bingham at 8, 9 and 11 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 wav $1.50 Round Trip $2.50 Tlie wise wife has no wishes for Iter husband to cratfiy. The Health of a Mother Is of Great Importance ' i Reno, Nev. "I do not hesitate to recon".end Dr. Pierce's Favorite ( Prescription to be a Une laedic'.ne. During expectancy end afterward I ! always took the 'Favorite Prescrip-tion and I know that It was won-derful help and benefit to me. It (?ave me strength and courage ar.1 helped' me In every way. I would advise prospective irotTicrs to Rive this old and reliable remedy a fair trial." Mrs. Z. Clark, 633 W. 2d St. Go to your neighborhood- drug store and get Favorito PreEcript'cn in tablets or liquid. Write Dr. Pierce, President Invalids' Hcei In Buffalo, N. Y., and receive good medical advice free. Have you ever tried Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Toilets for the stomaclf'ar.d bowels? ' Your dealer has them 60 Pellets, 80 cepts. ln haniy glass vials. p,,.,, It's Pure and It's Rich " j Our milk is daily subject f. ' to careful tests for ptirerieSs , ' J"'" and richness. And--lt must . T P '. T pjlss' these testsi 'otherwise ' Jfr --h. ' ' it can never reach th table.-- y: rtS-Vl-i bingham OAiii ; - I VV 1 and we will start delivery ...... .n. .... I. I. - Drink Water to Help Wash Out. Ki'drtey Poison If Your Back" Hurts 'or . Eladc'er ; Eothere You, Begin ' - ' f : ' Taking Salts -. V.'hen yo-.i-r kidneys hurt nnd you: hack feels sore don't get scared, ar.d proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the kidneys ? and irritate tlie entire urinnry tract. Keep our kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing y them witli a mild, harmless salt. which helps to remove the body's uri-nous waste and stimulates them f their normal activity. Tlie function of the kidneys Is to filter tlie blood. In 24 hours they strain from.it TCO grains of odd and waste, so we cm readily understand the vital linpor-- tance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of good water you cr.n't drink too much; also get from p.ny pharmacist about four ounces of Jsvl Salts; take a tablespoonful in ft glari of water before breakfast each morn-ing for a few days and your kidney may then act fine. This famous si'-l- Is made from the ncld of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithla, m l has been used for years to help clem nnd stimulate clogged kidneys; nlso to neutralize the acids In the system so they are no longer n source of Irri-tation, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts Is cannot in- - ' Jure; makes a delightful effervescent Uthia-wate- r dim!,-- , which everyone should take now and then to help keep-thei-kidneys clean and active. Try this; also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder whr.t became of your kidney trouble nr.d backache. I GET YOUR QUOTATIONS I We have the exclusive broad-castin- g privilege over j the powerful KSL station of Salt Lake, for stocks J and bonds. j X LA COSTE & COMPANY ' I 211 Boston BIdg. Salt Lake City : X X I At 7:30 Mountain Time, each night you can listen ' "! in and have the day's market. 3 l I , J This Radio Service can he had on the entire Pacific j X Coast and as far east as Kansas. It covers the entire ' 1 Northwest. Our client as far north as Alaska report g receiving bur quotations plainly. .., j ?. Mi..;-r- , ;..-- . Looks I ""i Mtxrif" I ' EYE SAI.VB tor iper.lj W . trlirt. AMolutdJr tl'.t. OTc at Ml drug-trlft- , .Jl HALL 4EUCEEL. New YofVCltJ i JEFFRIES STOPPED " CORBETJ; IN CAMP .Previously Unwritten Chap-ter History.Disclosed. Disclosing a bit of previously un-written fight history, Jim Jeffries, la a chapter on his career, published In a recent Issue of Liberty, relates how he knocked out Jim Corbett while the latter was prepurlnjj. for the fight in which he lost the heavyweight title to I!ob FltzslnllIlo!lS, In 1881; The knockout, as Jeffries tells the Hory, occurred when he first put the gloves on with t"oii)?tt In the latter's trulning camp at Corson f City, Nev. Accounts of the meeting at that time and since, however, has cred'ted Cor-bett with knocking out Jeffries, then a1 raw but powerful youngster re-cruited from a Los Angeles . boiler chop to gerve as i sparring partner for Corbett. "Corbett didn't knock me out; I knocked hi in out, Jeffries Is quoted as saying. "The story thnt he knocked nie out was Just a ballyhoo for the fi'lit to worry and boost Cor- - bett's stock by crediting him with a knockout punch. Pelaney (Coibett's manager) told me to say nothing and to be tuire not to contradict It If any-one asked me anil I never did." According to Jeffries' version of the affair, wliL-t-i occurred behind locked doors, his temper was aroused by an attempt to have him expose his chin for a knockout blow from Cor-bett. .. They wanted to see Jf Corbett had a punch and they got me to step In and leave my chin uncovered while he took a punch at nie. It made me mad to 'know I'd been tricked. My lip was cut ngainsi my teeth, but Cor, bett never knew It. I rushed him and mixed for a minute, then I got a punch over. I hit him and knocked h I m against the wall so hard he near-ly went through. "Then I pasted him a couple of good ones to keep him there nnd his hands dropped. He was done for and another punch would have finished bim. They rushed in and pulled me away and gave mp time to cool off. There wasn't any more boxing hai day." Phew! , . "So you have forgotten our wed-ding anniversary." she said bitterly. "How could I remember it?" lie in-quired, "Time has slipped away so-las-t and so happily that the wedding seems but yesterday." Washington Star.. Harvard's New Pilot Hie snows Arlbm Krenelf. Jr., wlio was elected .cap-tain of the Harvard varsity football team for l'.l'JS. .Captain comef from Wi'ncliesteK 'Mas. He succeed ' Capf. Charlie Prnft. ' - . .' - - - ' Modern Grid Training Real Strenuous Ordeal Training for college football Is a se-rious thing nowadays. A man going out to make his eleven must often sacrifice bis ambitions in the field of baseball, basket hall and other sports. Of course the man who has won liis letter In three major sports still ex-ists, but lie Is becoming rarer and Is found mainly nt the smaller Institu-tions, where athletic competition is not so stiff. I'.ig colleges, and little ones, too, for that matter, have spring practice. There ore summer occupations of ar-duous work to keep in condition There is the early autumn session of intensive training nt a camp or se-cluded establishment. Also there are the regular practice sessions and the Informal practice sessions; there are tlie matters of clothes, sleep, assoiates. mental attl. tude. On top of all is the coaching system. In the football season the day of the members of the squad begins usually about 7 a. in., the men having break-fast nt the training table. The rest of the morning and early nfternoou is given over to studies and lectures. Practice begins some time between 3 and 5 p. m., depending upon the scholastic program. Nearly every coach get two hours or more of work out of the members of his squad every weekday, and several coaches are re-sorting to niiilit practice, using either a,, "ghost", ball, the leather being painted white, or powerful arc lights overhead. Itoleaux Saguero, Chicago's newest fistic sensation, is u former chef. The New York Ciants have selected Augusta, On., as the site for their l'.CS spring training. Tex Posen, Itutger's athletic star, is likely to win four letters In major sports this season. Already twenty intersectional col-lege football games have been curded for the 1!)1'8 campaign, early schedules reveal. A new goal net. which keeps the puck from bounding back into tlie playing awn, is being-use- by the Na-tional Hockey league. Manager McOraw of the Olants an-nounces that his battery men will be sent to Hot Springs In February for o preliminary polling out. Charles Scalletty, a young southpaw pitcher In the semi-pr- ranks at Par-sons, Kan., has been signed for a trial, by the St, Louis Browns.- - ? V Kid Francis, Italian bantamweight, lias placed himself in tin .first rank of that , division by virtue of his recent d decision over Archie P.ell. - 'The 'itrfulnbus' gnlt tuilt Mr night playing, Tried imt jw.'thei Fast ought to be practicable If some hunter doesn't mistake It for a one-eye- d wolf, . ..Racing grey hounds .are weighed r.i "at lix Vclock of the' ruclng"day. mi'' ' If the' (Tog's "'Weight is' one pound "'above r t eicnv' tiorniartt lp hot ulliw .i to ' '" ' -- . - ,-. compete.- - What . Is apparently. he very apex of executive .etl.iciency" lias been achieved by a rnilliouire In Washing- - , ii who retained a amateur , to play Ids golf... ' OwitgeS t'arpentier, who once es-sayed to take the world's fistic cham-pionship from America, is now a pub-lic dancer in France. He got that way In tlie American.r.ing.. A Siamese paper reports tlie arrival In P.angkok of Somdech Phra Srlsa-varlnd- a ParamahaJa I'bra Ranvassn Matuclin Chno. Sounds like an All American footbal.l .se.lection. Ignacio Fernandez. Philippine tenth erweight. who has been going good among the topnotchers of this coun-try, Is probably the best tighter from the Islands sinc.e .Pa.ncho Villa. Tlie P.rooklyn Koblns ' ave gone Into the collegiate ranks to sign P.urnlmm i.ee, star athlete of Mississippi col-- I lege. Lee was shorts'op on the base-- I ball team and captain of the football eleven. ... It Is understood that no more mutches will be permitted in Chicago unless the twist Imparted to the cue ball by the contestant be known by some other name than "English." At Kansas City Babe Ituth posed In a pair of new-fa- ? gled overalls, for ad vertising purposes, and received $:t. iKK). Gehrig also got a slice of the money, and If Is said they secured $4.70(i overall. .t . Doubt as to the return of Manager Cert NlehofT to Atlanta, was dispelled when President It. I. Spiller an-nounced at, the Southern league meet-ing in llemphls.' jhnt NiehofT would, igaln "pilot the Crackerst t"' "'"" - --- ' - .v Tower of Strength. ' After playing oecond fiddle to tin incomparable (J.orge Kelly at first base for four years', Memphis Bill Terry finally got bis chance last spring lo play tegular for the Oiants. He played the game of his life and was a tower of strength to Mel! raw John Ileisman to Retire . as Coach of Football . With .the close of tlie IDJ7 .gridiron campaign rounding out a coaching a reer of :W years. John W. Heisman. ethletlc director and head, football coach nt Rice Institute at Houston. Texas, lias announced bis retirement. With tlie exception of Alonzo A. Rtugg of the University of Chicago, no man has coached football longer than Hels man. The veteran announced his resigna-tion at a banquet rf Kice students. The resignation has been necepted and while the sixty-year-ol- mentor did not outline bis plans for the fu-ture, he Indicnted he had coached his last football team. I'efore coming to Rice. Heisman coached for several years at Georgia Tech, including 1917 when tlie Oolden Tornado ranked as r.ne of tlie coun-try's leading elevens. Mule Shirely Regained in Trade by Griffmen Krnest (.Mule) Shirley, tlie North .Carolina university first base product, who received quite a thorough inspec-tion with the GrifTtnen a few years ago. has been brought back into tlie fold. President Clark Griffith announces that Shirley has been obtained In a trade with the llochester club. In which the International leaguers get title to Shortstop Dubby Dear, who Joined tlie Nationals last summer, straight from the campus of Virginia Polytechnic institnie. Shirley, a left hand thrower who hats in the orthodox fashion, last season was farmed to Greenville, where he helped that club win the South Atlantic luugue pennant, clout-ing some "1 home runs in the process of registering a very respectable bat ting. average He Is to be retained hs understudy to Joe Judge, regular vestibule guardian and tire dispenser. Jockey Hardy Now Holds World's Record for Wins "Longshot" Hardy a lad of eight-een, with only one year's experience in tlie saddle, holds the world's record for winning mounts on thoroughbred horses for a single season by virtue of riding to victory In 207 races. "Previous records were held by Ivan Parke, with 20" winners, and Guy Garner, with 203. Hardy is tlie third Jockey to cross JtHt in the history of tlie American turt. He broke In on Ohio tracks In 102C and was several months getting his first winner home. This happened on September 30, H2C. nt Columbus. Last spring Hanlv began riding on Chicago tracks almost unknown, and became a sensation almost overnight. C. K. "Boots" Durnell purchased Har-dy's contract for $12,000, and Hardy has since been riding for the Thre D's stable., manflgen by Durnell f K. T. Waggoner. Texas millionaire. |