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Show Thursday, March 15, 1928 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH i The BABY VJtH:; J ro mother in this enlightened aga would give her baby something she did not know was perfectly harmless,) especially when a few drops of plain Custorlu will right a baby's stomach and end almost any little 111. Fretful-nes- s and fever, too; It weal no UiM until everything Is serene. That's the beauty of Castorla; Its gentle Influence seems Just what Is needed. It does all that castor oil might accomplish, without shock to the system. Without the evil taste. It's delicious I Being purely vegeta able, you can give It as often a there's a sign of colic; constipation; dlarrhen; or need to aid sound, nat-ural sleep. Just one warning: It Is genuine Fletcher's Costorla that physicians recommend. Other preparations may be Just as free from all doubtful drugs, but no child of this writer's Is going to test them! Besides, the book on cure and feeding of babies that comet with Fletcher's Castorla is worth its weight In gold. Drink Water If Back or Kidneys Hurt Begin Taking Salt If You Fl or Have Bladder IBackachyWeakness Too much rich food forms adds which excite nnd overwork the kid-neys In their efforts to filter It from the system. Flush the kidneys occa-sionally to relieve them like you re-lieve the bowels, removing acids, waste and poison, else you may feel a dull misery In the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick head-ache, dizziness, the stomach sours, tongue Is coated, and when the weath-er Is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get Irritated, oblig-ing one to get up two or three times during the night. To help neutralize these Irrltutlnr acids nnd flush off the body's urinous WRRte, begin drinking wuter. Also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any phnrmacy, take a tohlcspoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine and bladder disorders disappenr. This famous salts Is made from the add of grapes nnd lemon Juice, com-bined with lithin, nnd has been used for years to help clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder Ir-ritation. Jad Suits Is Inexpensive nnd makes a delightful effervescent lithin-wnte- r drink which millions of men nnd women take now nnd then to help prevent serious kidney nnd blad-der disorders. By all means, drink lots of good water every day. Children Cry for c,,r"" mm. Wir 1 1, lift, frm boolltt. Krawkl J JOtntottnt ramovrB f rcklw. Uid mmt forty jmsm, 11.26 and Me. Ak roar dJr or writ Wimm Dr. C. N. Brry C..l7 9MchkmA-Chm- m M-1m- i i b'4v - I i 9AYEFN Tttp2 The whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote for pain. But it's just as important to know tluit there is only one genuine Bayer Aspirin. The name Bayer is on every tablet, and on the box. If it says Bayer, it's genuine; and if it doesn't, it is not! Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Aspirin. So are colds, and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgia, neuritis, and f rheumatism promptly relieved. Get Bayer at any drugstore with proven directions. Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin; v it does NOT affect the heart Ajplrla la tbt tr&dt mark of Bver Manufacture of liauotcetlcacldeiter of BtUcftkic&al Moore to Play His Real Game $ i J 7niI.E there tins never been as much said or written of Eddie I X A Moore as there has of the famous trio, Krctner, Wright and J V Cuyler, that broke In with hlra In the yenr 1024, yet Jt I It s fact, none the less, that Moore played a greater came of ball J $ than any of the above-mentione- d trio that year. Afterwards, all X three of them moved pretty stead- - J II) ahead to stardom, while hddle $ Moore, the real star of thnt won- - derful 1924 IMrute team, some-- T how flashed un and then faded His baitlnfi punch of Xj!) In lJ24 had slumped to .250 In 11)20, full X of over 100 points. Moore claims J X out of the limelight, j Eddie's , batting ac-id tlvlilea aVeragi'd .SoO jjj that year, four points ahead of the mighty jjj Cuyler and a far dls f tance ahead of the jjj other two heroes, f . Wright and Traynor. jjj Then Moore played t In three different po- - sltions during that jjj ball season, outfield.' second and also third jjj base. Only a name X boy with a natural jjj born playing talent of a most unusual or jjj der could have flashed such a record as that jjj on the 1924 Baseball j screen. - Funny thing about that he had a bad Z shoulder In 1029 and jjj that It affected his playing enough to uc-- jjj ' count for his failure to come up to his jjj form of the previous j year. And then, early jjj In 1020 he says he f tore the ligaments X loose from the hone jjj at the ankle and slin- - ply coudl not play hU jjj gumo. He was also In I the hospital that year jjj with pneumonia. Out- - I side of these little jjj things Moore was nl- - ? , right that bad year. jjj Maying 112 games In various positions for the Boston team jjj last year Eddie Moore I Eddia Moors. J Moore. He fell back In his hatting X the next season to .21(8. Then the jjj next yeur he dropped to .250. May- - Ing regularly at second base in jjj 1925, the year the Pirates won the league flag and the world chum-jj- j pionshlp, Moore played just a fair brand of ball; nothing to compare jjj to his record of the previous year. They said it was temperament. During the 1025 series Moore was jjj supposed to have been at odds with jjj the team, and, after playing poor-- ? ly In the first four gnmes be rnl- - lied and came through gamely In J the pinches. But the next year ue slipped back so badly that he was jjj released to Boston In a trade that did not involve much cash or play-jj- j ing mnterlal from the Boston end. hit Just over the coveted ;wi mum. I Moore says he Is hLppy In his X present berth and that his bunged- - I up leg Is sound again. He declares X that tlili'd base Is his natural posl- - jjj tlon. but he can play right well In the field. He does not claim to be jjj a second baseman at all. They are doing a lot of figuring on the jjj Braves board of strategy on where jjj to place Moore to the best ad- - vantage next spring. They are hop- - jjj Ing and even expecting that this slushing hitter of 1!)24 will get Into jjj the state of mind and body to play his real game. Even on his pres- - jjj ent form he Is a very handy guy 5 to have hanging around for be jjj can knock out .300 find play the In- - jjj field and the outfield equally well, jjj What Happens When Business Men Confer This was a conference to end con-ferences. Gathered about the long table were 12 representative business men, 14 ash trays, 1? pencils, 48 cigars and one telephone. The chnlrinnn briskly ruppcd for or-der, lie stated the purpose of the meeting, lie called for remarks. Silence did not follow. Membvrs A, B uud C were engaged In small talk. Members D and K were playing over a Saturday golf game. Members P. G and II whispered, followed by pro longed luughter. Members I, J and K were calculating the effect of bridge on the human nervous system. Mem-ber L, ulotic, was brooding. No one, It seemed, had heard the chairman. The telephone rung. The chairman was called. He listened attentively for a moment His reply was decisive, stern: "Tell 'em I'm In conference!" Kansas t'lty Star. iNewoNoteo;; : It's m Privilege to Live in ', Utah ii ' ' CEDAR CITY Utah's latest scenic highway, Zlon National Park-al- t Car aael, Is being pushed forward, with several hundred men employed on the works. PATSON At a meeting of Nebo achool district board recently bid were opened and contracts let for the new $85,000 junior high school build-ing In Payson. Work will start at once and construction will be com-pleted before the opening of achool next September. The general con-tracting work was let to Chytrous & Lindqulst of Salt Lake, at $64,474. SALT LAKE With 2,730,000 head reported, Utah ranked second In the number of sheep and lambs January 1, as compared to the number In each of the seven far western states, ac-- cording to report of George A. Scott, Utah livestock statistician for the U. S. department of agriculture, issued recently. California ranked first with 1,628,000 PRICE Mud on Soldier Summit road, due to the thawing and recent rains, makes that highway Impassable, it was announced recently by E. C. Knowlton, maintenance engineer ol the state road department. The mud Is so deep that it is dangerous to try and travel over that road, It was re-ported. The road through Heber and Provo to the Uintah basin Is still pas-sable, but the rains and thaws have made it muddy and la in a poor condition. PARK CITY Park Utah Consoli-dated Mines Company, one of the larg-est silver-lea- mining enterprises In 'the state, earned a net of $1,713,723 during 1927, according to the com-pany's report, filed with the state board of equalization recently for tax-ation purposes. This is $43,446 more than the amount required to pay the company's dividend of 80 cents a share during that year. PANGUITCH Rains and thaws during the past week have made farm-ers of this section happy, although many of the roads have been made rather difficult of travel. Due to the recent storms, the' Bear Valley route from Panguitch to Paragonah has be-- i come impassible to motor travel, most i of the tourists now taking the cove Fort route by way of Marysvale. ' SALT LAKE Contracts signed for sugar beets, tomatoes and peas Insure increased acreage in all these indust-ries throughout the state, planting plans through various associations reveal. LOGAN Tuberculin tests will be applied to all cattle over three months of age in Cache Co., beginning March 19, it was decided by representatives of twelve local farm bureau organiza-tions who met In County Agent R. L. , Wrlgley's office in the court house. W. H. Ballard, Jr., county chairman of the dairy committee, had charge of the session, which was attended by Dr IW. H. Hendricks, state veterinarian; Dr. E. D. Libby, representing the fed-eral government, and Dr. O. Wenner-gren- . ' EUREKA Decision to make im-provements on the Tlntlc highway ex-tending from Santaquin to Eureka amounting to approximately $30,000 v has been made by Utah county com missioners and E. C. Knowlton, state road maintenance engineer. RICHFIELD Holstein dairy cattle owners of Sevier county whose herds now number, according to a recent census, 2044 head, are organizing a Holstein breeders' association of Se vier county. Movement to this end received a decided impetus here the past week during the visit of R. E. Everley, field man for the Holstein-Friesia- Association of America, and as a result the following board of di-rectors have been chosen to perfect an organization and to serve until the first annual meeting. PROVO Construction on the two miles of new road from near the Junc-tion of the Mt. Timpanogas loop road with Provo canyon up the canyon to the narrows, probably will be started this summer, it was announced by E. C. Shepherd supervisor of Wasatch forest, recentry. The project, which was proposed and favored last year by the bureau of public roads, has been held up on account of the ex-cessive cost and the steep grade In-volved. The construction will cost about $50,000. COALVILLE Distribution of the road funds for Summit county for the coming year was made at the county commissioners' regular meeting re-cently. County road funds were allot-ted on a mileage basis to the follow-ing precincts; Henefer, $975; Upton, $2025; Coalville, $?50; Peoa, $990; Oakley, $1200; Marion, $225; Kamas, $1650; Woodland, $675; Francis, $975; Parley's park and Park City, $750, and Beaver City, $300. LOGAN After making the regular monthly enow survey on Mt. Logan, Professor George D. Clyde of the Utah Agricultural college reports that Feb-ruary has been very unusual and the prospects now are that the water sup-ply for the coming season will be be-low normal. The precipitation in the valleys and on the high watersheds has been deficient during the past month. Whereas the total accumu lated precipitation during February 1927, was 13.7 inches of water at 9000 feet elevation, the total this year at the same elevation was only about pne Inch, Professor Clyde announced. FARRELL BOOSTS OLD ATHLETES Old-Time- rs' Work Praised by Michigan Coach. Would the athletes of 13 and 20 years ago bold their own agalnrt the athletes of todry under present day conditions? Certainly they would, In the opinion of Steve Farrell, varsity of Mlchlgau. who has been training all sorts of athletes for more than 25 years. Steve believes that the modern ath-lete has things too easy. Wulking any 0 1st mice Is unthought of by the average star today, while years ago, riding In street carp, cabs and busies wus taboo with any aspiring college athlete. Couch Farrell admits, of course, that the Increased dislike for using one's leg to travel between two given points Is only the result of the attitude of college students as a body. Training room attention, says the coach, was a thing unknown in years gone by. Shin' rplints, sore muscles and tendons and other ailments were J'.ist as common In those days, but were Ignored, Just because there was nothing one could do uhout It. Today, for the average athlete, the care of expert trainers and rubbers Is consid-ered as essential as good coaching. If the average track mun today, for Instance, say? Steve, wore to be told how the truck men used to train years ago, he would laugh. The "hard work-out" which the present day truck man fears would be considered only a .pre-liminary warming up In those days. Any man who stayed ojt for the sport then did so because he liked It The aversion of the modern youth for stiff work Is shown by the Increas-ing proportion of candidates who se-lect the shorter running distance events, and shun the mile and two mile runs. The latter require long work-outs dully, and unless the candidate Is a glutton for punishment, he drops from the squad or decides he'd make a lietter short-distanc- e man. Steve does not go so far a? to sny that the athlete of yesterday was uny more plucky than the present athlete. He merely infers that their bodies were sturdier, because of more Inten-sive training, and they were more val-uable to any team as d ath-letes than the modern stars as spe-cialists in one or two events. To ruin up, the couch feels that given the present advantages of scien-tific coaching und training, as well as Improved tracks and other facilities, the athlete of the past would have little difficulty In outsprinting, or outdistancing the average "star" of today. Breaks World's Mark The photograph shows Walter LuufTer, the I.uke Shore Athletic club's new swimmer, who slashed four sec-onds from the world's 150-yur- back-stroke, record as he made his debut at the Central A.' A. U. women's meet in the Lake Shore pool in Chicago. His time wus 1 minute 40 4-- seconds. Scintillating Remarks by Noisy Detroit Fans In relating the baseball expressions for which Ilughie Jennings was fa-mous, one has been generally over-looked, and that was: "Touch all the bases." At times he emphasized It: "Remember now: Touch alf the bases." It was always shouted across the playing field when a Detroit batsman came to the plate in a pinch. If the butter happened to strike out, or fly out, or ground out, the crowd. If Detroit happened to be playing on a foreign field, had its revenge. The crowd, In chorus, would yell to Jen-nings: "See hlra touch all the buses, Ilughie?" Or, quite often : "Hey,- - Ilughie, that bum can't even touch first." And similar scintillating remarks.- - ' But Jennings generally hud his In-nings before the game was over. Soon-er or later Rossman, Cobb or Craw-ford, would "get hold o' one" and touch several bases while Jennings fehrleked nnd danced In glee, fully re-venged. Give Cowt to Needy To reduce the hazards of fellow , settlers In the first few yeurs of farm-ing, Zoutpnnsberg (Africa) branch of the 1D-- U Settlers' Memorial associa-tion has evolved a plan whereby every member of the branch undertakes to give a good cow to any member ex-periencing difllculty In getting a start. A needy settler will thus receive 80 to 40 good cows with which be will be able to overcome his difficulties and begin anew. Lucky Shot May Be Costly While hunting near Clearfield. I'n., William McMullen killed two deer with one bullet. A big buck got with-in range and he fired, the bullet go-ing through the buck's head, killing It Instantly, nnd then hit a doe which was hurrying by. The game warden Is trying to decide whether Mr. Mc- Mullen must pay two fines, one for killing two deer In one season and the other for killing a doe. The game of golf is played by more people than any other sport In the United States. The world's bicycle sprint champion-ships will be held in the United States In 1020 for the first time since 1012. n Charles llargreoves, Brooklyn catch-er. Is employed as a basket ball couch at Mlddleburg college In the winter months. Carl Rice, a member of a blind men's Institution In New York, Is a fine howler and boasts a high score of 258 pins. Young Gr.fi'o, credited with being one of the greatest boxers of all time, had only two knockouts to his credit in seventy-nin- e bouts. Ed Barrow of the Yankees says he doesn't believe In gnmblinB-- . But it doesn't seem like gambling to have a little dough oo the Yanks. Although he Is only fourteen years old, Virgil Abcrnathy, of Cheyenne Falls, Colo., Is regarded as one of the best billiard players In his state. Jockey A. I'useumn, who rode Jus-tice F. to victory in the recent New Orlenns handicap, was given a reward of $5,000 by his boss for the victory. Eighty nor cent of the students of the Colorado School of Mines are now taking part in an extensive physical training and Interclass sports program Kugene William Gooihvillle. who starred In track for Cornell for three years, received a Rhodes scholarship appointment for next year a few days ago. F. R. Burrow, the old Oxford lawn tennis star, has been appointed ref eree of the Wimbledon lentils ehatih plopshlps to be beld beginning June 2S next. A new sand mixing machine is ex-pected to revolutionize the construc-tion of golf links. It can mix more soil than a dozen dubs armed with niblicks. - Frank fJibson, catcher last season with the Boston Braves, has been ny pointed manager of the Snn Antonio Texas league club for the coming season. Out of Babe Itnth's total of 416 home runs made during Ills hla league career, the greatest number. 71. Have heen scored at the expense of IH'trolt pitchers. John !e I'nlimi Is starting his twen year in competitive automobile racing. He Is forty-seve- his hair Is virtually white, and he has com lieted in 3.000 races. College men in the major leagues last season totaled KIT. will) honors equally divided between Holy Cioss college and University of Alahsina each having four nliminus. Babe Ittith failed to hit a home rnn with the bases loaded dm ing the 1!I27 season until he hit his fifty-sevent- h homer on September 27. He did the feat again rff September 2i - Bobbing in the Patt Bobbing the hair is not new. It ll shown on a wall painting dated 1380. Fashions repeat themselves. If your bathroom fixtures tend to rust, wipe often with a . woolen cloth saturated In gasoline or ammonia They prevent rust. New Auto Record The photograph shows Capt. Mal-colm Campbell, English race driver, who set a new world's automobile Sliced record of 200.5!i0 miles per hour on the beach course nt Daylonn. Fla., In his Campbell Napier Bluebird car. Errors as Essential to Baseball as Base Hits John Joseph- - McGruw once said that errors are as essential to base-ball as base hits and that if ever the error is removed from the game then baseball will collapse. Mcflraw can say- the some about football. Most of the thrills on foot- - ' ball are the result of errors, mechari leal or mental. i There would- - be nothing more monotonous In sport than a football game between two teams whose piny was mechanically perfect. It would leave the spectators bored stiff. Illinois nnd Michigan played a game at Ann rhor last year. It was about ns near mechanically correct as games are played In football, but It hinde no hit with the crowd. The ex-perts were highly enthused but the experts were outnumbered 500 to I ry men nnd women who were com-pletely bored. j Big Train Beats Sport Boys at Their Own Game In leaving the ranks of active base-ball players, ns In leading them. Wal ter Johnson thought first of the boys. Bepoitcrs end friends were eagerly awaiting his decision whether to sign the contract with the Newark Bears of the International league. All day his telephone was ringing or "busy " All day he replied that he probably would have 'something to say in a few days." But fliut night he was making a little talk over the radio to boys. When he felt their presence on the Invisible side of the microphone he told them all about it. Not many of them realized they were getting n choice news "beat." Not until the radio station had signed oiT wer." the reporters and friends able to pet the "Big Train" to own c.p tin! b" had signed 'o manage Je I tear. San Francisco Player Cost $38; Brings $5,000 Kven in these days of high-price-baseball players', with figures running from ?.i.000 to $1.".(l(Kl in the minor leagues, the case of Alfred McC&rdy stands out In bold relief. The tall first baseman cost the Cortland club $.18.71 train fare and meals from San Francls-c- to the Oregon city He was picked up on the "ssiiid lots," played with the I'hcIMc Coast league team In l!)'J(i and 1.)27 and was sent to Ies Moines of the Western leavue'tfilf year In a $.", 000 cash and player deal. v ' " - .. . . - v. : ,; , |