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Show THE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH Thnrsday, March 15, 1928 f i r The Bingham Bulletin Entered as second-clas- s matter at the postoffice at Bingham Canyon, Utah, under the Act of Congress of March .1, 1879. Subscription Price, per year, in advance - $2.00 Published at 446 Main St., Bingham Canyon, Utah HOWARD A. JARVIS, Editor HOUSE-WOR- K . TOO HER Fin& Aid in Lydia E. Pink-ham- 's Vegetable Compound Plymouth. Wis. "I am n of th women tiling Lydia B. Pinkbam'f I Vegetable Com-- V; " pound and ara proud to aay It la ' f good. I wbi o run--I l- -dWl down that I didn't I I ) i feel like doing any--il .'j thing and my 7" mother told me t SjL' try the Vegetable j Compound and I V did. It did mo f good. I do my housework and also f""""" do all my garden, work and I have a three-year-ol- d girt to look after. I have told quite a few ' others to try the Vegetable Compound j and I am willing to answer letters ! about It." Mas. Ed. Baia, R. i, Ply. j mouth, Wisconsin. ' Bingham Stage Line Bingham Depot Main and Carr Fork Phone 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 ' Phone Was. 1069 SCHEDULE Cart leave Salt Lake City at 7, 9 and 11 a.m. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 p.m. FARES Oneway $1.50 Round Trip $2.50 JOHN D. Hair and Scalp Specialist 408 Cliff Bldg I PHONE Was. 2327 : : Get i : :: Your CjT ;; fyy From :: i: Granite i: i: Furniture Co. i: Isis Theatre Building ' ; ; Bingham Canyon UNDERWOOD Special GUARANTEED MODEL NO 5 $40 and $50 Terms $5.00 monthly if desired LATE MODELS RENTED One month $2.50, three months $7 Wholesale Typewriter Co., Inc. ' 821 Vt So. Main St. Wasatch 2761 Stores: Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Sacramento, Fresno : After Colds or Grip See That Your Kidneys Get Rid of the Poisons. 1 DOES winter find you lame, tired achy worried writh back- - ache, headache and dizzy spells) Are the kidney secretions too frequent, scanty or burning in pasaage These are often signs of sluggish kidney action and sluggish kidneys shouldn't be neglected. Doan't Pills, a stimulant diuretic; 4 increase the secretion of the kidneys and aid in the elimination of waste w impurities. Doan's are endorsed the country over. Ask your neighbor I 3 VJLliy Jn your subscription... A STIMULANT DIURETIC fSt KIDNEYS I rbilrr-Milbur- n Co. MfgChem. BuffsloiNY. I 1 I it Finished Work Unexcelled REPAIR SERVICE FREE WITH YOUR LAUNDRY WORK MURRAY LAUNDRY George Streadbeck Local Agent Phone 98 84 Main Street BEST WAT TO KILL RatsSMic 1 Always Usa 1 Stearns Electric Paste Sm Drata Is cockrauku, watrrtxw. rib 1 Used by housekeepers for 50 yearsl Directions in 15 languages. All Dealers 2 or. 35c 15 oz. $1.50 Money Back It It fails Always give your wife her own way; It will save her the trouble of I taking It I BINGHAM & GARFIELD S RAILWAY COMPANY Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast i daily merchandise cars from Salt Lake City in connection 1 with the Union Pacific System. S USE COPPER i Brass piping for $4500 cottage only costs $48.87 3 more than galvanized iron piping and will LAST FOREVER J T. H. PERLEYWITS, H. L. DAVIDSON I I Asst. Gen. Freight 8c Pas. Agt., Agent I Salt Lake City, Utah . Bingham, Utah Broadcasts Good News Salt Lake City, Utah "About two fears ago I wag Buffering with feirl-nin- e trouble. 1 was advised to tabs Dr. Pierce's Favor-H- e Prescription and o I did. It was wonderful how it helped me. Thre bottles of the 'Fa-vorite Prescription' gave me better health than I had enjoyed for a long time. I am glad to pralfe and recom-mend It to othei people." Mrs. J D. Gray, 349 W. 6th South. A beautiful woman Is always a well woman. Get this Prescription of Dr. Pierce's from your dealer, In liquid or tablets, and see how quickly you will have sparkling eyes, a clear and skin, personality. Write Dr. Pierce, Buffalo. N. t if. you need free medical advice. Balks Bandits After I They Dig Hi Crave t X Orense, Spain. A tale worthy X I of i Poe was unfolded concern- - I J tng a country merchant who 1 from a place of concealment J f saw robbers digging a grave for I him. J Francisco Rodrlguet Alvares, J jjj the merchant, was on bis way J to Inspect bis farm when two jjj X masked highwaymen robbed blm I of ISO pesetas (about $25). X Stopping at an Inn for the jjj night, Alvares told the Inukeep-- jjj er he bad a much larger amount X In the lining of his hat jjj Near midnight he awoke and j overheard the highwaymen ad- - X dressing the Innkeeper as "fu- - ? X tber." X jjj He arranged his bed so ss to jjj make It appear occupied, and jjj arming himself wltb a razor, jjj hid behind the door. jjj Through the window he could jjj see the two highwaymen digging jjj a grave In the courtyard. X jj Soon the door creaked, an ) J X the Innkeeper, cautiously enter jjj Ing the room, plunged his dag jjj ger Into the pile of bedrtieets. X jjj Alvarez threw himself upon jjj X the Innkeeper and overpowered jjj him. i Hastening to a police station, X jjj he returned before tlte grave jjj X had been completed, and the jjj men were arrested. jjj - No Basic Conflict Among the Republics That Make Up the Two Americas By HENRI V. BERENGER, Ambassador. is no basic conflict between Anglo-Saxo- n America and THKHG There are difficulties and misunderstandings, will be stupidlj blind if it refuses to see the progres-sive evolution of the two Americas toward the same ideal of ma-terial prosperity and intellectual culture in an economic and political federalism. The various American republics were all former European colonies and they all rejected the yoke of England, Austria, Spain and Portugal, oppesing the holy alliance of democracy to the holy alliance of monarchy. The Monroe doctrine was the first dogma proclaimed by the Americas the Fndian-Lati- n America and the Anglo-Saxo- n America. Whether Latins or Nordics, they are all Americans and they all have an equal conception of federalism and business. Euroe would be mis-taken if she believed she could act as an arbiter among them. It is not fitting to exaggerate the dilliculties between the republic? of North, Central and South Americas, which have been unavoidable since Europeans abandoned the Panama canal to the United States, this being the key of both the Americas, permitting them to exert a continuous in-tervention, which is not always flexible or discreet But the final objed of the conferences has precisely as their goal to put an end to all friction. Another source of difficulties lies in the economical consequences of the World war, whose responsibilities belong to Europe. The United States has replaced Europe in the first commercial and financial place in Latin America. The constant siege of the dollar has produced conflicts of wounded pride which, however, only assume a secondary place before the Inter-America- n economic federalism and capital. The economical, maritime and political federalism present three phases already inseparable in the great Pan-Americ- pyramid, and we, Europeans, should become per-suaded that this pyramid does not hold pharaonic mummies, but frater-nal youths of one of the most powerful families in the human future. History in Legends An Indian chief has dictated to bla I secretaries a history of his tribe from the creation of the world as It Is re-lated In legends. Erland Nordenskl, the Swedish ex plorer, who has Just returned from Panama, has brought back a copy of the history, which he regards as ona of the trophies of his expedition. His special Interest was the Cuna tribe of the Atlantic coast They art people of good Intelligence and cul-ture who cling to their old traditions. The chief who dictated the history employs two secretaries, one familiar with English, the other wltb Spanish. COP DRIVEN MAD BY FEAR OF GANG "Bravest" Officer Becomes Violently Insane. Hoboken, N. J. A few month- - ago Sergt. William Delnney was known as a policeman who feared nothing. Time and again his courage had been tested. About that time he came a toss a gang of silk robbers In the act of holding up the driver of a silk truck tie gave buttle without hesitation, shot It out with the gangsters, killed two of them, regained the truck, and made the robbery a sorry fizalo. For his bravery he received an award of $1,400 from the Silk Associ-ation of America, honors from the po-lice department and civic organiza-tions, and much acclaim. Then he went hack to work, ap-parently the same Sergt. Hill Deluney. But gradually, feur began to creep Into his thoughts. He heard other oflicer8 tell stories of .vengeance by gunmen, lie read of such things tn the paper. He began to express a feeling that vengeance would be meted out to him. He changed anil beenme nervous. About a week ago he heard that the widow of "Frenchy" Genese. one of the silk robbers he had killed, had come to Hoboken announcing she wanted to see the man who killed her husband. He went home and doctors said It was nervous collapse. Put rest did not help and the other morning he began babbling Incoherent-ly. Finally he beenme violent, smashing .furniture and bric-a-bra- c Physicians pronounced his condi-tion as serious. A squad of officers and a physician later left for a sanitarium, taking with them Sergt. Hill Delnney. the bravest pollcemnn In Hoboken gone Insane through feur. American Bar Association Wisely Seeking Pre-vention of Labor Controversies By MATTHEW WOLL, Vice President A. F. of L. The formula designed by of the American Bar associa-tion to prevent strikes and labor controversies has my full commendation. The etTort of the association is to find a method of encouraging and maintaining peaceful industrial relations and collective agreement vo-luntarily entered into, without applying any power of compulsion. It believes this can be accomplished by giving validity to collective agreements and leaving the contracting parties at liberty to determine methods by which such obligations shall be enforced, without bringing these issues into the courts or burdening the courts with these industrial problems. The setting up of a national industrial council for fact-findi- pur-poses, also proposed in the formula, should have a wholesome effect on both workers and employers, in that it will present to the public the true facts underlying any industrial situation. It is believed that ultimately public opinion and judgment are far more powerful and influential than any power of government. It is evi-dent that the bar has come to realize that the law, so far as industrial re-lations are concerned, must be modernized. . Owns Underground Farm if ' One of the strangest farms in the world Is the great subterranean acre-- age of Howard I5ell of Crittenden, N. Y., on which he raises huge crops of I mushrooms. Seeking means to cultl- - vate the delicacy, which thrives with- - out daylight, on u wholesale scale. Hell g conceived the Idea of using an aburi- - I-doned cement mine. The results were f. even better than he anticipated. Throughout the entire underground agricultural plant a temperature of from 47 to ,M degrees Is maintained ; the year round, this being Ideal for I the product. Popular Science Monthly. Methods of "Big Business" Must Be Studied and Adopted by Smaller Merchants By LAWRENCE H. WHITING, Chicago Banker. Small merchants who do not study the methods of big business sre in real danger of going the way of the extinct hack driver and ferry boat operator. Every year business becomes more of a science. Then, too, there is a constantly growing trend toward buying in the larger cities. Hard roads make it easy for the customer to go juet ahoul wherever he pleases. If you would draw him to your store you must train men in the methods by which successful merchants are getting ahead in larger cities. You must advertise in proportion to the results you want to nccom plish. You have it within your power to give a degree of service beyond that which is provided by the merchants in the larger city. As additional proof of the need for careful study in the retail fiVld is the fact that, although storekeepers once trained their sons for profes-sional careers, business today is at such a high stage of development and competition that it is drafting trained men from the professions. Stowaway Rivals Tale of Jonah and the Whale Miami, Fin. Government agents here have placed their olliclul rtamp on one of the strangest rlsh gtorlt-- ever brought to light on that section of the Florida const. They s;iy thej have reported to the Immigration bu-reau, at Washington, D. C, that a school of porpoises carried the help lens form of Gustnv DanlelziU. German bo,v. for three miles and cast htm on the beach at I Danla, Fla. Ilorder patrol olllcers the other d;iy began a watch along the 25 miles of cons-- t between Fort Lnuderdiile and Miami after they had received a ra-diogram from a steamer bound from Norfolk, Va., to Mobile, Ala., that two German youths, stowaways, had Jumped overboard. One youth, Wilhelm Kierserling. twenty-four- , was found drifting aim-lessly at sea. supported by a lifebuoy That night some fishermen passing along Ottilia beach, near Fort Lauder-dale, saw the figure of a man sprawled In the surf, making feeble efforts to crawl ashore. Revived, he told his? rescuers: "I could not swim. 1 tried for hours. The waves kepi carrying me farl her away. The water I swallowed made nie sick. I gave up. Then some one push. I do not care. Again a push, and I see first I was stared. I think walrus. I was so dumb. Then I know. Porpoise. They do not wish to hurt me, just push like I am in the wpy. "They force nie to ehore. Now I am glad that I heve been captured. I am sorry I tried to stow away and. most of u II. Jumped overboard." Defining Them "Are you very enthusiastic about entertaining callers?" "Yes,' but so very few of them are." V ft Broadest Conception of Liberty Is Freedom to Do Right in the World By REV. W. II. FOULKES, Newark. N. J. Young people today like to have a great cause for which to fight-libe- rty bulwarked by law. We should have outgrown the liberty of the caveman and the jungle, which ought to be surrendered for civil liberty The liberty of the jungle was every man doing what he pleased when he pleased regardless of every other man. Shall America go ba k to the jungle idea of liberty stressing the individual right of every per-son or shall we keep preserved the gains we have made? The supreme liberty is freedom to do right in the world today, free dom to do what we ought to do. The time is at hand when the youth of today can be marshaled un-der the banner of world peace. There is a growing passionate spirit on the part of young people ngainst world war. If you ask any of these men whether they want another World war they will vote against it. Healthy Home Influences Will Turn Youth From Desire for "Petting Parties" By MISS LOUISE MERRILL, Denver Sociologist. Mothers are to blame wheD daughters indulge in petting parties. To stop petting parties and like entertainment, mothers must provide pas-times more absorbing. Youth is the most lovable thing in the world and adolescence , is a burning question today. A mother's and a teacher's business is a 24-ho- ur job. Every mother should get out the old music selections she used to play, even if she isn't an artist at it. Get the chil-dren interested in music, astronomy, and such things, and they won't 99 u. of tbe home for entertainment "Flaming Old Age" Calexico, t'ulif. Harry Hush was hnleri into court on his one hundred and fourth blrtluhiy to explain bis carelessness in driving his automobile Into an Irrigation canal. Bush ad mltted he had been "drinking a little.'' tie produced a roll of more than fl, 000 and, puM a small Hue. |