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Show . - - ..y-v .(',v ...... ; t:-..- ' .... .;, ; ..;"'.. :r i ... ,:;.: " r'tNi'-- . .. THE BINGHAM PRESS BULLETIN PAGE THREE Eulogy of the Dead The custom of funeral sermons, to geUier with various other rites In con-nection with the burials may be trace-ba- ck to antiquity. Even the primitive peoples had certain ceremonies In con-nection with the burial of their dead. In ancient Greece and Borne the cus-tom of eulogizing the dead was very popular. We Solicit Your Savings and Checking Accounts The First National Oand Bingham Canyon WANTED i - I ! A LADY FOR ALTERATION WORK ON j MEN'S AND WOMEN'S WEARING APPAREL ! REGAL CLEANING CO. i I 484 Main Street I WhatYouWant How You Want It When You Want It gWTl For anything in the JL I line of printing come to us and we'll guar-antee you satisfactory woik at prices that are right You Are Always Welcome at ' Merger's The Home of the , ' r. ONLY BILLIARD TABLE IN BINGHAM CANYON MAH JONGG HEADQUARTERS 6 POCKET BILLIARD TABLES Where the Live Ones Meet minima EDITH ELAINE I BEAUTY PARLORS I I 289 Main Street j jj Phone 264-- M j iX Hunting Season Is at Hand 1 I YOUR HUNTING NEEDS TAKN CARE I ' OF AT 5 I . 4 $ Bogan Hardware Company I i j HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL BINGHAM PEOPLE IShafer's SPECIALTY LARGE PARTIES Salt Lake City, Utah f 8 TIRE PATCHES f 1 THAT WEAR j I When you have your in-- 1 1 ner tubes patched see I I that they are repaired in a lasting manner. We i see to this if you allow ua to take care of your tire I troubles. j Bingham Garage H Storage 1 Temporarily located at i Inglcsby's Garage i I Phone 88 j Day and Night Service Lincoln FORDt-Fords- on i ' Taylor Garage . i GENERAL REPAIR WORK ' Sales and Service I 228Main Street J . . ' ' 1 : .. J , Permanent j . ' . roads are a good investment ! ' not an expense t 1 HSglsway BuiMiziQ . .. p j Poor motor roads stifle industry and agriculture, waste huge sums annually ' in high maintenance costs, and greatly i increase gasoline, tire and repair bills. I There is not a state, not a county, not f a community, that isn't paying a heavy price for having too few permanent II roads. fi I There are still many sections of the h j country even whole states that are f.j trying to operate twentieth century ; ; traffic over nineteenth century roads. i? ... ! This is costing millions of dollars every year, and will keep on costing millions y until we have well developed permanent highway systems every where. j Even what we often call the more - s progressive communities are far behind the demands of modern highway traffic I with its 16,000,000 motor vehicles. ' j . From the Atlantic to the Pacific, and t from Canada to Mexico, we need more , ' . Concrete roads the roads for twentieth ' ' ; century traffic j Your highway officials want to be of U. the greatest possible service to you. Get M behind them with ways and means that E J ' will provide more Concrete roads and , streets. Such an investment will pay you j big dividends year after year. 1 PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION j' MeCornick Builtlinz jv f j SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH jI hfatinnal Organization to Improve and , j Extend the L i of Concrete I, j OFFICES IN 29 CITIES ' I ; )H Unless you ask for your bread by name you cannot blame your grocer if he send, you a loaf that douk't suit you. ' There are many grades of bread In every store. The grocer ha. to carry several kinds because lie is a public servant, supplying various grades and f-ri- of all foods. Butter-Kru- st is high food value bread, containing all the elements of nutrition. It it woesome, pure and satisfying. Get it today. Order it every day. Dpn't say "bread" My 'BUTTER-KRU3- T tor there's a difference fei bread! t ! I Begin tohaiiIiYoiirBi0a l wMeyonareyomf. l - When you are young, the whole world is before you and just how ; much of it you conquer, rests with you. ' ; The best start a young man can make is to work hard and ; REGULARLY bank a part of his earnings. It won't be long before . 1 he is "noticed" and soon the older men are relying upon him and he , J rapidly comes to the front Young Man, come in, start that bank account today-$1- .00 will ; d0 it and it is UP to you to keep up your deposits regularly and sue- - ; ceed. We will welcome you J CML II OF BINGHAM J We Seek More Business on Our Record mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmm I Prometheua . t The word Prometheus, the name of character In Grecian mythology, .means forethought, and forethought Is the father of Invention. According to the Grecian tradition, Prometheus '.taught man the use of Are, and In-structed him In architecture, astron-omy, mathematics, writing, rearing cut-tle, navigation, medicine, the art of prophecy, working metal, and Indeed, .every art known to man. The tale Is that he made man of clay, and, In or-der to endow bis clay with life, stole Bre from heaven and brought It to earth In a hollow tuba Zeus, who In Grecian mythology corresponds to Jupiter In the Roman mythology, In punishing Prometheus, chained hitn to a rock, and sent an eagle to consume bis liver dally. During the night it grew again, and thus the torment of Prometheus was ceaseless, uatll Uer-cuie- s shot the eagle, and unchained the captive. c GHOST HUNT IN ATTIC REVEALS PAPA'S $10,000 Boy Go on Spending Orgy Until Father and the Copt Get Wind of It. San Francisco. Johnny ... Lincoln didn't believe in ghosts. And his papa didn't believe In banks. And thereby hangs a tale. , Johnny, who's nine years old, bad been told time and again by his father, waiter, that there were ghosts in the attic of the Lincoln home In Oakland. "And If you ever go up there, son, they'll get you I" he warned. Johnny thought It over for a long time. Then be called his pal, eleven-year-ol- d lied Chrlstensen, Into confer-ence. i "Pop says our attic Is full of ghosts," he said. "Banana oil I" sagely opined Red, and advised looking carefully and deep-ly Into the matter. So up on the Lincoln roof they crawled and pried off a flock of shin-gles, until they could peer adequately Into the dim-li- t recesses of the attic. "Now where's your ghosts?" chal-lenged Red, Not a Single Ghost "Maybe they're in that box over In the corner," suggested Johnny. They looked Into the box. There wasn't a single ghost in tt but there was $10,000 in assorted currency. Forthwith Johnny and Red became the plutocrats of the Juvenile circles In "Maybe They're In That Box." which they moved. They bought more soda pop, Ice cream, candles, tin, watches, baseballs and bats, flashllghta and other items' deemed essential to complete happiness by nine and eleven years than were ever purchased before by two boys in a given length of time. ' The policeman on the beat got wind of It lie Investigated. Bo did Johnny'g papa. And Johnny's papa went and put what was left of the $10,000 in savings bank. "I was saving It for home," he explained. Johnny doesn't betteve In Santa Claus either. It's good thing, Judg-ing from what Papa Lincoln thinks of the prospects for next Christmas. j Shakespeare or Bacon? A heated discussion arose In the Nineteenth century from an attempt, on the part of Miss Delia Bacon, to prove that Lord Francis Bacon was the author of the plays commonly at-tributed to Shakespeare. William II. Smith, an English scholar; Nathaniel Holmes, In his "Authorship of Shake-speare," and Mrs. Henry Holmes have also labored In the same direction. In 1888 Ignatius Donnelly produced his work entitled "The Great Cryptogram," wherein he endeavored to show "that Bacon's authorship is avowed under a cypher In the teit of the plays In the folio of 1023." Shakespearean scho-lars do not accept the Baconlun theory of authorship. Odd Form of Punishment In the days when It was customnry to bestow the title "Mrs." on all women of mature years, whether married or unmarried, deprivation of the prefixes Mr. and Mrs. was among the punish-ments enforced in the American colo-nies, says the Detroit News. The rec-ords of Massachusetts show that In 1080 Joslas Platstowe was condemned "for stealing four baskets of corn from the Indians, to return them eight baskets agnln, to he fined five pounds and herenfter to be called Joslas, not Mr., as he used to be." Though the penal code also provided for depriving women of the prefix, there Is no record of this clause hav-ing been enforced. The First Ad The first known English newspaper advertisement concerned, not pills, soap, tobacco, liquor or ladles' cloth-ing, but a lost horse. It appeared In the Moderate, of March 27, 1040, and ran: "Header, fnotf'art entreated to enquire after a blackish and kind of piebald nag, very poor. his face, feet and flauk white, end a little white tip ' on his tall, wall eyes. He was stolen from grass from John Kotherhara, of Bnrnet, In Hertfordshire. Whosoever will enquire, find him out, and bring or send tiding of him shall have what content they will for their pains." Qualities of the Great A great man Illustrates his place, makes his climate genial In the Imagi-nation of men and its air the beloved element of all delicate spirits. Ralph Waldo Emerson. Plenty to Feed Hi Dog While Children Starve Bethlehem, Pa. James Bishop of Freemansburg fed bis hound dog, Duke, Instead of his four undernour-- Ished children. State Agent Pelfer of Easton, with Constable Joseph Reed of Freemans-- burg visited the Bishop home and found the children in a destitute con-- . dltlon, while outside pan contained plenty for the dog. . Pelfer ordered the animal shot and next morning Constable Reed carried out the orders. The dog's life was sacrificed so that the children might live properly. '. Fritco Girl Kill Deer I With a 52-Pou- nd Bow I San Francisco, Cal. Miss Virgin! ; Ay res of San Francisco killed a deer with a bow, ijearly double I the strength of the ordinary woman's target weapon, and steel-heade- ar-- rows. k Miss Ayres, with William J. Ilaek. j! meter, went bunting near Cloverdale, She brought flown a buck with an ar--I row through the body. Hackmeler also dropped a buck with an arrow, but the 1 animal ran a mile before dying. j. jj Walking Saves Life t (Tnlontown, Ky. Playing doctor, lit- - I tie Dorothy Marie Clements gave her t younger brother four spoonfuls of good-tastin- g medicine. The dose con-- talned 20 drops of poison. Awakened I by a physician, the s lit- - ? tie fUow was kept in tuotlon for 12 j hourt, five miles ber covered In talking him. He will live. t j Servant Gets Estate Lexington, Ky. A farm estate, In-- $ eluding homo, slock, wiulpmcnt and f 273',4 acres, goes to Ellen Davis, an aged negro scrvnnt, through the will of t her late eiinihtyer, John T. Hughes, wciilthy farmer end horseaaa, whe f died recently. |