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Show j)i j; '" VA"' ,' W " iV- j tf. . . .... .... S Time Eemham News I - VOL 2 , BINGHAM CANY6N, UTAH, SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1923. NO. 15 I Society , Mrs. F. E. Straup was a visitor - ' to Salt Lake on Wednesday. : ' . Mrs. Anna McGuire spent the week end at Salt Lake City with ' relatives and friends. ' Mrs. J. O. Adams was in Salt , 1 Lake on Tuesday and visited her ' son, Zane, who is recovering ? ' slowly from injuries received in i . t , ; an auto accident. He is a pa- - ' tient at the Holy Cross Hos-- "5 pital. . '- - Frank Newton of Salt Lake was a visitor to camp on Sunday ; 1 last. He was " accompanied by his mother, who is 83 years of ' . age, and this was her first trip to Bingham. Mr, and Mrs. D. C. Hunter entertained Saturday in honor of Mrs. H. H. Morris of Wilming-ton, Del., who is spending the summer at Salt Lake with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Rollo. .i Mrs. Edna Wade was called : to Salt Lake on Saturday on ac count of the serious illness of her father. Mr. and' Mrs, Robert Wells and family returned this week from a pleasing vacation thru the southern part of the state, which included Bryce and Zion Can-yons. Mr. and Mrs. Neil O'Donnell . and young son Neil motored to Salt Lake on Wednesday and visited with relatives and friends. j m Mrs.. Wayne Foote and daugh-ters were Salt Lake visitors and .spent the week-en- d there. Mrs. John Mitchell and daugh-"'.- '' ter, Edith, are spending a vaca- - v tion at Saratoga Springs. ' ' Miss Beth Rogers of Garfield . visited with relatives here the past week. Mr. and Mrs. James Green have left camp and will make their permanent residence in Los Angeles, California. Miss Louise McConnell, the pleasing young daughter of Mrs. Ann McConnell, is spending her vacation with relatives in Spring-- : ville. '. Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Dahlquist . - : and Miss Amy Rowe motored to Salt Lake and took in all the sights of the circus on Monday evening. Mr. and 'Mrs. Ralph Evans and daughter, Phyllis, will leave . camp on Monday for California, where they intend to make their future home. Mrs. W. E. Collins of Salt A Lake visited here with her hus-band on Thursday. The many friends of Mrs. Kate Ford in Bingham will learn with V pleasure that she is recovering nicely from the recent operation performed on her eye. Mrs. Ford is now at 213 Market St., Inglewood, California, and de-sires the "Bingham News" to be sent her weekly. lllllll1iltlHIIIMIIIUttllMlHHIlII1IIlMlttliHHIUllHII1IIIMlt11HHIinill"tlIIHIttllllHn tt lHIIUI ' ill .lit tll ItlttH ll ItHUI tll lil Ul til l 11 OWN ItUiHttlll HUH 1 PAVED ROAD TO) BINGHAM WILLIE BUILT THIS YEAR i ... s Friday night a large (citizens' mass meeting of Bing-ha- m was held in the City Hall for a paved road to Bingham, The meeting was called at the request of the Republican Precinct Committee and te desire of the County Commis-sioners to discuss the mfitter with the Town Board of Bingham. , v Dr. F. E. Straup. presided at the meeting and briefly outlined the good work done by the present County Com-missioners in building goo roads to Copperfield and High-land Boy, and rendering'att! in building a good road in the town. This all has been made possible by the agreeable relations between the Town Board of Bingham, the Board of County Commissioners; and the good work ' done by Mr. Forbes and his road tang. He laid stress upon the fact that this fueling should extend into the county for a paved road to Bingham after the local conditions had so well been taken care of. ' Mr. E. L. Burgon, chairman of the Board of County Commissioners, responded , in a very decided manner and praised the Town Board and the Precinct Committee for their interest in the matter in behalf of the people of Bing-ham. He said the people, of Bingham are entitled to all we have done. We will this year do all we can that county funds will allow. We will build as good a road as you have in the Welby stretch, or better if possible. If the funds will not allow us to build the whole four miles, we will build what we can. Commissioner Stenacktr said : "I am glad of the op- - '. portunity of meeting with1 the board and the committee. Everybody in Bingham isja unit for this road. We will build as good a road as possible and as much as the county funds will allow. I will fctand back of Mr. Burgon, the chairman of Roads and Bridges." So with these emphatic statements it seems certain Hhe road will be paved. Everybody has boosted for this road, and with this final stroke the Bingham Mfiws is glad to announce its co-operative work in the matter. I U . News Notes From Lark Mrs. Kate Callaway of Minne-apolis is visiting in Lark with her daughters, Mrs. Edward Pen-pra- ze and Mrs. Percy Penpraze, and her son, William Callaway. Mrs. Leo Slater of McGill will join the family here for an ex-tended visit. ' Mr. and Mrs. Horace Seal of Fort Harriman have moved to ' Lark and will reside in the for-- - mer home of J. E. Christensen. A,-- ' Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Lauros . and Mrs. Mary Brandon of Salt Lake City visited in camp this week. Mr. Jos. Hyland returned to Lark on Monday, having spent the week end with his family in the city. Misses Norma Johnson and Marion Brown of .Salt Lake City were guests of Mrs. William Crittenden the past week. Miss Ann Holt of South Jor-dan is visiting at the Hemming-se-n home for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Magee mo-tored to Salt Lake City on Tues-day. Mrs. R. F. Meyerhoffer and sons, Ralph, Gordon and Alvin, returned to Lark on Monday af-ter a ten days' vacation in Salt Lake City and Logan. Mr, Jos. Park and family have returned to Lark to reside. Mrs. Dewey Nelson spent sev-eral days at ' Sandy the past week. " CHIPS AHD SHAVINGS AROUND B I N G H AM - General Manager liner Pett of the Bingham Mines Company has been appointed by Governor Mabey as Utah's official dele-gate to the convention of the 'American Mining Congress, to be held at Milwaukee, Wis., from September 21th to 29th. II. B. Aven of Copperfield has been appointed trustee of the Kiwanic Club of Bingham, to succeed W. H. Woodring, who recently moved to Salt Lake to make his permanent home. B. P. Buck has severed his connection with the Outle Com-pany and intends opening another clothing store here in the near future. Mr. Buck ex-tends his sincere thanks to his many patrons and hopes soon to be able to fill all their wants satisfactorily. Sheriff Andrew Fleacher of Christian County, Illinois, and Deputy O. B. Hewitt of Taylors-vill- e, 111., were the guests here on Monday last of County Sher-iff Ben Harries. They were taken over the workings of the Utah Copper Company's property and returned to Salt Lake de-lighted with their pleasing ex-periences. Henry T. Nishiyama, the chef employed by the U. S. Mining Company for the past nineteen years, confines his trips out of camp to about six in the year. "Henry" has a number of old-tim- e friends throughout the state who pay him occasional visits. 1 County Surveyor II. M. Chris-tensen and Architect George Welsh of Salt Lake were in camp on Monday last! making surveys so as to prepare plans for the new school grounds. Luther D. Childs of the Inter-mounta- in Development Company of Salt Lake was a business visi-tor to camp on Wednesday. Mr. Childs is connected with the scientific section of the company. The hearing of the application of J. W. Hogan to operate a freight service between Bingham and Salt Lake will be heard be-fore the Public Utilities Com-mission on August 20th. There will be another popular dance given at Society Hall on Saturday niirht. when the Im- - perial jazzers will furnish the necessary music. J. C. Hague of the Model Gro-cery of Salt Lake visited friends in Bingham on Wednesday. Mr. Hague was connected with the Highland Boy store for fifteen years and is well known in camp. Mayor F. E. Straup and Chief of Police Frank Thompson left Saturday on an auto trip thru the Yellowstone country. A number of members of the Nos. 1 and 2 Volunteer Fire Companies will attend the State Fire Convention, which will be held at Logan, August 13, 14 and 1."). Charles Kelly will rep-resent No. 1 Company as Chief, while Ross Marriott has been ap-pointed to represent No. 2 Com-pan- w as their Chief. A number of members of Bing-ham Post. No. ;!(), American Le-gion, attended the convention held at Price on August 3, 4 and .". Fred Eberhart, the local com-mander, was appointed state chaplain and was also chosen delegate to the promenade na- - tionalc and elected as grand chef de garc of the 40 and 8 for the convention, which will take place in October, in San Francisco.' Carl Crookston was elected as alternate to the convention, and Mrs. James Barkle was elected as an alternate to the National Auxiliary Convention, which will be held in conjunction with the Legion Convention. On account of the death of President Hard-ing, all social functions were cancelled. Pete Mu ratio, a resident of Bingham for a number of years, died at the Holy Cross Hospital at Salt Lake on Thursday. Mr. Murano is survived by his" widow and five sons. The bociv is at the E. O'Donnell t'lule'rtakiug Parlors at Salt Lake. Theodore "Tug" Matson, a former resident of Bingham for a number of years, died at Los Angeles. California, this week. He was a member of the local Kaglc Lodge. His bodv will be shipped to Salt Lake for inter-ment. Copperfield Brevities Mrs. George Johnson enter-tained at her home Friday even-ing of last week, the occasion being the eleventh birthday anni-versary of her daughter, Bernice. The time was spent in games and music, after which refresh-ments were served to the follow-ing: Elsa Bodmer, Dorothy Dix-on, Margery Scott, Evelyn Mace, Gladys Palmer, Maxine McNab, Alpha Pope, Kate Anderson, Irene and Isabel Kilry, Amy and Edna White, Jeanette Mann, Sarah Strand and Virginia Col-ya- r. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Townson are rejoicing over the arrival of a daughter, born Thursday. Mrs. C, J. Dixon and daughter, Dorothy, left Sunday to spend several days with relatives in Salt Lake. Miss Amy Umpleby of Salt Lake has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Steele for a week. Mrs. George Johnson and fam-ily left Monday to visit with rel-atives in American Fork for sev-eral days. Mr. and Mrs. P. Reynolds of Spanish Fork arrived here Wed-nesday to make their home. Mrs. F. S. Ellis and daughters, Mrs. O'Conner and Mrs. New-an- s, Mrs. R. Rogers, Seymour Ellis and Francis O'Conner, all of Salt Lake, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Mann Sunday. Mrs. John Byrne and sons, ames and Donald, and Mrs. Wil-liam Steele and children, are spending ten days at Saratoga. Miss Beth Rogers of Salt Lake is a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Mann. Mr. and Mrs. John Knudsen and daughters, Ruby and Mabel, returned home Saturday after a visit with relatives in Mount Pleasant and Fairview. George Knudsen and' John Hy-land returned home Monday after a two weeks' trip to Yel-lowstone and other points of interest. Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Colyer spent Tuesday and Wednesday in Salt Lake.' Mrs. J. Knudsen and Mrs. E. C. Poulson were Salt Lake visi-tors Monday. Miss Gertrude Colyar and Wilfred Adams spent Tuesday with the lattcr's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Adams at Amer-ican Fork. Mrs. William Atkinson enter-tained the Aid Society of the M. E. Church at her home Fri-day afternoon. The time was spent in sewing, after which luncheon was served to the fol-lowing: Mrs. A. T. Kent, Mrs. W. Braun, Mrs. Joe Nichols, Mrs. C. A. Elides, Mrs. Ben Har-nett, Mrs. Julia Roudebush and Mrs. Lon Lloyd. Mrs. Lowe, who recently moved to the U. S. settlement, is entertaining relatives who mo-tored here from Oklahoma. Mrs. Maud Kurz and daugh-ter of Salt Lake are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. Turner. U. S. Mine Employees to Have Outing ; The employees ofthe.JJnjted States Mine will be given an outing at Lagoon on Thursday next, August 16th. The mine will close down, neither the night nor day shifts will work, and every employee will have an opportunity to participate in the festivities. Track and novelty races of many kinds are included in the lengthy program. Trans-portation will be furnished em-ployees over the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad, a spe-cial train having been engaged, which will leave the Bingham depot on Thursday morning at 9 :20. Noted Mining Engineer Visits Bingham ...II, S. Denny, mining engineer, - of London, England, was a vis-itor to the camp on Monday. Mr. Denny is a mining engineer of international note and his arti-cles on technical mining subjects are well-know- n to readers of the leading technical magazines, both in this country and abroad. , He was much impressed with the operations of the Utah Coppes mine, and said he Iiad heard much of its operations and had seen many pictures of the prop-erty, but that the actual obser-vation of operations convinces him that it is without question one of the greatest as well as the biggest things in mining the world has ever known. Fred Bellows Dies from Injuries Fred E. Bellows., a JocomotiW engineer of the Utah Copper Co. and superintendent of the Bos-ton Con. Hotel, died at the Aird Hospital at Trovo on Monday from injuries received on the Provo Bench highway in an auto accident on Sunday evening. The accident happened about nine miles north of Provo, where the Geneva road crosses the state road at Linden. Mrs. Lillie Bel-lows, his wife, sustained bruises about the head and body. Their children, Howard and Betty, es-caped injury, while Perry Gates, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. Burr Gates, of Green River, suffered a light muscle strain. The other occupants of the car were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Nepple, manager of the Rex Hotel of Copperfield. Mr. Nepple received a slight cut on his left hand from the broken windshield. Mrs. Nepple sus-tained injuries to her back, but all are now sufficiently recovered to be out of the hospital. According to William Allred, 18, living at Provo, was driving cast from Geneva in a Chalmers car. With him were August Lewis, 17, and Laurence Peterson, 17, student body president of the Provo high school. The Allred car was trav-eling at such a rapid rate it was unable to turn south at the road crossing, but continued across the road and struck the Bellows car. None of the occupants of the Allred car were injured, al-though the front of the car wa destroyed. Mr. and Mrs. Bel-lows and family had been visit-ing with relatives at Green River, Wyoming. Funeral services were held from the funeral chapel of the E. O'Donnell Undertaking Company at Salt Lake on Thurs-day afternoon at 2 o'clock, with Bishop 1). R. Lyon officiating. The beautiful floral tributes com-pletely covered the casket. A large number of friends from Bingham and other parts of the state attended. Interment was made in the Mount Olivet Ceme-tery under the direction of the O'Donnell Company. For Furnlturt Designers. A recent exhibition (if old Aiiu'ilcm furniture contnli.cd h ruekinjt eluilr of Hip Windsor tyiie which h;id n drawer under Its sent. Why not popularly this Idea In chairs built today for the diminutive homo whose Just boast, "1 ti f 11 easy to take care of," noitietliucK calks forth the answering wall, "Yes I ut where fdiull I put my things while I il. It?" ; To Tighten Eye-Glai- e Screws. If you do not own a tiny screw-driver, when the screws holding the Ion Res In your eyeglasses heroine loose, try usinj; the blade of an ordinary pocket-k-nife or the tip of n small pen In manlier like a screw-drive- r to tlghtefl them. Faults. You will find It less easy to Kproot faults than to choke them by seining virtue. Do not think of your faults; still les of others' faults. In every peiBdu who conies near you looJ for what t4 nd strong; honor that; try to fUai It, and your faults will drop t. i:k dead leaves, when their time cv0i8. Astronomical. The sun Is a million and a quarter times as Ma as the earth and J!H2,8(0 times ns heavy. The sl.e of the fixed stars and the planets varies greatly; some are smaller than the earth, while others are larger even than the sun. The earth revolves completely on Its axis every 21 hours, or ;W5 times a yeur. Banish Cvll Th ! The chaste uiluJ, .like a polished . ,Mnne, may admit foul thoughts with-u- t receiving their tincture. Sterne. The Unfit. There are two kinds of men who, In Cyrus II. K. Curtls's estimation, never amount to anything, and for these be has no use : The one kind, those who cunnot do what they are told; the other, those who can do nothlr.R else. Edward W. llok In the Atlantic Monthly. Strange Experience. I was ivturnin home on" rl:ht through a Mrui. All n Oii-'- my horses stopped anil could not l.e per-suaded to go on. Just then a flii-:- i of llghtiiiijjj showed me that the l'''g( had jti A'lislieil away, leaving a siren, wide 'r.iiu. I hud to go l::i"'. era I miles nl go home over another mad. Kxchatiife. ... Living Tru It's when a man Is in dead earnest that he Is'moRt apt to be alive to bis ' opportunities. Boston Evening Tnn-- , script. Crops Always Valuable. The seeds of knowledge are extreme-ly hardy, and may be planted every month In the yenr, and If well culti-vated will produce profitable crops. On Voles Culture. Bernlvatylfs beautiful voice was on of her chief churms, and to the woman who would take up voice culture sin; said: "Voice is a charm whose subtlety nMs to Its powei. it does not matter how large or how small u world a wom-an, sets out to conquer, her voice, with Its cadences and fluctuations, will be one of her wrongest weapons. To In plcuslnx a woman must know h wv to use her voire." 'inoujht for tne Day. The man without a Job Is n men-ace whether he sleeps In n boxcar on a bench In the park or In a man ' eion. Evidently. "I don't know bow the secret got nut. It was between you, me and the Iiinffham News Solicitor Will Call on You The "Bingham News" has se-cured the services of W. L. Bar-ne- tt of Salt Lake, as a subscrip-tion solicitor. Mr. Barnett will be found most courteous, and we would thank you to hand him your 2.00 for a trial subscrip-tion. Where He Slips Up. Many a man who Is the architect of tils own fortune falls down on the plans and specifications. Mere Fluff. "Some men uses big words," I'nele Ehen, "de same ns a turkey spreads his tall feathers, pey makes an llegant impression, but dey don't represent no real meat." Hot-to- Trr.nserliit. SHIPMENTS OF ORE FROM THE BINGHAM DISTRICT THIS WEEK I'nited States Mining Company 4G carloads Ctah-Apc- x Minimr Cmnpany carload Bingham Mines Company carloads Total " carloads Wanted. A girl to wait on table; good wages, Apply at once, Diamond Cafe, 001 Main street, Bingham. Human Frailty. "The world is full of tightwads," :nys the Suburban Sage. "Some jeo-,!- e are never happy unless they get l.eir Uaiolness for nottiliiir." |