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Show IrT.) , . ;,,ww...., ., wTOE BINGHAM PRESS BULU3TIN . CY The Press-Bulleti- n Entered as second-clas- s matter at the postoffice at Bingham Canyon, Utah, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Subscription Price, per year, in advance $2.00 Address all communications to the Press-Bulleti-n at Bingham Canyon, Utah. PHIL M. GOLDWATER, Publisher 6:45 p.m. Evening Service at 7:45 p. m. Subject: "The Man Who Played Fast and Loose." Eventually you will come to the Methodist church. Why not now? Copperfield Sunday School plans to have the celebration at the close of the contest, the Live-wir- will enter-tain the Treasure-digger- s who came out ahead. This will take place on Tuesday evening and games and re-freshments will be served. Boy Rangers and Boy Scout have been organized in Copperfield. The number is growing each week. We can accommodate several new scouts 12 years and over. Come Monday night at 8 p.m. The Rangers must be there at 7 p.m. Mrs. Othiem'g class is meeting during the week; better get in on that useful organization. COMMUNITY CHURCH OFFERS BUSY WEEK During the week of October 20th to 26th, the Methodist Church will offer three very acceptable events. Monday evening of that , week the Ladies interested in the missionary funds are planning s very interesting birthday party. You will want to take that in. Saturday we arc to be favored with a visit from the Dyncvor Concert company. This company is largely composed of Welsh singers. And the Queen Esther Circle and the C. K. U. D's are together in the promotion of this fine array of talented musicians. The concert program will be given in the high school auditorium Satur-day evening, October 25th, at 8 p.m. Then as a final finish to the week we are trying if possible to arrange for the presentation of a pageant en-titled "World Service." The cast is composed of twenty performers and is now being presented in the First Church of Salt Lake City. These of-ferings ought to bring you something worth while in the way of spiritual culture. Good music and high-clas- s pageantry. The societies of the church are all on a sure footing. The latest addi-tion to our activities is the Junior League which meets on a Fri-day afternoon after the school hours. Mrs. Anna Othiem is the superinten- - dent, with Mrs. Paul Ransom and Mrs. Robert Halverson as efficient helpers. It is probable that this Sunday eve-ning the officers of the Junior and Senior Leagues will be installed dur-ing the evening service. The Kindergarten is going on a pace. There is an enrollment of forty-- one and an attendance of thirty-thre- e. There is room for a few more children and if you want your chil-dren to get the benefit of this splen-did service you had better hurry. The Sunday school is growing, a larger attendance last Sunday and yet we missed many of the small chil-dren. Parents may rest assured that we will have a warm church. Send them along. Reception of members and Holy Communion next Sunday. Regular services next Sunday. Sun-day School at 9:45 a.m. Morning worship at 11 a.m. Subject: "Such As I Have." Epworth League a OUR LABE is your guarantee ij t J That ROYAL BREAD is absolutely t pure and clean; X I That it is made by expert bakers in a ' i X I modern shop; f 1 That it is made and handled in a san- - ;; itary way; .B. That it is the best food obtainable any- - V. where in the world. J I V ' I I I The bread thai made I I I & mother quit baking gg5 BREAD is your best food T J eat more of it When you order Hogan Milk, you always know that you are getting the best dairy product obtain-able. Our modern milking machines insure the clean- I liness HOGAN DAIRY of your milk. I Energetic Gasoline and Good Oil, Too You'll get both of these at the Bingham Garage Filling Station I and lots of extra service. Then, too, the charge is right and 1 that makes it more reasonable. 1 Our men are expert in the matter of lubrication and choosing I the proper mixture for your car. They'll be pleased to help i """""J yU' I BINGHAM GARAGE STORAGE Temporarily Located at Inglesby'a Garage . Phone 88 I DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE 1 LINCOLN FORD FORDSON 'I ! . YES! SPECIALS, AS OUR j Meats j I ARE ALWAYS OF THE VERY BEST f X CORN-FE- D STOCK Xi X Good Meat Is t ECONOMICAL MEAT I ''That is what you get when you order Meat from the I BINGHAM CANYON EAT GO. PHONE 5 ? X Highland Boy Branch I PHONE 205 I t i You are cordially invited to inspect oar new X Market at t X 460 MAIN STREET Utah's Finest Meat Market 3 t Ml Jime I Says I Meet Me at the Copper King! "BECCO" ON DRAUGHT I i Bingham Canyon, Utah j ri nit ummnm m .mr - r ytjmmmmmmr mmt wjaasja Lei Hie Sure Yourvp PILES That Quick! I can cure yonr Piles (Fistula, Fissure and other Diseases of the Rectum except Cancer a short time longer without Chloro-form, Ether, Knife or HoapitaL Do not doubt this amazing truth! Send the coupon below for Free Information and Convincing Proof that my method of curing Rectal troubles is reasonable and should sppeal to everyone wishing to avoid a severe surgical operation with its attendant discomforts and fearful dread that causes so many sufferers to delay seeking relief and cure. Piles Cannot bo Cured with Salves, Tablets and Ointments I Home remedies at best can only relieve, thus delaying proper I treatment and a permanent cure. Symptoms of Cancer and other 1 serious Rectal diseases are thus smeared over and not discovered M until too latel If you are a sufferer with Itectal trouble, your H condition Justifies an intelligent opinion and proper treatment which I you cannot receive from any patent medicine or from any friend's H advice. My experience of more than twenty years In Grsnd Island will he of real value to you if you will only accept it PAY WHEN H CURED! I give a life-tim- e guarantee in every case I accept for I treatment, or make no charge for my services. iPnilis I CAUSE MANY DISEASES I " ""Unt "' B f yiTriZJ. S ,,B,p f 1 H SWl 1 ".' thetle nerroM rUm. r ,"?t-T--- J 1 trnt nan? trouble re-- V, 1 1 I lVmZ?M ! Mch IM siek- - I J H f Tt" - tal rtit I H V if. Writ to Bit todr anil J?A iJ 9 $ I W "' " rr Ai I 1 h 7"-- - trMbl. ... wh.t t jlT "H lMM lieald d. f ,.t r4. LmjT M. RICH spst GRAND ISLAND, HEBR. Free Information Coupon 444 ricase fend free information In regard to your I cure for Rectal Troubles to 1 (Print Km and Addrtu and Sluts Whether Mr., Uri. or Min) BMIIIBIBBMimilliaHM j Second Hand Cars At Bargain Prices I j 1 Ford Coupe, 1922 model I 1 Ford Touring, 1922 model I 1 Star Touring, 1923 model. I The right terms to the right people 1 I P 1 BINGHAM LIVERY AND GARAGE p I Miles Hartman, Prop. W j l I Carr Fork, Just Around the Corner from Main !:' S l I O'Donnell Company j ! I X FUNERAL DIRECTORS . X Bingham Canyon X I Phone 17 P MARY 1 j SUCCEEDS if on ; MAIN STREET if 8 ; $ By LAURA MILLER 8 ''. e by Laura MllUr NATIONAL HONORS AND LOCAL SALES Would you ever think of being bug ly Interested In corsets, other people's corsets at that! And if you bad dis-covered that all the fascinating art and science of salesmanship could bs wrapped up In coutil and whalebone, would you think you bad sny chance of carrying off s record, way out In Idaho? Well, Sophie Boellert was and did. That It to say, she found her-self a saleswoman In a Bolss store. Sbs set berielf to "work, and bard work, with tireless ambition to go 00 and on." 6h took one course of study after another, for "we never have enough learning." That she won the national prise la corset selling not long ago Is Just one milestone on ber way. She's buyer and department manager In the Boise Mode. That means that she baa corns to know Intimately the baying pubUe of Idaho, snd the manufacturers of America and the world as they art translated to the retail trade through the clever, complicated, ever changing, ever Interesting New Tork market She's a director of the store, which means that she's managed to learn how to work wlih other people day In and day out, to get her own way when It'a based on good hard knowledge without Irritating the other person, and to yield her opinion as gracefully when other Judgment Is the better. Her position means work with much overtime, but Miss Boellert Onds op-portunity for outside Interests. "I've always been Interested In helping girls np In their work," she says. "My own experience Is that the best founda-tions for the sverage girl are laid In smaller towns. People seem to bare more time. But In any place the study of human nature Is the most Interest-ing one. This many-side- d study Is a great help In any work. One of the most Interesting studies today Is sell-ing. We sre all doing that It has many angles snd the whole world enters It at some angle." Miss Boellert's own Ufa seems to bear out her statement about the wide angle vision possible to the good sales-woman wherever she Is. The wsr brought more than one honor to this Idaho woman who had been so con-scientiously preparing herself. And when. Just after the war, the National Federation of Business and Profession at Women was started, the women of Idaho chose Miss Boellert to be their representative In the national council Each year they have her This year she bas mothered two new clubs Into being, and has two more on the point of organization. "So," she comments, "I'm buay most of the time." ; WHY YOU SHOULD VOTE The laws of a democracy intend that every voter should cast his ballot when the opportunity comes. If men and women, as individuals, stay away from the polls, while the remaining men and women vote as organized groups, the resulting danger is not only government by the minority, but government by organized groups and factions. This is not the kind of government that Jefferson wrote about or that Lincoln eulogized. The authors of the Constitution, although not mention-ing political parties in that document, intended that America should have its great parties whose issues might sway the electorate as a great pen-dulum to serve national needs; but they did not contemplate comparatively small factions springing from selfish interests, or what is sometimes worse vicious motives. That is what might happen indeed, often does happen as the result of the apathy of individual voters. You can be assured that every radical, every bolshevist, and every man or woman with communistic tendencies of mind will this year be at the polls. Why? Because it is their widest avenue (or expression of their doctrines; it is their most telling blow against a government that is, and in favor of a government they want to bet Because the average bard-workin- g, clear minded citizen is not "organized" in the sesnse of ulterior demonstration is the strongest reason why he should be aroused to out-poi- the unscrup, uloua efforts at the ballot box. This is the time to cast aside the rules of editorialism and get "preachy." This is the time to arouse the peace-tim- e patriotism of the multitudes. Fig-ures of the United States Census Bureau show that twenty-seve- n million people stayed away from the polls in 1920. This represented a little less than one-ha- lf of the eligibles. If the half that voted equalled in political sagacity the half that stayed away, perhaps the economist might close the issue. But no such Utopian result can satisfy. Such logic defeats itself, because it does not take into consideration the obligation that each one of us owes to our government. The worst effect is never in who was or who was not elected, but the reaction upon the stay-at-ho- himself constitutes the greater menace to popular government. What care we for the laws who had not enough interest to help make them? Let us find the answer in every-da- y horse sense. The man or woman who helps to build something who has, his or her share in its formation and maintenance whether that something be a home, a lodge, a city or an empire, will everlastingly defend it against the onslaughts of opposition. This is the human side of the proposition; and as America grows, the price-less treasure of the franchise becomes more priceless, and the corresponding duty becomes greater. There is something lacking in civic consciousness an clement of de-voted service missing in a condition that will permit one-ha- lf of the people to govern the other half. Let us do our full duty on November 4, and thus perpetuate the ideals of this republic as emulated by those who have sacri-ficed their lives and fortunes that we might enjoy the full blessings of American liberty. Juat What J Beatify? Beauty cannot be described, since what seems beautiful to one may be plain to another. Ben Jonson's "most beautiful face" had to possess simplicity crowned by flowing hair and a sweet neglect ; Spenser would have eyes like sapphires, teeth like pearls, and a forehead like Ivory; Rogers In-sisted on archness and mirth. Every lover thinks his girl is beautiful. data That Turn BulUti Bullet-proo- f glass has a layer of celluloid or similar product cemented between two layers of glass. "KINDLY WATCH JANE" If s woman really wants to bave fun In this modern world, said woman gets Into s niche where she can watch, re-port upon and, on occasion, manipulate some of the currents of feminism. There's a woman out In Topeka doing that very thing. Wherefore there has grown up a tradition In Kansas, par-ticularly In Kansas politics, "Kindly watch Jane!" Now Jane Is merely s nickname for a newspaper known off-icially as the Kansas Woman's Journal. It Is the Initials of the paper plus the necessities of the esse thst worded the slogan quoted. Who snd what are behind Janet There's an advisory board that covers nil one side of a sheet of paper. There's a motto, "Devoted to the Interests of women, children snd home," that Is honestly lived np to. There was lng the' last political campaign, the Re--' publican state central committee, which made the paper official organ of the ' Republican women of Kansas. There are the subscribers, both men and ; women. And there Is UUa Day llon- - roe, editor, who describee herself as ' "chiefly responsible except when the printers of my most capable publishing ) company commit some kind of crime, mayhem possibly, on some pet article." ) It was July when Mrs. Monroe wrote, 11a' mercy i I have the rheumatics. I I've one wrist trussed up In t red flan- - nel bnndaxe. (Dr. said hot applications, snd I'll leave It to you if there's any- - thing more torrid than a red fU.net I bandage.) "I was born Into a family that was crazy to have a girl. As the only girl n a bunch of boys, I had many priv-- I lieges, but I had to learn to be a good K sport My father died. I became a school teacher, read law, grew up and K married a lawyer politician. When I I first went away to school I boarded at K the same place with s newspaper man and his wife, who were mighty nice to E the lonesome little stranger. The ed-itor took the most Inconvenient times to become drunk. With his wife I used t to get up In the middle of the nUht to get out the Courier. To keep awake I J learned to set type. . "I only advise a girl to go to a big clt j t tor a bit of post grnduate work, for a sojourn that will make her apprecl--t ste the wide spaces more when she comes back. One of the greatest boons for wotcen li the feeling tliRt they have a sort of proprietary Interest In the some town, such si I have for Toneka. |