OCR Text |
Show V I . II 1111 I .1 III ... .I-- 1 ; r THE BINGHAM BULLETIN K Entered as second-clas- s matter at the postoffice at Bingham Can-.vo-n, Utah, under the act of Cougrcsis of March 2, 1879. J. R. Jnrvis, Editor and Manager. i Subscrption price for one year in advance, $2.00. x ! ,n iiT, '.i ...." jg i '' n "j""" i"11. , ,'; '!" " .v.'.' "' ADigpst of Industrial cossa "7" HB National Automobile Show in New fork lut week wu much mora I than au impressive array of the world's beat motor cars. The gluamiujr model, powerful and efficient, were symbolical of the motor car with !ti manned bilUona of capital and ita armlea at trained wrrl:cr. They emphaaliod' not only the economic- significance and the vital Influence of the Indus-try, but they also dmnonatrated that nulomoblle maoufacturr r are conn-Jn- t of future prosperity. iloreovcr, this confidence In the fu-ture, exr eased mutely but effectively by the show nod-.il- as tbe firet of milltnns of others to be made title year, wae upheld and strengthened by the record crowds of visitors who displayed keen interest Id the new ears, and by the large numbers of persons who bought automobiles at the ahow. Although 1930 does not promise to lit a record year for sales of new automobiles, conditions Indicate that production of oars will not be curtail, ed to a degree which will seriously harm general bualness. It is probable that the American publlo, always quick to recognise a bargain, will not let production aag deeply la 1A30. when the greatest dollir-for-doll- ar values in motor car history ars being offered. Business mea everywhere are in-terested In steps to be taken by au-tomobile manufacturers In the face of I9t$ The great numbers of motor ears produced last year served to Invoke the economic law of diminishing returns,, which cuts down profits by necessltntrng greater end more expensive sales ef-fort la disposing of cars. As was pointed out during the Show by Clarence E. general sales msnager of the Reo Motor Car Company, manufac-turers found th-- .t economies efrectod y quality production were culcSl wtped ant after the overproduction pemt was reneheJ Bldridgo told a national meeting ' sf dealers at the show that produc-tion schedules kept more closeiy In nns with the absirntlve etpadiy of the . market- - even though aueh s system Involves a substantially re-duced valume of frodunlln end rn!e offer greater profit for everyone in the Industry, mano factursr, distributor and deals. "There still remains one danger oua fallacy that not even 1029 has succeeded In completely wiping out," Eldrldge said, "that la, that conced-In-g the desirability of a more scien-tific regulation of production, such regulation implies a definite de-termination on the part af each of tbe manufacturers to reduce his pro-duction during 1930: and that such determination presupposes and re-quires an agreement on tba part of all the manufacturers. "No manufacturer needs to aet out deliberately to build fewer automo-biles In 1930. Much less do manu-facturers need to agree to build few-er automobiles. All that any manu-facturer needs to do and this It what many of thrra hava already Indicated their firm Intention of doing --is to determine that be will bullj ust as many and only so many auto-mobiles during 1930 aa his selling or-ganization can sell by legitimate and normally agressive selling methods. In visw of the fact that all busi-ness is affected by motor car produc-tion, and that our export trade, rep-resenting surplus production, often means the difference botween pros-perity snd depression. It is significant that automobile manufacturers sre actively developing foreign markets. H. Tippor, aalee manager of Gen-eral Motors Export Corporation, sail. Ing recently for Australia on the MRtson liner Ventura, said as ths chip left Hun Francisco that the Ceneral Motors export program does not contemplate merely selling its products In Australia and other Pa-rif-lands. "The plan." he said, "is to effect such economies In assembling and distribution and such Improvements !n snrviee that General Motors prod-act- s will be av.illabls to people ef oil Incomes In Australia and other not'qns. Just aa they are now within reach of every family In the United Glatcs." j One day service, Friday to Sat rrday. Royal Laundry. Phone 90. The Royal Laundry sews on your buttons. Phone 90. "" '" S2 Fashions for the Smart Woman Mill m ftp ifll COVERED SHOULDERS Smart women are covering their shoulders for evening. In the very iheer materials, uch ai chiffon, the cape collar it often employed to achieve tint thoulder theme, and when the fabric it one of the lovely, modern printed designt, it it an especially at-tractive style. In this model the cape finishes an oval neckline and hangi straight across the front, dips slightly over the upper arm. and hangs to the waistline in back. A tight hqi sect'vn, shirred at the front, molds the figure softly, and the circular skirt. ' length at the front, dips to the Vrie at the back. Pictorial Printed Pattern No. 5106. Sizes 14 to 42, 65 cents. S2 Fashions for the Smart Woman r ' A, 1 If117' ' STRAPS, SKIRT AND CAPE Sports frocks are casual this season , and earmarked by simplicity. The : smart woman at winter or summer re-torts is known by her lack of elabo-rate clothes when she goes in for active sports. In a costume such as this she is "right." It consists of a simple pleated skirt with suspender straps, which cross at the back and button to the belt. Over whatever little blouse she happens to be wearing with the skirt she slips the scarf-cap- dipping in the back, seamed under the arm with armholcs free, and cut in one with the tie ends, which fold in front to a soft bow. Pictorial Printed Pattern No. 5117. Sizes 14 to 42, 50 cents. Thoasaaaa of preaeripUbni for this ol stops pain in headachea ja remarkable formula wa filled bj ralgla. dental pain. rheamaUam. r orer 10.000 pny- - ol nov cornea in handy tubes at endorse aa clna cheat alaa IU0 at W rhTmlM. Sa. rantd reUet tor scripUon druggist or on receipt of &1J "a. price from ol Co, Holtoa. ta . f" poRtalns No Aaplrln or Othar Heart Depraaaanta. I ncadachet! Colds! Neuralgia! Dental Palnl FOB SALE Pour room modem home, double garage, - ooopa for 250 chickens also two room eaVia. All goes at a very reasonable price. A small down payment and $25.00 per month will han-dle. Buyer will deal direotl with tha owner. You must tea this home to appreciate it Call Midvale 235-- ar see the owner at 65 Sixth Are. Midrale. 19-5- -t POTATO CHIPS DELICIOUS FRESH AND READY TO SERVE 50c PER LB. at R. Jay Mitchell, 455 Main St. Copper Mercantile Co., 381 Main St. Cozy Confectionery, 309 Main St. Canyon Confectionery and Grocery 25 Out Fork . Interior Decorating Paper hanging, Kalsomining or other Decorating. Bepair work neatly done. Ask for Larten Care Richard Walker 374 Main Bt. BINGHAM FASHIONS- - I for the Smart Woman I S4 vtvnaiMi Mtt ll Ji77 4635 saw ... ajsj "EARLY TO RISE" . Most children are "early to bed and early to rise," and it is important that the things they put on in the morning are simple to get into and warm. Underclothes may be made of a very fine fleecy woolen material for winter, and each child should have his own warm, blinket bathrobe. This bathrobe wraps around the child snugly. It is simply tailored, with long rolled collar. The two-pie- underwear set next consists of panties and tuck-i- n shirt, especially designed for the young fig-ure. The underwaist and panties on the smallest figure are practical and easy to make. First Model : Pictorial Printed Pat-ters No. 3177. Siies 6 to 16 years, 35 cents. Second Model : Pictorial Printed Pattern No. 4635. Sixes 8 to 17 years, 35 cents. Third Model: Pictorial Printed Pattern No. 4414. Sixes 1 to 6 years, 30 cents. 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 Ilotel 107 E. 2nd South Phone Was. 1069 SCHEDULE Cf.i-- leave Salt Lake City at 7, 9, and 11 a. m. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 P- - m. FARES One way $1.50 Round Trip ..250 O'DGimell & Co Funeral Directors Eingham Canyon, Utah Phone 17 Salt Lake Phone Wasatch 6461 siwitWasaaaanafmawfi'awaiMesii inmnMm hi mi I in the sensntionmi mew - The sensational value of the Greatest Chevrolet in i ' I hydraulic ABSORBERS shock Chevrolet History is based on definite points of WEAriE J!f00F.. &a72rb2. superiority which you can easily check for your- - lSSuJXtSt- - rmfLdtSl self. From its improved er irvbrSe"o" tSi . COsattfOsTt tl !UC4s I valve-in-hea- d engine, to its beautiful new bodies L . 1 by Fisher --it sets a new standard of quality for I the low-pri- ce field. I caso,,nk MOTOR ON DASH LV"i2-- A few of Chevrolet's extra-valu- e features are listed TiSJlSS' ' tMiwew moactisr. the driving controU in .V iirM opttio. wtts! on this page. Check them over carefully. Then ciudmasgaouneauae. J come in and drive this car. Learn what these new I '' features mean in terms of finer performance r .. ..."i'V? IBkonZ...usked greater comfort-gre- ater handling case-a- nd I NON.GLARE : t.SS. increasedsafety.Itwilltakeyouonlyafewminutes .TSfw, , ISSIm'SZ-- to find out why this car is winning more praise 3eanr,h.,rian..rlu,!i ) .d.n.pdioosu. than any Chevrolet we have ever shown. A finer : ' ' Six In every way yet it sells . '' . ' , KtwHOTrxw .At extremely low price! larger manifold balloon tires A lrr hX-M- TK Rruirlafsw 40", New, Innt-- r. npariieiiM ef f"-- " Tl Slfy"" Improve roedsbllltr. 1, ' .... ! J The Sport Roadster $525 I --ix' ' The Coach.. $565 "1 The Coupe .............. $565 I "I STKONCKR AR - TWO-BEA-M axlb - lne oport Coupe $bZ5 headlamps , iase" msd5i5e The Club Sed&ll . . . . S625 coTtrolT?hyafISlt ' flmof nlckl sel oS 3 Li n permit rourtmyi S&.TV . The Sedan ..; $675 ZflS? ,"'f- --r. 1 The Sedan Delivery $595 . ' , v The Light Delivery ChasU . . . $365 . - ' ' I new acceleration I The 1 1-- 2 Ton ChHis $520 I I The 1 1-- 2 ton Chasis, with cab $625 ' dr. s.lat rL(t 4m rvilon pump pro-ia-ea AllclosH mpd;lil-ia-the fhfii rcelen.Hom djunt;it.l drlvet t whb'h modra traflse t -- irf thrituhitorT n.Micau. All prks f. o. b. factory, Flint, Michigan giTis.tiipro:.ri.itioo. A SIX IN THE PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR ... ''.. Adderley & Nichols A SMOOTUEH, PASTE!!, D E T T R Q SIX S2 Fashions for thf Smart Woman O PKTOI.IM, MVlttt I i 5I05 CITIZENS COAL & SUPPLY CO. Coal, Ice, Hay and Grain' DELIVERED to all Parts of Bingham Canyon: PHONE 39 PRINTED SIMPLICITY Young girts' clothes are only when they are simple, and this is a rule that holds in every season and for all occasions, no matter what the prevailing adult silhouette. The young girl may adapt the older mode but in a modified version. This s to express its youthful simpli-city in one of the stylized prints. It adopts the high, belted waistline which rightly belongs to youth, and a skirt attached to the bodice at a low hiplinc. The smart short sleeves are particularly fitted to the young girl, and are used here to advantage. Pictorial Printed Pattern No. 5105. Sizes 8 to 15 years, 40 c;!s. & Garfield J IKauttUtW'.ltXKKIMKKIt COMPANY j via Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast f cars from Salt Lake City in connection j System. J USE COPPER j 5 Brass piping for $4500 cottage only costs $48.87 j more than galvanized iron Vipin? and will J LAST FOREVER I T. H. PERLEYWITS. IL L. DAVIDSON Asst. Gen. Freight & Pass. Agt. : . Agent Salt Lake City, Utah Bingham, Utah ( Eer'y E.iH.b NereM Janp Aiimpii a oca of th VtiiiMjj of Ktclisli oowllsta Sh hud tlx nilraniNKO f an educatlea fur i porlur lo Hint of oiost girts of hef il:iy. She --r.i. educated bjr hor fnthrr, Janf wn Iie youngest of seven ehft. rJrrn. f whom only one other era a rl Her fuiher whs rector of Strv (risen, nour Rnslngstotte, In Ifninp. hire. Hi'ii' she llvwl for rite flinf '.'!J inr or tier tire Slia I tnld ti hsvi tn'ci) of the doimwlf HOVI-- L j - - Another FteM. Fou can't sell tno u gold lirtrt I've bought 20 tr iuuie lu lay time "Exactly, and you therefore need a container. I'm tolling elegant ma-hogany holders with gilt nails. Too sign hare. NOTICE TO WA':ER USEES State Engineer's Office, Salt Lake City, Utah, i December 19,1929 NOTICE is hereby given that 'John M. Beattie, whose post of-- ; fice address is Salt Lake ' City, Utah, has made application in ae- - cordance with the requirements of the Session Laws of Utah, 1919 to 1929 inclusive to appropriate 15 c. f. s. of water from Bingham Creek in Salt Lake Couty, Utah. Fid water is to be diverted at a point which bears N. 56 degrees 45 minuses W. 1600 ft. from the K.l-- 4 corner of Section 18, T. 3 S., II. 2 V. andl conveyed by means of h ditch u distance of 3,000 ft. where it will be used from April 1st to November 15th inclusive of each year as a supplemental sup-ply for tha irrigation of 1920 ncres of land embraced in Bees. !,- -, 16, 17, T. 3 S., R. 2 W., S. L. D. & M. This application is designated in the State Engineer's Office as File No. 10775. All protests against the grant-ing of said application, stating the reasons therefor, must be by af-fidavit in duplicate, accompanied with a fee of $1.00, and filed in this office within thirty (30) days after the completion of the publication of this notice. , CEO. M. BACON, State Engineer. Date of first publication, Dee. 26, 1929. Dale of completion of publica-tion, January 23, 1930. Siljer Co-- ioi Ivory Ivory i gleti a sllverllke tlnlsli tl'u Is composed of liny silver grains, by placing tl (n a dilute si I vet nitrate solution, and then In a anlu tlon of common salt until It turns deep yellow. Next the Ivory la dipped In water, and exposed In tha sun until tt blackens. On rubbing, tba black surface changes to a brilliant silver Popular Science Monthly. a a Ventriloquises The CKvntliil ineihiiiilfcin of ventrtl inulfn! In Ink'.ng l full breath ihwt keei'htg the muscles of the chest snd ne k llxed, and speaking with the month aimoal dosed and the Hps and 'nwer Inw as mnllonlese ss poeelbl while sir Is very slowly expired through a narrow glottis. No air moat escape throogb tba nose. ' a ' nV'Safe HoMf) there ta an embonpoint In mlddU age from which snspendnrs point tba way ef aalratloa. ; ' Fastest Swimmer The d Iphln (coryphena hlpporus) is snpposed to be tba fastest flab tn tba ocean. Uncle Eb.s --Ton rnn't nilus Judge a man by da ..injmnj he keeps. wild Uncle Eben, Many ptirty low down rltlssen man-igo-to Kit hlRsolf a fine dog." Wash-'ngto- n Stnr. Banish tba Ibs If you ara op against a bard Job lmt saems Impossible, kick out the "Imp" snfl work heartily and chaatfly --air Bobsrt Baden-Powa- |