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Show ThursdayFebruary 16, 1928 f PAGE TWO THK BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINfMAM CANYON. UTAH The Bingham Bulletin Entered as second-clas- s matter at the postoffice at Bingham Canyon, Utah, under the Act of Congress of March 1879. Subscription Price, per year, in advance - $2.00 Published at 446 Main St., Bingham Canyon, Utah HOWARD A. JARVIS, Editor mm? ! Are You Really Well? To B Fit There Must Be ! Proper Kidney Action. j you find yourself running dowa ; DO always tired, nervoua and da j pressed? Are you atiff and achy, sub-- to nagging backache, drowsy leadaches and dizzy pelli Are kid-ney secretions scanty and burning ia passage? Too often this indicate iluggiah kidneys and shouldn't be neglected. Uoan's Pitts, a stimulant diuretic; increase the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Doan's are endorsed everywhere.. Ask yourntlghbcrl Jr j DOAN'S p,!bLcs I A STIMULANT DIURETIC V KIDNEYS t rb(r-Milbur- Co. Mfg Chm Bufslo.NY. BBB1SSSS1SSSSSSSSSS1S1 sMsss) SSMSM rores,Fislula,PolIEril Hanford' Balsam of Myrrli ; Itawr bsck for Brat bottl If m soltoiL allOMlsia, i When in Salt Lake Stop at THE METROPOLE HOTEL MODERN. CLEAN, QUIET Rates: $1.00 day and up SAM LYTE Manager 35 East Broadway !Get jj Your I From i (jf :: Granite i: Furniture Co. : Isis Theatre Building ' X Bingham Canyon V, WWWWW WW WWW WW wvt O'DONNELL & CO. Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon Utah Phone 17 Wasatch 6461 Salt Lake Phone I When You Feel a Cold Coming On. Take Lnxatlve BTJOMO QUININE Tab- - lets to work oft the Cold nnd to fortify I the system against an attack of Grip ' t or Influenza. 30c. Adv. ' Finished Work Unexcelled REPAIR SERVICE FREE WITH YOUR LAUNDRY WORK MURRAY LAUNDRY George Streadb'eck Local Agent Phone 98 84 Main Street BINGHAM I HELD I RAILWAY COMPANY ; Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast daily merchandise cars from Salt Lake City in connection with the Union Pacific System. ; !USECOPPER cottage only costs $48.87 i iron piping and will ft LAST FOREVER g T. II. PERLEYWITS. H. L. DAVIDSON Asst. Gen. Freight & Pas. Agt., Agent Salt Lake City, Utah Eingham, Utah : . i I The BABY ! L -I AMmA 1 V ' V7 ! I No mother in this enlightened nge would give her baby something she did not. know was perfectly harmless, especially when a few drops of plain C'astoria will right a baby's stomach and end almost any little ill. Fretful-nes- s and fever, too; it seems no time until everything Is serene. That's the beauty of Castoria; Its gentle influence seems Just what ia needed. It does nil that castor oil might accomplish, without shock to the system. Witlmnt the evil taste. . It's delicious! Being purely vegeta- - able, you can give It as often as there's a sign of colic; constipation; diarrhea; or need to aid sound, nat-- , ', ural sleep. Just one warning: It is genuine Fletcher's Castoria that physicians recommend. Other preparations may be Just as free from all doubtful drugs, but no child of this writer's Is going to test thein! Besides, the book on care and feeding of babies that comes with Fletcher's Castoria is worth its weight in gold. mammaeII HALL j HIGHLAND BOY II I 1 I choicest cigars, Tobaccos, Candies and Ice Cream. I S 1 n I fe Children Cry for W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 923 1 t I News Notes j X It' a Privilege to Live in Utah COALVILLE Working an average dally force of 120 men and 150 head of tock, the forces of the Utah Construc-tion company, building the new Lin-coln highway and the relocation of the Park City branch of the Union Pacific railroad around the Echo reservoir moved a total of 46,000 cubic yards of earth material during January, as re-ported by F. F. Smith construction en-gineer for the government. LOGAN Inasmuch as nearly all the snow has disappeared In northern Utah and Indications are that spring has come, prospects for a season's wa-ter supply are good at the present ac-cording to a report issued by Profes sor George D. Clyde of the Utah exper iiuent station. ROOSEVELT With Its home office In Roosevelt, the Dry Gulch Irrigation company lays claim to being among the largest mutual Irrigation com-panies In the world, watering approx-imately 53,000 acres of land subject to proof of beneficial use and actually watering, this year, 44,038 acres of land In Duchesne and Uintah counties. ROOSEVELT After sinking a new shaft a depth of forty-thre- e feet, tho Raven Gtlsonlte mine crew was forced to abandon the work due to wate- -. Ap- - proximately 250 gallons of , water per hour was developed, overtaxing the pumping facilities. With a new puinp on hand soon, and drier weather. It is poasible that work on the shaft will be resumed. SALT LAKE Annual meeting of the' Utah Fruit and Vegetable Growers' association will be held February 18 at 10 a. m. In the offices of the Utah State Farm bureau In the Dooly building. New officers will be elected and mat-ter- s concerned with the marketing of this year's crop will be discussed. J. W. Gillman of Orem, president, will have charge of the meeting. VERNAL Utah in 1927 produced 4,046,000 bushels of the three major feed crops barley, oats and corn-comp- ared to 3,392,000 bushels in 1925. The Denver & Salt Lake railroad is preparing for operation through the Moffat tunnel, which is expected to be opened about February 15, according to an Associated Tress dispatch re-ceived here Thursday. The laying of the track is now In progress. No re-cent developments in the proposed use of the tunnel by the Denver & Rio Grande Western railroad have been reported, the dispatch states. LOGAN Cache County Toultry Producers' association opened its fif-teenth annual show in the Steven? building, on Center street, and will continue for tha rest of. the week There was a gratifying attendance all day, oflicials report, and the judging brought out some favorable comment. VERNAL Maurice B. (Lefty) Flynn, erstwhile movie star now con-ducting the Elkhead ranch, seven miles east of Craig, bus gone to New York City to confer with his fathci and other capitalists with reference tc the establishment of a silver fox farm on the ranch. TROVO Sheep in Utah are little affected with scabies, It was reported to the board of county commissioners by Thomas Redmond sheep inspector. The stale apiarist reported that there are 64.000 colonies of bees in the state and that they are graded by experts as the cleanest in the country, less than 2 per cent of them being dise.'s:d. VERNAL Charles Hanna of Vern il, operating a line of traps on Red moun-tains, pieht mill r north (if Vcrr..il lm ? caught the largest badger on record in Uintah county. The pelt masnr d ' 12 inches in length from tip of nose to tip of tail, was 37 inches wide, and brought JO in the St. Louis fur market. Tha ruling price for badger pelts, prime, is from $li to $(1.50. TAYSOX Lions club regular lunch-eon and business meeting was held at t'u:' Strawberry hctel with President U. F. Ott in charge. A report of the Lions road effmniittee on its work in connection with Eureka K wanis club in constructing a hard surfaced road between Santaquin and Eureka, was made, with all plans In readine-.- for iis early completion. SALT LAKE General precipitation, heavier in the southern counties, fa-vored livestock, range and cr. p condi-tions, according to the weekly report Issued from the office rf J. Cecil Alt?r, government weather observer in this city. BKIGHAM, CITV More than 100 poultrymen of the eouthsrn part of rioxelder county attended a poultry n;r.eting held at the commercial club rooms in this city. The meeting was followed by a buffet luncheon. Jesse W. Hoopes of this city, president of the state poultry association and chairman of the meeting, reviewed th) accomplishments of the state organiz-ation and predicted a prosperous yet.r for the poultry industry. HEBER The financia' report of Wasatch county for the year ending December 31, as published by Alfrd Sharp, county clerk, stiowd the coun-ty and tbe various funds iu a healthy condition, with no I uncled Indebted ness. The report follow:' Fixed as-sets, 124.300; to credit of various funds, $68,056.64; due county frcm state, $150; half salaries and oth? sources, $712; total resources, $91,218 R4: fal liabilities. $15,747 95. The total receipts for tbe year were $395, !9S 20 and the total disbursements I3:7.m.56. I To the Youth of the Nation Falls the Duty of "Saving" Society By DANIEL L. MARSH, President Boston University. youth of today faces the age-ol- d problem of "saving" society. THEorder to accomplish its task the rising generation must succeed rejuvenating a moral and social conscience which, despite the best intentions of society, shows unmistakable signs of "petering out" periodically. It is education that will help in the saving process. It is impossible to capitalize the good things of each generation so strongly that the accumulated moral strength will not subside and ulti-mately end in bankruptcy unless its strength is renewed with each gen eration. That means that each generation is faced with the necessity of saving society. As a result, education must play its part and each generation must be taught certain fundamental essential to an orderly state of society Among other things, America's youth rmist be taught to place only 'good and worthy men in positions of power, to enact just and equal law e and to enforce the laws upon all alike, without delay and without fear or favor, for delay causes fermentation of unsocial propaganda. They must be taught to obey and reverence all laws as the political religion of the nation, for disrespect for law is a sign of social disintegra fion; to respect property as a divine institution, for by means of it the material wealth of mankind may be increased, the intellect developed and innumerable virtues exercised, and. to recognize human rights as more important than property rights. America's youth must learn to think clearly and not to confuse liberty with license, nor public opinion with mob psychology; to appeal to reason instead of to physical force and violence as a means of settling disputes, and to rise above all class and racial fear and hatred and jealousy and animosity. Want Supplied Roger Knhn, millionaire airman and musician, said at a dinner In ? New York: j "We hear lets of stories about the j conceit of movie actresses, but none j about the conceit of movie actors. j Ilere goes, then, to supply a long-fel- t wnnt i "A movie actor, on Ills return from j bis vacation, went about with his j sleeves rolled up so as to show the J big, bulging biceps on each arm. He j was very proud of them, fie cot all j his friends to feel how hard 'hey were. 5 "Gosh, what a muscle!" a friend j would sny. "How did you raise It T ! Rowing?" j "No," the actor 'would answer. "It comes from hugging girl admirers I" j Time for America to Declare to the World Its Definite Peace Policy By DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, President Columbia University. The time has come to take the outstretched hand of Europe that has been offered us and to declare the peace policy of the United States in terms that our people desire and applaud and that the whole world cm understand. If we join nations on a like plane of civilization in saying that In our dealings with each other we don't contemplate fighting, that we con-template only discussion, only conciliation, only arbitration, and in the extreme case judicial settlement, and tha we have reached a civil:(d point where we are not going to consider fighting them, believe me, so long as those nations and ours keep their word, war of a serious kind wi" have a much harder time in breaking out than it has now. There are a large number of persons at the great diplomatic center of Washington who talk about peace but are alarmed when asked to do something definite. My appeal is to the public sentiment of America to say to ourselves and to the world that we are ready to this exteit to man ifest that will to peace which is the only thing that can establish the habit to pence. I Impossible "What Is tiie proper thing for a J man to do when his wife nsks him for f money unit he hasn't any?" "Oh, there Isn't any proper thing to i do In those circumstances. Anything he docs will be wrong." Stratford Beacon-IIenild- . k The Straight and Narrow Path ia not a favorite thoroughfare with j crooked people. I Child Seldom Will Be Found Better Than Home From Which It Came By DR. ALBERT PARKER FITCH, New York (Presbyterian). The human race as far back as Plato has been trying to find a sub-stitute for the home so we won't have to be bothered with the annoyance and care of children, but no one lias ever succeeded. Fathers and moth-ers represent God to the child, who says nothing and sees so much, and in my 18 years of teaching undergraduate boys and girls I have come to know that you can expect the child to be just what the home was from which that child came. There are two ways of loving your children. One is in the creative way, which sees in them the coming man or woman that should be tine and great, and the other is the lazy and indulgent fondness which a cat will give to her kitten. This kind of love makes a milksop of the boy and a shallow, inefficient woman. If the parents never talk about God, read the tabloid newspaper and cheap literature, the boys and girls will never learn the supreme value of life. They will not get it anywhere if they don't get it in the home. No Possibility That Movement for Christian Reunion Can Be Stopped Cy BISHOP WILLIAM T. MANNING (Episcopal I. The moemcnt for the reunion of Christendom rannot be stopj ed despite the recent papal encyclical opposing the movement. No utter-ance can or will stop or retard that great movement. I don't think any-one seriously wants to stop it. It is goin on and the Christians all over the world, Cathelic and Protestant, are drawing nearer to each other Our own church and the Anglican communion throughout the world will continue to day a large part in that movement, because in the prov-idence of (5 od tle Anglican church includes in itself those things which are true and essential for which Protestantism stands. It was for this rea-son onr German brethren at Lausanne, at the world's conference on faith and order, last year, applied to the Anglican church the name "bridge church," because they recogni7ed the fact that we stand in a unique rela-tion nith the Catholic world on the one hand and the Protestant world en the other. Modern Father Shares With Mother Preschool Training of Children By DR. LOIS HAYDEN MEEK Educational Director. Women are educating men to the point of taking an interest in tbe scientific training of children of preschool age. Formerly this particu lar form of education was considered the duty only of women. Hut the departure of many women from the home into the business and profes-sional worlds has created a new situation. Hoth the mother and the fa ther are at home and with the children an equal number of hours now. It is not as it used to be, when the mother's entire day was spent with her youngsters. With this greater equality, fathers have realized that the preschool training is as much their job as their wive-.- . And as a result most prominent educators among men and in men's educational organization are making a study of the problem ith specific relation to the faUiei in the home. ' |