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Show I fe! " THE BINGHAM PRESS BULLETIN ' ' Par S llingham 36 vt Jordan 16 BASKETBALL FAN TAKESEXCEPTION Story Printed in Salt Lake Paper Con-cerning Bingham High Hoop Quin-e- t Is Cause of Comment. Tommie Porter, dean of Copper-fiel- d basket ball fanet is quite excited these days concerning a story printed in a Salt Lake paper prior to the Canyon tilt of last Fri-day, in which said paper declares that up to the time of the game, Jordan and Bingham Canyon were on equal footing. t ,.. ,i ,. , i Now as everyone 'knows, Tommy keeps his own score book during all games, and consequently is a, hard man, to fool. He now comes along with the true itatis af the .two tenuis, showing Bingham to. be ahead of its valley opponents, thus proving 'that even the larger papers err at times. According to Mr. Porter's dope sheet, 'Binghani Caflyon has won 8 and lost 6 (this includes the game of last Friday evening.) His score book, which dates back to 1920, shows that Bingham Canyon has scored a total of 439 points against 366 for Jordan, or a total of 103 points more than their opponents. The score book afso shows that the greatest victory for either team, as far as total points is concerned, also goes to Bingham Canyon for in 1920 on the Jlingham Canyon floor, they walloped the valley quintet to the tune of 64 to 34 for a margin of 30 points. Jordan's greatest victory over Bing-ham was a 28 to 20 game played in 1921 on the Jordan floor. t. The real dope concerning the two teams is summed up in the news that Bingham has won 6 games from Jor-dan on its home floor, and won two at Jordan, while they have lost 4 at Jordan, 1 at home, and one at the state tournament, in 1924. i. ' Following Is' what has happened be-tween the two. teams since the 'start-ing of the Jordan District: .. ., - , 1920 . Bingham 29 at Jordan 33 "' . V ) Bingham 52 vs. Jordan 26 v ' Bingham af Jordan 18 t ' Bingham 64 vs Jordan 34 . 1. 1921 .. v. Bingham 43 vs Jordan 21. ' Bingham 20 at Jordan 28 - -- 1922 ' ' Bingham 33 vs Jordan 30 ' Bingham 0 at Jordan 2 , '", . , (Forfeit) ': 1923 Bingham 30 vs. Jordan 33 Bingham 39 at Jordan 21 1924 " Bingham 26 vs Jordan 21 Bingham 25 at Jordan 31 Bingham 29 vs Jordan 22 (State Tournament) , 1925 Totals . 439 336 Where place is not designated, the Kaiucs were played on the Bingham, floor.- ". - i C: We Solicit Your ; j I Savings and Checking Accounts : I the first national Danli Bingham Canyon ; r.1 :" BIN6HAM 5 GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY J Through Daily Package Car Service from Salt Lake H City in connection with the Union Pacific System. 1 "'" Semi-weekl- y iced refrigerator cars in summec and heat- - I ed refrigerator cars in winter are operated for the con- - H V venience of patrons receiving shipments of perishable 11 freight. H. PERLEYWITS, " A. W. MALY, IT. Cen. Freight Agent Agent ! Lake City, Utah ' Bingham, Utah isagjBBMsMM I OUR LABEL is your guarantee ii I ) Ar That ROYAL BREAD is absolutely f I pure and clean ; t I That it is made by expert bakers in a X .1 modern shop; ? I That it is made and handled in a san-- ; ; I I tary way vly at ' te kest 00 DtamaD'e ny J X where in the world. X I IfeytlThebread that madclteytj I I mother qnh heUdnq j J BREAD is' your best food X J eat more of it .... T IMIUHUIIIHIHM HICKS TAILORING GENT'S and LADIES' CLOTHING MADE FRENCH CLEANING AND DYEING PRESSING ALTERATIONS Out Work is Guaranteed I Try Us IWllMBIIIIMillllllllAlllW 520 Main St. v Bingham Canyon. 1 The Royal Candy Co. J LIGHT LUNCHES TAMALES I . " CHILI v I -v;;:: I .iitiiMAii,ria I HOME MADE CANDY ; Store No. 1 Store No. 2 j j Phone 13 Phone 189 WHITTLING CLASS TO START j "Miss Nellie Stevens, Deaconess of the Community M. E. church, will j start the Whittling Class Monday af- - j ternoon of next week, it was announ-- ced. This news should meet with ap- - proval from the boys of the commun- - ity, as much good is derived from this class. All boys are urged to be pres- - ent Monday afternoon at 2:30 for the opening. t ... j ' '. v - . I O'Donnell Company j; ',-',"'- FUNERAL DIRECTORS v- - :; ...... .'.!.,.,.-- . Bingham Canyon t ' " Phone 17 i; HDUIWIinUDiH Canyon Garage STORAGE SERVICE AND REPAIRING , OF THE BETTER KIND 7 Main at Markham Phone 333 MIIIMMMWlMMMIIIIllliilllW Get Your Lesson From the Squirrels! IBrr gL E I the fall busily stor-- CVt "1 ng t5" for , , j taQ vj TVj Yet only a small . i PBTniU percentage of men have the foresight to I be as provident as the squirrels. 1 ' i The men who are wise make regular de-- - 1 posits in this bank during their earning 1 j years. We'll be glad to show you several I !'-- ; plans.' 1 IGifluTnW Oldest Bank in Bingham Canyon ' .. ' - - i " -. .s.v.?y..v- - , 5? s? ' - if t. t- ' I- - 4h;:a ' ' t '."' ' 'Vrj,.-.i- f ! ; a fr xi S i?::tL-M-- Li .V-- Berger's I 1 THE HOME OF THE ONLY I I , BILLIARD TABLE J IN BINGHAM CANYON g j MAH JONGG HEADQUARTERS J : : ; "Where the Live Ones Ueet' 'y ;,..-..,- : r,r ,'t ; - , .!'... ..'.-.:,- ; . , V::ftf?1&-frmW:K:- t ' .:,i;v,-t- - u t, ..i-ce- t :, " Right of MotherJe-La- w. ,. , The niother-l- n law, In this country at all events, is tela tlon, but In China she hat come Into " her own. There a new law hat been passed under which divorce may be granted for the of a mother-in-la- or a father-law- , for that matter, says the Detroit New, Tbla code replaces the ancient law called "Ti ll.'! which legalised divorce from a wife, for lack of respect for? a mother-in-la- or for Jealousy. One other unique reform' baa bem made, namely, that the con-sent of a father and mother haa to be obtained 'tefore , divorce may be (ranted. ' ;' "S "'. ,k ; Deserves a Trial The receiver used by Mr. Pierce la located In an exceptionally, bad spot, close to a large, electric powerhouse. He employs an 1 aerial consisting of two wires, each 60 feet long, running north and aouth, !wlth the lead In from the northern end. From a radio story In the New York Evening Jour-nal . i : j. DICE GAME GETS . LADS IN TROUBLE The other night three fellows in Highland Boy decided to go to the picture" show. This was a wonderful inspiration, as the show was a good one, and it would help while away a long, dreary evening. - But alasl there was only enough money between the ffiree of them for two tickets, and as everyone, knows, it can't be done.,, So they decided to shake, dice to see who would have to. stay at home, and wait for the 'other two to come back and tell what had happened. U v ' ' Oh Cruel Fatel a deputy sheriff heard the clinking, of the ' African dominoes, and thinking there was a crap game in session, arretted the would:be law breaker. ,DWn to the police station were these fellows tak- - en, and as far as is known one is still in the city bastile awaiting trial. ' It is true that crap shooting is un-lawful, but it is the consensus of opin-ion that shaking dice, to see who had to stay home from a picture show is. pot near as serious as killing a person. Mah Jongg players, who shake the dice to see who is going to be "East Wind" are1 requested to hide before rolling the' gallopers with the little1 black dots. It is rather hard for a person to conceive a crap game with merely enough money in it to take two fel-lows to a picture show. . .. - - WEEKLY MENU SUC CESTIONS Meal planning to Include ttie entire family will be much easier if some ef the general fundamentals of food and their, proper proportions are under stood. " U N D A Y Breekf asti v Oranges, French, .toast, Dinneri 8tewed chick-en, cent en cob, parsley, potatoes. Support Marmalade, sandwiches, cocoa. MONDAY Breakfast! Grapes, poached eggs, toast, coffee. Dinneri Cornleh pasty, gelatin with cream. Support" Baked apple, gingerbread. ; TUE8DA Y Breakfast: Stewed prune, oatmeal,, top milk. Dinneri Baked sliced ham, baked sweet pota-toes. Supper: Chicken soup, stuffed egg. - WEDNESDAY Breakfast: Canta-loupe, corn game. Dinner! Cream of spinach soup, minced meat on toast. Supper: Scalloped rice with tomato, THURSDAY Breakfast! Cereal, cream, griddle cake. Dinner! Broiled steak, Spanish potatoes, ' horseradish sauce. Supper: Creamed drisf beef, baked potatoes. FRIDAY Breakfast! Peaches, ome-let Dinner! Codfish chowder, cole slaw. Supper: Oatmeal cookies, let. tuce ealad. x SATURDAY Breakfast! Corn flakea, doughnuts, coffse. Dinner! Buttered lima beans, sliced tomatoes, prune pie. Supper: Sardlnta en toast, canned plume. ' Parsley Potatoes. Take uniform email potatoes, cook until tender, torn Into a vegetable dish with enough warmed butter to cover each potato well. Sprinkle with chopped parsley and serve. Cornish Pasty. Line an ordinary pie plate with a rich biscuit dough. Put In a layer of diced round steak with plenty of suet or butter. A pound of meat will make a good-slse- d pie. Cover with two or three allced onions, plenty of salt and pepper and a layer of thinly allced po-tatoes. Cover with the crust, leaving a vent for the steam te escape, add a teaspoonful of water and bake two hours In a alow oven. When the crust seems done, cover to avoid getting too brown. Remove from the oven, wrap In a cloth and steam for ten min-utes before serving. Horseradish 8auce. To three tablespoonfuls of grated horseradish, one tablespoonful of vin-egar, a little salt and sugar, add one-ha-lf cupful of whipped cream. Stir lightly and serve with fish or ateak. GOOD THINGS WE LIKE A stuffed, d chicken Is a dish fit for a king, yet we like a change occasionally. Let us not forget: Chicken a la King. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter and cook in It h pound of fresh chopped mushrooms and one-ha- lf of a green pep-per chopped fine. Cook the stems of the mush- - rooms first, then add the caps. Melt two-third-s of a tablespoonful of but-ter, add three tablespoonfuls of flour, cook until well blended, then add twe capfuls of thin cream, one cupful of chicken broth, and atlr until boiling; add the mushrooms and pepper and set over hot water. Beat three taolespoon-ful- s of butter to cream, add three egg yolks one at a time, one teaspoon-ful of lemon Juice and one-fourt-h of onion Juice and stir in the sauce; then add the meat from a hot cooked chicken, cut Into Inch-squar- e pieces. Mix thoroughly without break-ing the chicken and serve hot with or without toast , Standard Cake Formula. A base foi all klnda of butter cakes Is the fol-lowing : When adding fruit the floor la Increased slightly. Take one-ha-lf cupful of butter, cream well, add one' and one-hal- f cup-ful-of auger, cream both together, add the well-beate- n yolka of three eggs and flavoring to suit the taste; rinse the egg bowl with one cupful of milk and add to the above mixture alter nately with two and one-ha-lf cupfuls of pastry flour alfted with two and one-ha- lf teaspoonfuls of baking pow-der and one-ha-lf teaspoonful of salt Beat the batter hard for a few minutes to thoroughly Incorporate the baklnj powder, then fold In the stiffly beaten whites of three egga. Bake in loaf, a layer or In Individual cakes. To make s spice cake, add one-ha-ll teaspoonful of cinnamon, a quartet teaspoonful of mace or nutmeg, and the same of cloves. Bake in a loaf and Ice with chocolate. To make choc-olate cake omit two tablespoonfuls of flour, add two tablespoonfuls of cocoa, or unsweetened chocolate melted. Bake In layers and use orange filling. Wafflea. Sift one. and er cupfula of flour, one-hul- f teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of sugar, one-hal- f teaspoonful of soda and add, slow-ly, one cupful of sour cream or milk, cupful of melted butter, three egg yolks. Beat well and fold In the stiffly-beate- n egg whiles and cook on a hot waffle Iron. Serve with but-ter and maple sirup. Reheat any leftover pumpkin pie, garnish with a spoonful of whipped cream, and sprinkle wlb grated cheess or chopped nuts, whichever Is con-venient. - COPPERFIELD SCOUTS SHOW MUCH ACTIVITY The Copperfield Boy Scouts are now over the top according to an an-nouncement made this week. This is one of the real progressive scout troops of the camp, and many activ-ities are being planned. That this troop will soon be doing effective work is shown by the enthusiasm be-ing shown by the different members. If there are boys in the Copperfield district who believe in scouting, and they should, who care to join this or-ganization, they should get in touch with the Boy Scout head of that dis-trict. The nominal charge of 50c is charged for registration fee, and it is urged that all those desiring to join have the registration fee on hand. The next meeting of the Troop will be held at the home of Patrol Master Alvin Cole, Tuesday evening of next week, starting at f:30 sharp. All members are requested to be present, as business' of importance will be transacted. TV--' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 he MAKING GOOD IN A SMALL TOWN Rial Storita-- About Rial Cirh sestssssjsssssjsesiasesewejseejsaeseseaseajp By MRS. HARLAN D H. ALLEN niiiiii iii tiiiiim mint THfe BUTTON-LAD- Y i - 4 v a. girl can; make ' money yes, even In as small a town as this I" exclaimed the enthusiastic, girl whs was my next-doo-r neighbor In a little village ef only aeven hundred people. "Take me, for Instance I am tutton lady for the whole town, r She has what most people would call a woman-alse- d Job, without bet "buttoning" this girl of tweaty-thre- e. She keeps house for an invalid mother, and a brother and sister of high school age. She spends most of her time . "mothering" her mother, .and "the children"; yet she manages to make the button business a paying one. "Of course, mother gives me money enough to run the bouse," ahe ex-plained eagerly, "but I like to do little extra things, for myself or the chil-dren, and for ' her not with money that she glvea me. .That's why I got button machine." ,s She bought It with a small sum of money given ber for s birthday pres-ent, she said. It was a foot power machine. But the small-tow- n girl who wants to try "buttoning," and has eren - less than she had to Invest, ran get band power m ichlne which will be eatlsfactory. Either kind will quickly become a money itetter. The girl can get the kind of machine that will oiake all staea and shapes of buttons acorn buttons, lalf acorn buttons, Hat buttona In vsrloua alsea, globe buttons and bone-rtume- d buttons. All these buttona are to be made from materials which her customers bring her. She can also nse ber button machine for attaching snaps, glove and fastener buttona, as well ss eye-lets snd grommets. Hbe could else rechet buttona la dXTerent colors, using wooden molds as centers. The buttoner-to-b- e may begin by putting an ad la the local paper; ahe tnay also tell ber friends about ber project and may show them eamplea of her work. It la also a good Idea to display samples of the bnttons In front window, with the sign "All kinds of buttons made to order." The village dressmaker may be a ready customer, since she often wants but-tona made specially to match gar-ments. The button ledy may find that ber busiest season la In the summer, when college girls are home to have new clothes made and old ones remodeled, perhaps with fresh buttons ; when vis- - ... r iters from thera-e- - W. town to rest and sew s little. Buttona never go out of style I They re indispensable both for utility and for decoration. And the "Bnlcky" dresxer knowa that a button-to-matc- h fulfils the two unalterable requisites of good dress simplicity snd distinc-tion. ;;V : THE SUCCESSFUL SQUAB " - RAISER "'Cr ' (t7 OV don't go Into squab rats-- Ing; yon have to grow Into It, someone has said end It's true." de-clared the successful girl squab rais-er. "Raising of squabs, or , young pigeons, Is a 'good way for sraall- - town' girl to make money; but she must start with only a few pair, which the can easily keep track of, and In-crease her business slowly." s This girl started with only one pair vt pigeons, which she bought from a reliable breeder whe waa willing to guarantee them. tmmmf "JJ The secret of successful pigeon raising, she says, la to keep non work ers out of the flock. She kept a rec-ord of each pair, by means - of num-bered nests and colored The leg-ban- d had a number that corre- - sponded to one In her record book, nd she could easily look up the bird's ge and parentage, determine which pair were doing the best work and decide what young onea to save for breeding. i The novice should remember that pigeons are most valuable as squab-produce- rs when they are from two to ' Six years old. The Homer, so called because It usually returns home, even though taken hundred of miles away. Is wprobsbly , the. best, variety. The Homer is not only the most proline type, but Is the moat attentive mother. The Runt Is one of the largest va-rieties, but It Is not so proline as the flomer, nor so dutiful s nurse. The squab raiser will not have te worry about providing .food ' for the young pigeons. The parents tend te ithat by disgorging "pigeon milk" from um--- ghelr own crops. ' - . . ' . j The pigeons should get their water, of which they require large quaa titles, before tbey are fed, since, short-ly after getting their own food, they feed the squabs, and should not be .disturbed ai they do so. Luck has nothing to do with squab raising. Practically all losses are xaused by poor breeding stock, birds not being mated, rats or mice, Im- - t , proper feeding (Including overfeed ing), careleae inbreeding or. unsani-tary condition of the lofts. The squab raiser should sell ber birds, when they are from three to Are weeka old, direct to hotels, clubs and housewives. The profits are so good that she will never went to g" ouf of the business once v4be haa thoroughly "grow" into It - (a, li). Wwtm Nivist DtlM.1 ssswisswssJ itjrs mJ'.'im ; CRADLE ROLL IS ADDED The latest addition to the efforts of the workers of the M. E. Community church here is the installation of the Cradle Roll, which will be under the direct supervision of Mrs.iWill Thorn- - as of 11 Markham. The Cradle Roll will care for the infants until they are three years of age, when they will be transferred to the Beginners de- - j partment, thus assuring the child real j care throughout life. .v Another Ute for Horto In Russia, there are several farms where horses are bred especially for making violin bows from their hair. Popular Mechanics Magazine. Macaroni. History says that the Chlueae In-vented macaroni. That may be right, but It's the Italians who do the eat-ing of .the stuff in our modern days. For several centuries Italy has held the secrets of manufacture. It is on record that King Louis XIII ordered a dish of macaroni while stopping at a famous Inn in Tours. The. average American consumer does not know the great number of forms In which the paste Is fashioned by Italian manufac-turers. They range from long, thin threads to short square pieces. Other shapes are stars and other varieties kneaded and twisted In U possible forms. ' And then there Is the color. In Bologna they prefer green macaroni j and vermicelli, but in Naples they j prefer red. i Reversion to Armor.'; The World wr resulted In s rever- - ' slon to the armor of medieval and post-- I medieval . times, and lf.lt bad con-tinued for any longer period the de-- , velopments along this line would have been still more pronounced. The d "siege police" in Paris have ' been equipped with a new armor which greatly resembles the old models. A ; steel breastplate is made of laminated steel, attached to which there' U an "apron effect" reaching to the thighs. The head Is protected by a helmet per-forated with peepholes. The armor has successfully withstood revolver bullets at a distance of 35 feet, which la fairly near for riot duty. Scientific Ameri-can. |