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Show - TF1R BINfiHAM BITTXKT1N. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH Thnrsday, September 27, 1928 The Bingham Bulletin 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 Published at 446 Main St., Bingham Canyon, Utah HOWARD A. JARVIS, Editor Watch Your Car Door to Prevent Accidents Several serious accident have been reported during the first six months of the year involving coses where chil-dren have fallen out of machines due to extreme carelessness on the part of the motorist, according to a bulle-tin Issued by SI. Muyer, president of the automobile club of Illinois. Never allow a child to sit next to the door of an automobile If it la possible, nor extend it any such priv-ileges as closing or opening the doors for passengers. In this wise many doors, which would otherwise seem securely fastened have merely been closed without the double-sna-p lock taking hold. A three-year-ol- son of a party of tourists was recently hurled to the pavement from a car traveling at an approximate speed of 40 miles per hour. The child was se-verely injured and may possibly be crippled for life, due, no doubt, to some One's carelessness. "At this youthful age. the child could not be expected to do the things that the grownup should of done," de-clared Mr. Muyer, and it is the duty of every motorist having children, or for that matter, anyone as a passen-ger to carefully guard against this form of accident. HEVAS BUMUOG, BUT HE KNEW HOW TO PICK FRIEND Gets Into Trouble, Bat Ic Lucky to Have Palled With Fireman. New York. Nobody ever called Bum a Dice dog. If they bad he prob-ably would bave bitten them. He doesn't belong to anyone In particu-lar, for he Isn't that kind of a dog lie chases automobiles and cats, barks at children, and never wears a muzzle. But Bum knows how to pick his friends, and that Is the reason he Is till chasing cats over In North Ber-gen, N. J tonight Whenever Bum gets hungry or lone-some and Itinerant airedales do get hungry and lonesome he trots right over to the North Bergen Are house. He has a lot of friends over there and there Is one fine fellow, Fireman Fred Stockfish, who always takes Bum down to the butcher's shop and stand treat. Bum got in trouble one night (itin-erant airedales have a habit of get-ting in trouble) and he yowled and yowled all night but nobody did uny- - thing except maybe to swear a couple of round oaths. Bum had a reason to howl, for be was on a tiny ledjre Jutting out down the Palisades cliffs and looking down 225 feet to an aban-doned rock quarry. The ledge was 75 feet below the top of the cliff. Mette With a Mishap. Some time during the night Dum had abandoned bis cbase of automo-biles and cats and gone after bigger game. Be ended up with a crash In a little clump of bushes on the ledge. It was then that Bum set up a consid-erable bowling. Finally, next morning, somebody called the police. A big fat fellow came, and crawled out to the edge of the cliff. Be saw Bum snarling and Bum Came Up as Calmly as a Puppy. snapping . at the bushes on bis tiny perch, then remembered a fellow over at the fire station who could make friends witb dogs by talking nice to them. Firemen Come With Ropes. . The firemen came with ropes and hooks, half of North Bergen following behind. Fred Stockfish took one look over the cliff and began tying a rope around bis waist He recognized his friend. Two of bis buddies lowered away and the fireninn hung feet first, looking downward 300 feet He saw. as he neared the ledge, a crazed dog snapping viciously at everything In siglit Bum, his teeth bored, Jumped at the fireman as his shoes touched the ledge, but the snarl died In the dog's throat when Stockfish spoke. Then the fireman told the alredale in pats and words that everything was all right and Bum came up as calmly as a puppy. "Fred's got a way with dogs," grinned the fut cop, as Bum darted away and the crowd started shaking hands with Stockfish. CARBON MONOXIDE iS BEADLYJNEMY More Than Thousand Hu-man Lives Claimed by Deadly G;$. "One of man's most deadly enemies, carbon monoxide, which has been called 'the universal poison gas,' will form the subject of a new educational motion picture film to be produced within the near future by the United States bureau of mines, Department of Commerce," according to a state-ment Issued by the Chicago Motor club, which buses Its assertion on a bulletin received from the Department of Commerce at Washington. Thousand Lives Lost. "It Is said that more than a thou-sand human lives were claimed by this deadly gas during the past year, and that 700 deaths were due to driv-ers of automobiles being overcome while their engines were Idling in closed garages. In photographing this film, not only will the peril of carbon monoxide contained In automobile en-gine exhausts be emphasized, but at- - tentlon will also be given to the haz-ards due to the presence of carbon monoxide under certain conditions In factories, iu homes, and In fact, any-where that there may be posslbllty Df exposure to (he products of incom-plete combustion of fuels." What Film Will 8how. The Chicago Motor club bulletin points out that, "The film will show how, by proper ventilation, accumula-tions of carbon monoxide may be pre-vented. There will also be pictured methods of first aid treatment and resuscitation which may be adminis-tered to a victim of the poison gas if found before death has occurred. The film will be given wide circulation by tbe bureau of mines In the hope that, through the universal language of vis-ualization, knowledge of this deadly enemy of mankind may become wide-spread, thus serving to diminish the annual heavy death toll from this cause." I News Notes 3 lt' m Priviltge to Liw in I I nUteh J RICHFIELD Three million and half fish eggs are hatched each year at the Glenwood fish hatchery, second in size to the Springville fish culture plant, and, perhaps, the most impor-tant in the state of Utah. LOGAN Although threatening storms began to appear here recently, the second day of the annual three-da- y Cache county fair, continued un-abated amid great success. Thousands of visitors from all sections of north-ern Utah poured through the gates throughout the entire day. HEBER CITYMany Utah sheep-men have suffered large losses to their flocks which have been grazing on the Caribou forest in southeastern Idaho clue to lupine poisoning, according to information received by E. C. Shepard, ' supervisor of the Wasatch national forest. LOGAN To bring a cash return above feed costs of an average of $121.62 each is the record made by 4F4 cows of Lewiston Cornish Dairy Im-provement association for 1927-2- 8, ac- - cording to a special srovernment re-lease just received by Director William Peterson of the Utah Agricultural college extension service. GUNNISON Cauliflower ship-ments from the Clarion-We- st View section, west of Gunnison, are reach fag their peak and this week an aver-age of five to six carloads daily are expected to roll. Up to last Wed-nesday forty cars had moved and three and four carloads a day were sent out at the close of the week. FILLMORE The first coaching school ever staged in region six wjll be held in Fillmore, soon according to an announcement made by C. Oren Wilson, along with E. Allan Bateman, will conduct the school here, and a record attendance from the region is anticipated. The football schedule for the. season will be drawn op at this meeting. SALINA A lease on 1080 acres of coal land was granted to R. M. Jensen by the United States land office, Eli F. Taylor register, announces. The land is located in Sallna canyon. Un-der the agreement with the govern-ment $75,000 in the next three years an show an output of 30,000 tons an-nually beginning the fourth year. He. also will pay the government a bonus of 10 cents a ton on coal pro-duced. PROVO Over twenty carloads of onions are being shipped daily out of Utah county, according to H. V. Swen-so- n, Utah county agricultural inspec-tor. The onions this year are of a general better quality and, due to the dry weather, farmers are able to cure ' them better this season than last. The price for the product is also much better than last year and the growers are expecting a very successful sea-son. RICHFIELD According to cattle raisers of this section it is becoming increasingly important to place the industry on a higher plane and with proper methods employed it should be possible to vastly increase1 the annual beef production and raise the indus-try to the place it should occupy as one of the most important means of subsistence. Of the many problems confronting the industry, in a local sense, is that of an increased calf crop. ' BEAVER In quantity almost uni-versally, and in some of the depart ' ments in quantity, as well the Beaver, county fair, which closed here recently, surpassed previous exhibits. The statement applies alike to exhibits and amusement features.. The latter was headlined by a rodeo, for which wild horses had teen assembled off the range last spring, and kept on good pasture land ever since so that the ani-mals were in fine fettle and excellent fighting condition. COALVILLE Working an average force of 200 men and 88 head of stock together with trucks, tractors and steam shovels, the forces of A. Guth-rie and company, incorporated contrac-tors on the construction of Ech dam, tontinued work during August on the excavation of the core trench, placing of gravel and cobbles in the dam, plac-ing of concrete in the corewall and trash rack, the placing of the concrete lining in the outlet tunnel and rock excavation in the spillway and outlet channel. BRIGHAM CITY An army of turkeys rushed to the battlefield in motor trucks, has exterminated a dev-astating hordes of grasshoppers on an eighty-acr- e pet.ch orchard near here. Advancing from the west, the hoppers were systematically eating up the peaches on the trees in the orchard of Dr. A. D. Cooley. Liberated from the trucks, the turkeys marched up one : row and down another, devouring the insects as they went. Within a few days they had routed the enemy and ' were taken to another orchard near by and later to a grain field, where they continued their campaign. MYTON Heavy winds rather than frost, appear to have caused most of what damage occurred to the alfal'a seed growers of this portion of the Uintah ba&in during the recent cold ' snap. What frost there was was only is;ht, and no damage from that source has been reported. Some of the grow-ers had already threshed their seed and delivered it to the seed plants in Myton before the cold snap occurred. The second crop seed appears in goos shape, according to growers, and with ', a week or two of warm weather a con-v- i siderable portion cf it will matuie. I We Are ReadyJ To turn out that job pj I of printing when jj ever you need it. I i Oor Prices Are Right a. Our Advertising t Service N Means More Sales for You, Mr. Business Man When you begin advertising in this paper you start on the road to more business. There is no better or cheaper me-dium for reaching the buyers of this community. We can also provide , Artistic Printing Bingham Stage Line of every description. Bingham Depot Main and Carr Fork 1'hone 41 SCHEDULE Cars leave Bingham at 8, 9 and 11 a.m., 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m. . Salt Lake City Office i Semloh Hotel 107 E. 2nd South Phone Was. 1069 SCHEDULE Cars 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 $2.S0 I I O'DONNELL & CO. Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon Utah Phone 17 Wasatch 6461 Salt Lake Phone i Coolest Place in Town s I THE OXFORD 1i - ' s Full line of cigars, tobacco and soft drinks. I American Beauty right off the ice. RsUUUUtlUUUUUUUtlUlltlUUKIM S SOFT DRINKS f ; Delicious Budweiser, Cigars anc1 j: Tobacco at the Io us i the Safeway CITIZENS COAL & SUPPLY CO. COAL, ICE, HAY and GRAIN AGENTS FOR.BECCO 4 Phone : : : : : , 39 BINGHAM S GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast daily merchandise cars from Salt Lake City in connection' t with the Union Pacific System. USE COPPER I Brass piping for $4500 cottage only costs $48.87 p t , more than galvanized iron piping and will I LAST FOREVER I T. H. PERLEYWITS, . H. L. DAVIDSON f Asst. Gen. Freight & Pas. Agt., Agent t Salt Lake City, Utah . Bingham, Utah Trouble Light Is Handy in Working Around Car The best place for a trouble light Is where It will shed Its rays on the work as nearly as possible In line with the line of sight When work-ing around a car you constantly shift your point of view, so no matter where you fasten the light there are tten shadows just where you want to pee what you are doing. Fig. 3 shows how to fix up a trouble light rwoKT nuns - JCHrw with JXtJirJaL J iamp jocxrr, MtD JOCWT I Design for a Trouble Light for At-tachment to Your Hat Brim So That It Shines Always Directly on . Work Anywhere About Your Car. thut will always be where you want It A cork takes the plnce of the reg-ular retlector and lens, witb a screw In the center of tbe cork to make con-tact with the center electrode of the battery. A Christmas tree lamp sock-et or a standard miniature lamp sock-et Is connected to a length of electric light drop cord with one of the wires connected to the screw In the cork and the other to the case by jamming It under the lens retainer ring threads. The socket Is attached to the brim of your hat by means of a wire bent as shown In the illustration. Popular Science Monthly. Stop Annoying Hissing by Knotting the Hose Occasionally suction windshield wipers are aflllcted with leakage, with the result that the driver will hear an annoying hissing sound when he ac-celerates the engine. When this hap-pens he's puzzled because he knows that if he disconnects the rubber tub Ing the hissing will be worse. Here Is wUere a temporary remedy Is In order, no matter how makeshift It may be. With a piece of string tie a loop In the rubber hosing. This will serve as a valve to stop suction at this point. Another plan is to disconnect the rubber tubing and plug the end of the copper tubing with a piece of chew-ing gum. It Is also permissible to pinch the end of the copper tubing with the pliers. This may shorten the tube a little, since the pinched part may have to be cut off when the wiper Is repaired, but a slightly longer rub-ber connection will cover this. Ecuador Bars Cigarette Lighters on Motor Cars Matches and motor cars may bave nothing in common to the layman, but to one American automobile manufac-turer they mean something In so far as motor-ca- r shipments to Ecuador are concerned. In this South American republic the government has Just granted a Swed-ish match concern the sole right to sell matches in that country. Under this contract matches mean anything that produces fire, and therefore elec-tric cigarette lighters come under the government ban. Ecuadoran consuls all over the world have been instructed to refuse to certify Invoices for automobiles on which cigarette lighters are standard equipment, while masters of ships calling at ports In this country must place all foreign matches under seal. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOO AUTOMOBILE ITEMS &ooocoooooooooooooofoooo Postponing needed repairs only adds to the expense bill. There isn't a single dimmer among the bright lights of automobile produc-tion. Unlike umpires, Judges reverse their decisions. A motorist In Ireland was recently fined $1,070 for violation of a traffic rule. Later the judge reduced the fine to $11.25. Motor vehicles have become the main factor In transportation in west-ern Australia, where new sections bave been developed so rapidly as to outdistance the railroads. "I don't recall any such accident," said the driver, as usual. "That's fair enough," replied the judge, easily. "You'll be in Jail so long I shall have n recollection that you are there." i Clearly Seen Road Never operate a car at such speed that it cannot be stopped within the portion of the road Immediately ahead. A clearly seen course is limited by curves and rondside objects upon them ; by the brows of hills which are being ascended; by other vehicles; by approaching headlights and the condi-tion of "the windshield; by the Inten-sity and direction of projection of headlights and other factors. j RESULTS OF OLYMPIC GAMES BY WIRELESS " 1 3 v- fit J&SSg r ,Lv-- x? yju. i- - Lit' ?i i l-- v S3: rfiwA-v'- - vrz!rti - H'r, Si Lj rmiBxffiA i &t i'.T " i x U J !:;!- -M One of the wireless-equippe- d cars which gave the Dutch people the results of (lie Olympic rowing events Just us soon as tbe standing was fi?termined. ... .... . ,,. . .,, Seal Attacks Stroller Along Scottish Coast .Edinburgh. A siil attacked a stroller who cume across It resting on the bench at Bun IT. The animal emit-ted a growl and snapped at the man's j (eg. It then lurched forward and seized with its mouth a shovel the mun wus carrying. A number of peo-ple gathered, and together they stunned the animal and threw it back Into the water. It was four feet long and weighed about 200 pounds. T Father Dies as Girls Run Two Miles for Aid York, f'a. Two girls, one eleven, and the other but eight, ran two miles to their home to tell their mother that their father was pinned under his truck. The girls were thrown clear of the truck when It overturned afier their father. Oliver C. Ourrnn. Brogue-vlll- e postmnster. lost control of It. The truck fell on. Curran. Currnn was dead when neighbors arrived. |