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Show Tharsday, February 2. 1928 Tv, BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH PAGE THREE City Cash Market ; D. Pezzopane, Mgr. :: GROCERIES, MEATS, FISH ij I AND POULTRY ; : Imported and Domestic Products : : il 381 MAIN STREET PHONE 148 ji Bingham Canyon, Utah :: It's Pure and It's Rich Our milk is daily subject to careful tests for pureness 'Vr and richne83, Am mu8t pass these tests, otherwise 2 it can never reach the table. If rv n BINGHAM DAIRY J .4y Phone 232 and we will start delivery j ".: --J at once IMMORTALITY qr . , jP 4 FOUR SCORE AND SEVEN YEARS AGO ; . f U OUR FATHERS BROUGHT FORTH ON I THIS CONTINENT A NEW NATION CON- - I CEIVED IN LIBERTY AND DEDICATED I TO THE PROPOSITION THAT ALL MEN I ARE CREATED EQUAL I NOW WE ARE ENGAGED IN A GREAT I CIVIL WAR TESTING WHETHER THAT I NATION OR AYFJ SO CON-- I CEIVED ANDSvbcDICA'iOmN LONG I ; . ENDURE. E: ARE? TON;A GREAT I , i BATTLEFlgtp OF THAT "WAfeWE HAVE I COME fCQ DEDICATE A PORTION OF I v i THAT TOLAS'A: FINAL RESTING PLACE I i FOR THOSE .WHO HERE GA2& THEIR LIVES TOAT THAT NATIOIGHT LIVE ( IT IS ALTOGETHER FITTING ANti PROPER THAT W SHOULD DQ THI& BUT IN A LARGER SENSE W CAN NODICATE- - i WE CANNOTCONSECltATEWE CAN NOT HALLOW THIS GROUND. THE i BRAVE MENNJ VINO AND : t)BAD WHO ! STRUGGLED HEfcBJiAVfc CONSECRATED ( IT FAR AD&YE OUKPQOR POWER TO 1 ADD- - OSDETlHCT. THE WORLD WILL I I LITTLp NOTE NfOR LONGfe&EMEMBER I WHATWE SAY HEffi BUT ITSAlshNEVER FORCET WHAT THfeY DID HERJE.NTT IS FORUS THE LIVING RMEft TO BEjjHM-- ft ft I ( H OffED HERE TO THE UNFINISHED WORK I '. WHICH THEY WHO FOUGHT HERE HAVE I THUS FAR SO NOBLY ADVANCED. IT IS , ' : RATHER FORUS TO BE HERE DEDICATED . s I TO THE GREAT TASK REMAINING BE-- ; ' FORE. US-TH- AT FROM THESE HONORED DEAD WE TAKE INCREASED DEVOTION TO THAT CAUSE FOR WHICH THEY GAVE I ( THE LAST FULL MEASURE OF DEVOTION - THAT WE HERE HIGHLY RESOLVE THAT V I , THESE DEAD SHALL NOT HAVE DIED IN I i jW I VAIN THAT THIS NATION UNDER GOD mm 1 SHALL HAVE A NEW BIRTH OF FREEDOM kM IIUm "AND THAT GOVERNMENT OF THE JJ M & JMflo PEOPLE BY THE PEOPLE FOR THE PEOPLE J&jW SHALL NOT PERISH FROM THE EARTR, MWf i! WHEN IN SALT LAKE ji ; ; Visit the STATE CAFE ; ; Where you will always get the BEST . to eat at reasonable prices i; 46 West 3rd South Salt Lake City I Hie BINGHAM BULLETIN ' The Only Printing Plant in Bingham Canyon Let us do your PRINTING i Phone 91 WhatYouWant How You Want It When You Want It iTTT For anything in the line of printing come JJ to us and we'll guar-antee you satisfactory work at prices that are right pi "1 7 I Jq We are I ViIT anxious to I I JU have you I Know about them n About UOUR They will I interest I FriCeS you when I Fh you're in I V need of I 0 printing NEW COAL PRICES 1 Effective at Once Lump - Nut - Stove Coal To All Parts of Bingham Canyon S I $8.50 PER TON $4.50 HALF TON Lump - Nut - Stove Coal To All Parts of Highland Boy and Copper field $9.50 PER TON $5.00 HALF TON g All Sacked Coal $1.00 Per Ton Extra i CITIZENS COAL and ! 1 SUPPLY . I I Phone 39 ' " M W-HIM -- " FISH FOLLOWED PRAYING PASTOR, FLOCK BELIEVES Poor Season 1$ Attributed to Transfer of Minister to Another Parish. Huston, Md.-Uesl- donts of Tllgh-man- , a fishing ceuter, had a hard time nuiklng a living about two years ago because tha oyster season was poor and, added to that, some western buy-ers had placed a ban on Maryland oys-ters. In addition, flsh of all kinds were scarce and as a consequence, many families suffered real hardship. About that time, Rev. Howard Mc-Da-arrived In Tllghman and the fish-ermen told their troubles to him. One evening Doctor McDade, who Is a well-know- n minister In the Methodist church, had a prayer service which most of the fishermen attended. He proved with them that their nets might be tilled and the neit day when the boats came In, most of them were well filled. Fish Ltavs Watsrs. Recently Doctor McDade was trans-ferred to Kent Islunti It Is now re-ported from Tllghman that all the fish have left the waters of Talbot county, while In and about Kent Island the fish are said to be plentiful. Under a Marylund state law the fishermen of Talbot county can't take fish from the waters of Queen Anne county. The Talbot men now have to look ou while the Queen Anne men The Boats Were Well Filled. catch plenty of fish while the Talbot men return home with one or two rock or a few flounders. Cite Biblical Story. They say that while Doctor McDade remained In Tllghmnn and prayed with them they caught plenty of fish, but as soon as he was transferred to Kent Is-land the fish In Talbot waters fol-lowed him to the waters of Queen Anne county and the fishermen there are reaping a harvest. Talbot fishermen, In narrating the story, refer to the biblical account of the fishermen on the Sea of Galilee, who could catch nothing until Christ appeared, among them and told them to cast their nets on the other side of the boat, whereupon their nets were filled to overflowing. Tiighman fishermen are firm believers In prayer and may ask Doctor McDade to return to again pray with them for better catches. Rough Trail of Pioneers to History Tom Lincoln was lookttig for a wmi-a- n to travel through life with, for bet-ter or worse. He visited at the place of Christopher Bush, a hard-workin- g farmer who came from German parents and had raised a family of sons with muscle. Also there were two daughters with muscle and with shining faces and the cabin, under a large, warm bear-skin. She turned her dark head from looking at the baby to look at Dennis and threw him a tired, white smile from her mouth and gray eyes. He stood by the bed, has ees wide open, watching the even, quiet breaths, of this fresh, soft red baby. "What you goin' to name him, Nancy?" the boy asked. "Abraham," was the answer, "after his grandfather." Little Dennis' Prediction. Little Dennis rolled up In a bearskin and slept by the fireplace that night He listened for the crying of the new-born child once In the night and the feet of the father moving on the dirt floor to help the mother and the little one. In the morning he took a long look at the baby and said to himself, "Its skin looks Just like red cherry pulp squeezed dry, In wrinkles." And Dennis swung the baby back and forth, keeping up a chatter about how tickled he was to have a. new cousin to play with. The baby screwed up the muscles of Its face and began crying with no let-up- . Dennis turned to Betsy Sparrow, handed her the baby and snid to her. "Aunt, take him I He'll .never come to much." So came the birth of Abraham Lin-coln that twelfth day of February In the year 180& In silence and pain from a wilderness mother on a bed of corn husks and bearskins with an C OlN IK WHICH THE 0 LINCOLN LIVED coin signed a bond with his friend, Kichard ISerry, In the courthouse at Springfield, In Washington county, over near where his brother, Mordeeai. was farming and the bond gave no--, tice: "There is a marriage ehortly In-tended between Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks." It was June 10, 181X5. Two days later, at Kichard Berry's place, Beechland, a man twenty-eigh- t years old and a woman twenty-thre- e years old came before Kev. Jesse Head, who later gave the county clerk the names of Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks, as having been "Joined together in the holy estate of matri-mony agreeable to the rules of the Methodist Episcopal church." . . . Carried Off His Bride. The new husband put his June bride on his horse and they rode away on the red clay road along the timber trails to Clizabethtown. Their new home was In a cabin close to the court-house. Tom worked at the carpenter's trade, made cabinets, door frames, win-dow sash and coffins. A daughter was born and they named her Sarah. . . . The same year saw the Lincolns moved to a place on the Big South fork of Nolin's creek, about two and a half miles from Hodenvllle. They were trying to farm a little piece of ground and make a home. The house they lived In was a cabin of logs cut from the Umber near by. One morning In February of this? year, 1800, Tom Lincoln came out of liis cabin to the road, stopped a neigh-bor and asked him to tell "the granny woman," Aunt Peggy Walters, that Nancy would need help soon. Lincoln's Birth. On the morning of February 12, a Sunday, the granny woman was there ut the cabin. And she and Tom Lin-coln and the moaning Nancy Hanks welcomed into a world of battle an1 blood, of whispering dreams and wist-ful dust, a new child, a boy. A little later that morning Tom Lin coin threw some extra wood on the tire, mid an extra bearskin over the mother, went out of the cnbin, and walkid two miles up the road to where I lie sparrows, Tom and Betsy, lived. I Minis Hanks, the nine-year-ol- d boy adopted by the Sparrow?, met Tom al the door. In his slow way of talking he was a slow and quiet ninn Tom Lincoln told them. "Nancy's got a boy baby." A look was in his eyes, as tlumuli maybe more babies were noi wailful :n Kentucky just then. The hoy, Dennis Hunks, took to his fcit di.wn the road to the Lincoln cabin. Tlr.-r- hejsaw Nancy Hunks on a bod of polos cleated to a cc ner of steady eyes. Tom Lincoln pussed by , Hannah and gave his best Jokes to Sarah Buth. But It happened that Sarah Bush wunted Duulel Johnson for a husband and he wanted her. Another woman Tom's eyes fell on was a brunette sometimes called Nancy Hanks because she was a daughter of Lucy Hanks, and sometimes - called Nancy Sparrow because she was an adopted daughter of Thomas and Klizaheth Sparrow and lived with the Sparrow family. Lucy Hanks had welcomed her child Nancy Into life in Virginia In 17S4 and had traveled the Wilderness road arrying what was to her a precious bundle through Cum6erland gap Into Kentucky. Sad With Sorrows. Tom Lincoln had seen this particu lar Nancy Hanks (there were several other Nancy Hunkses in Hardin comi ty) and noticed she was shrewd and dark and lonesome. . . . Her dark .v'nln, dark brown hair, keen little gray eyes, outstanding forehead, somewhat uccented shin aid cheekbones, body .,f Rlender build, weighing ubout Li pounds these funned the outward '.ape of a woinuu carrying soniethiiiK and cherished along her ways ut life. She wa sad with sorrows like dark stars In blue mist. . . . Tlie day Ciiue when Thomas Lin )' --uxrsK3 ultscour--4 early lauglilug child prophecy he would never come to much. And though he was born In n house with only one door and one window, it was written he would come to know many doors, many windows; he would read many riddles and doors and win-dows. From "Abraham Lincoln, tha Prairie Years," by Carl Sandburg. Tosses Baby to Death, Then Jumps Herself New York. A golden-haire- baby girl with a doll clutched In her arms was tossed from a sixth-floo- r window to her death by her own mother, who then flung herself from the snme win-dow to die on the stones below. The mother was young Mrs. Eliza-beth Levine, who had recently suf-ere- d a breakdown. The mother was seen to enter the Marbrldge Hall apartment building in Brooklyn leading the daughter, Kuth, two and half year? old, by the hand. "Hurry," the mother was heard to say as the baby lagged. "Hurry, we have no time to lose." And the two climbed slowly up the stairs from floor to floor, the one in-tent only on death and the other cud-dling her china doll In innocence of the fate awaiting her. The mother and child were seen to reach the sixth floor, the little girl was heard to scream In terror as her mother's plan first became evident to her, and nn open window told the rest of the story to those who rushed into the hall and found It empty. ' The child, lying among the frag-ments of her doll's painted head and still clutching the stuffed body In her arms, was dead. The mother died on the way to a hospital. World Wonder Nuneaton, England. This town claims to possess one of the world's wonders in a girl, "Happy" Boulestrldge. She has never been known to cry. , Drowned by His Boots St. Louis. The weight of water In Ms long rubber boots caused the I drowning of O. F. Kilgme when he fell ' into the Mississippi river. |