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Show THE BULLETIN v" ESTABLISHED 1889 - FORTY YEAK5 Qf CONTINUOUS COMMUNITY SERVICE VOL.39. '' emm i - . .' ..;illiu . - " BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1929 - ' ' yX 99 MINING INDUSTRY ESTABLISHES SCHOLARSHIPS More than $3,000.00 in cash and scholarship awards are being: of-fered to 'tie high school anad col-lege student of Utah by the Min-ing Industry of the state through the university of Utah. This an-nouncement wag made today by the University of Utah and can-not help but be of great interest to all whom the healthy growth of the atate is a matter of pride and concern and who are in lures ti-ed in carefully studying the eco-nomic foundations upon which it rests. As is well known, the mining in-dustry is one of the most impor-tant industries of the state of Utah. The state boasta of the largest lead and copper producers in the country, not to mention a growjng iron and steel enterprise and is the center of the greatest smelting activity in the West. It is believed that in our metal resources and their development we have our greatest and econ-omically unlimited agent to ad-vancement, and to the building of a balanced well contained atate. Utah is near the beginning of her history. A study of the means of progress in the past, when applied to our circumstances, would show where the current of progress lies and how to get into it. f , To encourage such o study, particularly among the riaing gen-eration some of the leading min-ing companies of our state have offered, through the University of Utah, cash prises in the form of scholarships, to assist those desir-ing to continue their education at the several institutions of higher learning of the atate those com-panies who have contributed funds for these scholarships may be men-tioned : Utah Copper Company, Tintic Standard Mining Company, Silver King Coalition, Iinee Com- - pany, Bingham Mines Company, International Smelting Company, Combined Metals Production Com-pan- Utah Apex Mines Company, Utah Ore Sampling Company and New Quinccy Mining Company.. It is expected that others inter-ested in this subject will also con-tribute. , Although the University of Utah will, in the near future, send to the high schools and colleges of of the state literature giving full information concerning the award ing of these scholarships, the plan for their awarding is as follow: 1. The writer of the best paper, on a subject to be announced later in each of the high schools of the state will receive a cash prize of $15.00. 2. The writer of the second best paper in each of the high schools of the state will receive a cash prize of $10.00. 3. The writer of the five best papers selected from the ten best papers from the high, schools of the state will be given a cash prize of $100.00 each. 4. The writers of the two best papers submitted by members of the freshman class of the Univer-sity of Utah, Utah Agricultural College, Brigham Young Univer-sity, Westmnister College or any Junior College of recognized col-legia- te standing will each receive a prize of $100,00. 5. The writers of the two best papers submitted by members of the sophomore class of the insti-tutions above named will each re-ceive a cash prize of $200,00. 6. The writers of the two best papers submitted by members of the junior class of the University of Utah, Brigham Young Univer-sit- y and Utah Agricultural Col-lege will receive a prize of $300.00 7. The writer of the beat paper submitted by a member of the senior class of the University of Utah, Brigham Young University and the Utah Agricultural Col-- , lege will recieve prize of $400.00 Should the response show that the plan had met with the appro-val of the citizens of the state the donors for these scholarships have planned to offer these awards ev-ery . year. .... ..... ...,.... - v.;,.,:,.:::- ... S m p V uV-- : i t Y?uWW-- V J ;ii i4s. W M. vtt4&3 mmmmmmmammmm : Members of the Arthur and Copper clubs, winners and ruEners-up- , respectively, in Copper loop. Arthur: Top,, back row, Pierce, 1 and manager; Paepke, p.; Pacer, lb; Egbert, o. f.; Biggs, p.; Anderson, o. f.; Blethen, lb.; GriHi, o. f; Green, p.; Warren, c; Fenezri, s. a. Pront row, Kinney, p.; Webb, 3b.; Ward, 2b. , ' Copper: Bottom, standing, left to right, Mclvor, lb.; Davia, p.; Sunmuch, o. f.; Muir, e.; Kel ly, p.; Stevens, p.; Bush, 2b.; Robertson, p.; Sitting, McKee, i. f.; Bankhead, 3b.; Branden-ber- g, 3b.; Santistivan, s. s.; Wackenfeldt, c; Moore, s. .; Oastello, o. f.; Hepting, o. f.. Junior ' Bankhead, mascot, is in front. ,f : A'-- a : ; j . , , - y' SO THE CITIZENS MAY KNOW By Principal II. R, ATKIN or fear that some misunder-standings might arise in the minds of citizens of the camp, concern-ni- g conditions at the local high school, due to statements that were made in a recent issue of u local paper, it sems advisable to wake the statement of the follow-ing facts. Concerning the Eligibility of Graduates for Admittance to the University. As far as we arc able to deter-mine, there has never been a time when a graduate of the Bingham High School was refused admitt-ance to the state university. We can state for a positive fact that during the past five years the local school has never been emb- - arrased by any one of its gradu-ates being refused admittance to any university. The state univer-sity requires a completion of the requirements: .1. Three units of English. 2. Three units from the follow-ing group: Algebra A., Gometi-- y Physics, Chemistry and Zoology 3. Two units of History. These courses are all required as for graduation from the local High School. It should be further stated that there has never been a summer school held to further prepare stu-dents for college admittance. This has always been and still is un-necessary. When a student is eli-gible for graduation, we have al-ways found that he is also eligible for admittance to the state uni-versity. Bingham High School Department Growing. The following courses have been added to the Bingham High School music department during the last three years : ' , Band A. for beginners. All High School and Junior High Students are eligible. ' The school furnishes instruments as far as possible to talented students who are unable to procure one of their own.. Band B. For student who have completed one year or more of Band A. Violin for beginners. Orchestra For students who have had violin or Band A. Glee Clubs Two for girls and two for boys, instead of one for boys and one for girls as formerly programmed. , Group Vocal A. For students caring to develop their powers to sing. This includes voice place-ment, sight singing and interpre-tation. Group Vocal B. For students who have had Group Vocal A. Group Piano. ' All of the above courses are given free of charge. Students are required to pay only for their own music. This is the policy throughout the High School courses. Students desiring to take more advanced work than can be offer-ed in the regulaar classes, may take private lessons and get cred-it for their work, based upon the work covered and their accom- - plishment. These lessons are given outside of school hours. There have been two exceptions to this rule this year in which two students have received private lessons during school hours. This has been done at a great inconvenience to the teacher who has had to give up his rest period in order to do this work. These students have to leave on school stages, making it impossible for them to get this work at any other time. We feel that students with ambition to ad-vance beyond the work given in our curriculum should be given every opportunity to make good use of school equipment in get-ting the education that our sys-tem can afford. To deprive them of such use would be an economic waste that could not be measured in dollars and cents. It is not the policy of the school however,- - to give private lessons during school hours. RESTRICTIVE IMMIGRATION "We owe to restrictive immi-gration, fore than to any one thing the present prosperity and econ-omic stability of our country," stated Secretary of Labor James J. Davis, in an address on August 23, before the annual State Camp, Patriotic Order Sons of America, at Pittsburgh, Pa. "The position," he continued, "we have attained in industrial and business devel-opment is now the envy of the rest of the world. I will not say it ia due wholly tio restrictive immigra-tion, but I will say this4hat with out our new immigration policy, no other effort that our bestl busi-ness genius eould make would have given us this prosperity. Without restricted immigration, everything else would have failed. Wi'.hout it, no constructive meas-ure could even have gotten a start. Par without restriction to immi-gration and with great tides of aliens coming to us throughout every year, we should have wit- - nessed an appalling competition for jobs. Millions would have been permanently idle, and even those who were employed would have been subject to staggering cuts in wages. .Two men would have been bidding for every job, each underbidding the other, and wages would have sunk to the bottom level.' I need hardly. say that with this collapse in wages would have gone a collapse of our presents tandard of living. And business itself would have been disastrously : affected j for the million of wage earners would greater buyers in our market our not have had any approach1 to their present purchasing power. "That is what restrictive immi-gration has done for us alL Many of the countries from whom our new citizens ccae still think 1 we passed this legislation as a sort of dacial distinction with a prefer-ence for certain races. Even here at home certain critics hold that ' view. They are all mistaken. Re-strictive immigration had just one motive behind it, and that a strictly eoonomio reason. v It w passed for the economic salvation ofA tnerica an end whih it haa triumphantly attained." bf Arthur Brisbane National Improvements Another Biggest Bank Poor Broker Sold Short A Fight for John D. Mr. Good, 8ecretai7 of War. speak-- i Ing President Hoover's authority, say the country is prepared to spend hun-- 1 dreds of millions In addition to flf-- teen hundred millions already spent , ilr harbor and river lmproraments. I It Secretary of War says: "The gov-- ernment will link together every part of the country with a chain of Inland waterways, making one great artery of trade." . That's good news. The people want , national improvements, have plenty of money and, fortunately, they have a President who is an engineer and understands problems involved. He would rather attend to great, ' permanent enterprises and let some-body else attend to bootleg liquor. v Again "The World's Biggest Bank" makes Its bow, bigger than any thus f far. I Charles E. Mitchell, head of New York's National City Bank, absorbs the Corn Exchange Bank, creating an institution with resources, of two . thousand five hundred millions of dol-lars. ', This one financial giant will have 100 branch banks In New York. The i million has glvea way s to the new "billion." I When will the trillion be trans-it ferred from books on astronomy to the books of United States bankers! In Wall Street a broker has closed up. His story la sad and brief. He sold short i And, most strange, he sold bank , stocks short t To "short" a bank stork with banks getting from 10 to 20 per cent for money on call, calls for an lnvestl-- gatlon In lunacy. 4 The Prince of Wales buys his first J airplane, making his first flight aa i an owner to see bis father at Sand- - frlngh&m. It Is a O. H. Gypsy Moth, i. price only $3,800. i ' The Prlnco would not buy anything not "pure British.". The little Moth - makes ninety miles an hour, la paint-- I ed bright red and blue, and carries ' a silver plate marked H, R. H. the Prince of. Wales." We have an assortment of "national ; disgraces." One, our high percentage of Illiteracy; another, the high effi-ciency of bootleggers, hijackers, or t ganlxed criminals. Another is the official usury estab-lished by the federal reserve aa a basis for dealing in American securi-- ties. "' . Our worst disgrace is the fact s--. .:' tabllshed by the American Association i of Obstetricians, Gynecologists and 'Abdominal Surgeons, that this Na-tion has the highest maternity death rate In the civilised world. Of the thousands of mothers dying if every year in childbirth, 65 per cent ' are killed by septicemia and toxemia, both preventable. You read that the Naval Confer j ence will depend largely on what j Japan wants and agrees to. The pow-- erful face of the Japanese Premier I Hamaguchi, who will do the deciding, $ tells you that Japan will talk plainly. I If Uncle Sam and Britain cannot ; agree, Mr. Hamaguchi might be us- - , ful as a good excuse. I, Why doesnt Uncle Sam decide for himself what he wants in airplanes, cruisers, submarines and everything else? Do we need the approval of - another eountryT Col. H. W. Stewart, formerly head of Standard Oil of Indiana, beaten in t a lght with Mr. Rockefeller, haa gone to England. Perhaps he goes to join the Shell company in a great British oil merger and oil tight : Colonel Stewart will visit Sir Henry Deterdintf, head of British "ShelC" the biggest Rockefeller rival In the world's oil trade. t If the British want action and ' an American representative who knows j the oil business, they show lnteUi- - gene In selecting Colonel Stewart. I It looks like a real oil fight f Betting la wrong, and apart from that It might be unwise to bet against I the Rockefellers. They have never I ' acquired the habit of losing. f Newa from Jerusalem that will ' doubtless cause indignation and mass i meetings tells of the arrest of 44 S Jews of Haifa, held without bail, ae-- eused of premeditated murder of ; Arabs during the recent Arab-Jewis- h f riots. ' I The President announces the P-- 1 pointmant of Harry T. Guggenheim I as Ambassador to Cuba. Cubans will welcome Mr. Guggen- - I helm, representing an able and pow-- erful American family well, i Americans will be glad to hear that t Mr. Guggenheim's work for aviation I in America Is conspicuously reeog-- nixed. While this country multiplies Its I prisons, containing thousands of prla- - I oners, with occasional frightful re-- I bellion, the Irish Free State reports I a total prison .population of TOO. 1 Britain ia disturbed because the I Nation seemr to have reached the : "stationary point to population. 1 No wonder the same animal can not be a good brood mare and a good eart horse. (t iw. r Urn J GUN CLUB SHOOT The crowd was considerably smaller than the one that usually meets owing to the fact that a number of members went out to draw for their blind and find lo-cations for the opening of duck season. The scores made were as fol : lows ' Q. Hogan ... 23 23 25 23 94 P. Gray .... 23 22 22 21 88 J. Creedon . . 24 24 25 73 0. Lee 24 19 23 66 A. Preloran .. 21 23 20 64 Q. Bihler ... 22 19 19 " 60 F.Carr 10 14 18 42 A. Sorensou , 19 23 42 TO INVESTIGATE ; SCHOOL SITUATION A committeec onsisting of the following: Mr. George Earl, Mr. C. E. Adderley, Mr. Archie Stuart, Dr. J. F. Flynn, Mr. J. A. Norden, Mr. Wayne Shelly with Mr. J. B. Myers as chairman, met Monday evening September 23rd to outline a plan of investigating the school situation in Bingham District. It was decided that the commi-ttee should visit the schools in Highland Boy.Copperfield.Copper ton and Lark on Sept 27th and on October 2nd. After these visits are made the commi'Jtee will visit the most, modern and np to date sch- - ools including high schools junior high school and grade schools in the city of Salt Lake in order that a comparison can be made. In this manner the needs of the schools in Bingham will be deter-mined upon. t ; ,, FOUR INJURED IN AUTO CRASH Mrs. W. D. Mitchell, W. D. Mit-chell, Mrs. Homer Anderson and Mrs. Clarence Grunger all of Bingham were painfully injured Sunday when the car that was be-ing ' driven east on Bingham high- - way by Mrs. Mitchell struck the car of Mr. Glen Price of Walles-burg- , while it was parked at the sie of the pavement. Mrs. Mitch, ell stated that the lights of a car coming from the opposite direc-tion blinded her so that she could not see the Price car. Price was! uninjured but his car was demol-ished. The injured are convalesc-ing at the Bingham hospital. KIWANIANSTAKEUP SCHOOLPROBLEI Committer Appointed to Make Survey. - At the luncheon Thursday' eve ning a report was made by the co-mmittee which bad previously met With the board of education with reference to the high school situ-otio-n. The report was to the effect that the board had been consulted by the committe en the problem and were assured that the school officials were ready and willing to with them and the pat-rons of the schools in meeting the requirements , for added school facilities in this part of the district provided the people come to an among themselves as to , what fliey desire. After some discussion of the re-port cn the best methos to proceed and the advisability of the elub taking up the issues and under-taking to solve the problem.it was decided by the member present to appoint a committee of seven to make survey of Bingham dis-trict and make recommendations based on their findings at to the most logical nd desirable course to follow with reference to the school question. The committe appointed to make the survey are leading citi-zens of th ecommunity equally di-vided with reference to where the high schol should be located. Af-ter a careful scrutiny of all cond-itions entering into the school pro-blem, should the committee reach an agreement, their recommenda-tions should have much influent-ial merit and recieve the support of the community. The following men were named as members of th.ecommittee. J, B. Myers, Chairman, " Dr. Flynn, a E. Adderly, Joe Norden, Way-:n- e Shelley, Archie Stuart and Geo jEari.;, SCOUT NEWS Mr. 1). C. Watkins lias been con-ducting a three-week- s course scout leaders' training school at the Lafayett school in Salt Lake. Assisting Mr. Watkins are Dr. Shafer and Mr. A. W. Eldin. The course consists of instruc- - tions in Troop Patrol, methods, troop committee and its functions. ; Troop council and its relations to troops. . , Mr. Watkins who has been ac tive in scout work for several years took a course in special scout work in New York last sum-mer. He was called to take charge of this course owing, to the ab-sence of Mr. D. C. Hammond. Mrs. Edward Byrne, Mrs. Cun-liff- e and Mrs. Janibelle Sullivan attended the Ladies Elks lodge Monday evening. ' ' Bingham Stray Antlers are en-tertaining at a dancing party at Smith Hall tomorrow evening hon-oring the First Aid champion team recently, returned . from Kansas City. . Time to Come Back ) PAINTER INJURED THROUGH FALL While painting the steel bridge near Highland Boy flat, a painter whose last name was Kelly, fell about 90 feet from the bridge land ing on the roof of a house in the gulch below. The ambulance was called and all haste made to trans-fer the man to a Salt Lake hospo-ta- l. His abdomen was said to have been bursted and his hips and back badly crushed. FOOTBALL SEASON IS HERE AGAIN j Coach Tommy McMullin and ab-out 33 of his boys are daily seen at the football field going through stiff practice in preparation for the opening of the season on Octo-ber 4th. The rivalry for the posit-ions on the first team is strong at the present time and it is hard to be able to state now just which of j fhe boys will make the regulate,; Hervilla. Vranes, Takis, Barnard, ' Strilich, Bolic, Contrata, Johnson,'' Caulfield, Vlosie, r,mith, Muscelli, IPagnotti, English, Carrigan, B. and D. Iveson, Harker, Cook, Mar-tinsi-n, Jensen, Church and Caul-fiel- d the the boys whoa re fighting for the jobs on the squad and any-one who makes the team will have to work hard. - The juniors are training under Bailey Santdstevan, and are look-ing good. Tomorrow the team will meet Coalville in the first game. j ; ? |