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Show - - THE BINGHAM NEWS . W" " ! Bolt Hits Chimneyr , j Kills Two on Hearth ! I Cordele, Ga. Miss Dannie J ! Blow, sixteen, and her brother, I i Dewey, twenty-eigh-t, were killed J by lightning at their home near I Luvlnla. . j The bolt passed down the J chimney of the home and struck a j the hearth where the boy waa J building a fire. I i .... J vs. . " ') ;" - Fred Erickson, Defendant. The State of Utah to Said De-fendant. You are, hereby summoned to appear within ten (10) days after the service of this sum-mons upon you, if served with-in the county in which this ac-tion is brought ; otherwise with-in twenty (20) days after such service and defend the above entitled action ; and in case ot your failure to do so, the plain-tiff in this action will apply tn the court for the relief demand-ed in the complaint which has been filed with the clerk of said court and of which a copy is hereto annexed and herewith served upon you, and will take judgment against you for the sum of Two Hundred Sixty-Tw- o Dollars and 50 cents ($262.50) with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum since the 2nd day of June, 1923, together with plaintiff's costs and disbursements herein and for such other relief as the court may deem under the cir-cumstances. A. C. Cole. Plaintiffs Attorney. Dated June 6th, 1923. P. 0. Address, Town Hall Bingham Canyon, Utah. SUMMONS City Court of Salt Lake City W. H. Woodring and J. II. Met-cal- f, Tlaintiffs. A Little Goes a Long Way. ; ( The research In nullum and the Is being carried forward con- - ' stuntly, nnu ti to the benefit ot human-- ity at larne. Although the price of rudlum averages in the neighborhood of $100,000 a gram, and a gram is only about ' e of a pound, the use of radium has been extended into dozens of different fields. The layman Is likely to wonder how radium can be used to illuminate the hands of watches and clocks when the cost of the material Is so high. The fact Is that It requires only a micro-gram of radium, mixed with tine sul-phide crystuls, so to cover the hands of a number of watches that they will be luminous for years, and a micro-gram is but a millionth part of a gram. Floyd W. l'arsons In the Saturday Evening Post. Evolution's Slow Progress. In explanation of evolution, it Is said that It may require 1,000.000 years to effect the change from one species to another. All the doubtful have to do Is to wait that long. The bane of our age, bromldlcally speaking, is hurry. Dismissing the "peed Idea from our minds, we can restfully Bit down and talk about some-thing other than evolution as we do about Doctor Einstein's theory. Dob-to- r Einstein says we can't understand it, and we are courteous enough to take his word for it The evolution-ists tell us that the alteration of one species to another occupies 1,000,000 years, more or less; and we can be equally courteous. We perceive at once that the oper-ation Is not going to disturb us; and we are grateful for any earthly change that does not disturb us. Exchange. SMALL TOWN HUMOR j AND PHILOSOPHY 1 By BUCK CAMPBELL If thy neighbor offend thee, cut his acquaintance. -- It Is all right for the people to rule If. they rule your way. Blue-sk-y laws are supposed to be a check on shady trans-actions. There are few men who do not enjoy being Jollied occa-sionally. ' Many a man would be doomed to obscurity were It not for his enemies. The religion ot optimism Is the greatest panacea for the Ills of the country that Is known. VThen the time comes that the one without guilt has cast the first stone there will be a lot less Investigations. No, the country la not going to the demnltlon bowwows; only the extreme pessimists feel that way about It, and a pessimist Is about as welcome to society as a polecat at a campmeetlng. Child Labor In China. Women and children are especially cheap In China, says Miss Tak-hln- g Shin, a welfare worker ot Hong Kong, who Is now In Europe studying condi-tions. In China there are 400,000,000 people, with only 4 per cent literate, and they die off by thousands, she as-serts. When a child is a week or two old she is taken by her mother to the factory, luld In a corner, and fed at Intervals. If he survives, In a year or two she toddles about among the machines. At four or five she learns the rudiments of the work, and at six or seven she Is an adept, taking her place In the ranks of regulnr work-ers. They work from 12 to 10 hours hours a day. Ice Cream for Dessert. My most embarrassing moment came while I was a student at college. I was working my way through by wait-ing table at a sorority house. Oc-casionally we would have Ice cream for dessert, and sometimes a portion or two would be left untouched. The other waiter and I, In our youthful Insatiability whenever that delicacy was Involved, were accustoaied to hasten Into the dining room as soon as the girls had left to look for such spoils of our trade. On one such occa-slo- n we hurried In, and found a splen- - did portion untouched. We began to divide It, and Just then the dining room door opened and the girl who had been called away to the telephone returned. Exchange. HARD LUCK FOLLOWS THIS LITTLE FAMILY Heart Disease Kills Three of Them and Father Dies in an Accident. Sioux Falls, S. D. A peculiar and unusual series of tragedies has fol-lowed the family of Mrs. Sarah Flan-ner- y of Montrose, a village near Sioux Falls. Recently Gertrude, her twelve-year-ol-d daughter, dropped dead as she was preparing to retire for the night. The girl had been the victim of heart trouble during the last few years. Some years ago the father of Mrs. Flannery was found dead In bed as the result of a sudden attack of heart failure, and some time later her mother died In the same manner. Her husband, Peter, was Instantly killed several years ago, being caught In the engine In the Flannery Imple-ment house in Montrose. Mrs. Flan-nery herself must be free from heart trouble, or the numerous shocks she has experienced by the sudden deaths cf members of her family would have billed her long since. Since her husband's death she has gone bravely ahead with life's work, end has reared her young family to the point where four of her children are nearly through school and ready to assist In supporting the family. DRINK BLATZ NEAR BEER and smoke GIRARD CIGARS For Sale by All Local Dealers Nelson Anson Co, Distributors, 337 Eccles Ave., Salt Lake City ... J 1 With You 55 On your Summer Vacation your outing or one- - 1 S day tripyou'll appreciate the pleasure of a Kodak. ri Bj The picture story brings back all the fun you had, to j t M be enjoyed for all time. Let Schramm-Johnso- n fK provide the Kodak, Films and all needed accessories. W We Develop, Print or Enlarge Your Pictures, too. m No matter where you are vacationing, MAIL US m m YOUR FILMS. We make the print on Velox in our M 59 modern finishing plant. You'll like our prompt and $t Ju efficient service. Consult withour experts at any time. Of JH Let us show you the way to BETTER PICTURES. : Autographic Kodaks $6.50 andUp iSffi See the 1 A Autographic f)&fj W Kodak Jr. ($ I Easy to operate, excellent lens and shutter equipment, every-- C1K (( I I 5p I thin? you want for good pictures. With Rapid Rectilinear Lens HHuiUU ii rx jj I With Kodak Anastigmat Lens, $20.00 I H' r Wjl i Siz Picture 2,2x4,4 inches. I N 55 Ul Sole Leather Carrying Case for 1-- A Jr. 09 flf) i m I Kodak yw.wtj t US nflnn;(nfl', nrnrnteJ METEOR LUNCH SETS Contain I hM i fillS white crcpe teble cover jijgj Crepe Paper Lunch Sets Bx white crepe napkins and ijjg I R? m r::JLTzi: "S' PERKR,aiED,, white II m 1 inT Mtomobiiinr. ete. (f ra CREPE PAPER NAPKINS, wrap-- I M I JQ 1 contains ii beautifully W I ped in glaceen paper, 40 , 1Cn m I Tl I Crated paper plates of ilBSkH Ub 1 ii TJTVX:iyZ SOL SeSntJs Crepe Paper, in packet I docorated table cover. At- - yfjfV folds, 10 ft. long, 20 in. Wide. ICp I Ijl X i l I tractive dealgna and color. All colors IWU I jS I Price, per set i I 111 t j Enjoy Both Cooking and Food i; This Summer j I The food hich you cook on your electric I range will be more delicious in flavor - - the j I whole family will be delighted with the meals t $ you will prepare. I I And electric cooking it so cool, lean, conven- - t I ient and pleasant that you will enjoy doing it. j When you have an t 1 ELECTRIC RANGE 2 i :; you never need to watch the cooking because 'I the temperature is so easily regulated. Just a turn of the switch and you can have any j degree of heat you desire. i Now is your opportunity to can fruits ;: for next winter's use. It is easy to " can when you have an electric range . . no hot work attached to it at all. ; ii Simply place the fruit in the bottles, ; ;; pour over the hot syrup, and stand :: the bottles in the electric oven. We will be glad to tell you about preserv- - ;: ing fruits electrically. II Come in and discover hoic ' valuable an electric range ;: ir be for you every day in the year. Utah Power & Light Co. "Efficient Public Service" X Everything Electrical for the Home Sheep Outlook In New Zealand. The 1023 outlook for sheep In New Zenland Is about 80 per cent below 1922, since more than 3,700,000 sheep and 6,150,000 lambs were killed during the calendar year 1022. The quantity and quality of lambs has been affected by adverse weather conditions. How-ever", the high price of wool is causing farmers to keep their sheep now, and the 1023 estimates of killings are con-siderably below last year, according to a cable from Consul Karl de Q. Mac-vltt- Auckland, N. Z. The Vintage of a Joke. One can Just tell how long a man has been married by the way he gets that old stuff about hooking them up the back, says the El Dorado Times. If he has taken unto himself a wife during the last ten years, or during the reign of the peasant blouse and the one-piec- e dress, he'll only regis-ter a blank look when the once popu-lar gag Is pulled, but If he Joined the ranks of the Trt Hook'era Upsllons fif-teen or more years ago when tight lin-ings, choker collars, stays and crino-line were In vogue, then watch him chuckle reminlscently but without a pang of regret however, for the bad old days. To Sound Deep River Reach. A specinl survey will undertnke to sound, the Deep River Reach of the Ot-tawa river In Canada. In several places In the space of twenty-thre- e miles 5,000 feet of towboat line has failed to find bottom. Lake Superior, the deepest of the great inland seas, attains a depth of about a thousand feet. Youth's Companion. OMAHA MAN FOOLS SLICKERS Uses Counterfeit Money and United States Agents to Turn Tables on Confidence Men. Omaha, Neb. Playing counterfeit money against a scheme, Carl Todorff, business man of this city, "out-sllcke- d the slickers." As a result, two men must go to prison for ten years. Blllle Qorgls and Lewis Dochoff Todorff and gave him a chance to pay $35,000 for some treas-ury paper on which to print f100,000 worth of money. Todorff "fell" for the plan and gave the men $35,000 In counterfeit bills, which be ob tained from a United States marshal after telling hlro of the game. Gorgls and Dochoff were shadowed by government men and arrested for conspiracy to commit larceny. The two men were tried, convicted and given long prison sentences. Peat Bogs In Michigan. Michigan has a large area of peat bogs. It Is estimated that about 5,200,-- ' 000 acres, or nearly h of the area of the state. Is swamp land under-laid with peat. There Is peat in Wash-tenaw, Jackson, Shiawassee, Lenawee, Ingham, Lapeer, Monroe, Allegan, Kal-amazoo, Livingston and other counties. Experimental work has been done at Chelsea and Oapac in connection with Utilizing this for fuel and fertilizer. Small Boy'a Idea. A Juvenile companion, having ob-served the corner stone of a public building Inscribed "A. D. 1012," made the statement, "I suppose that means 'All done, iei2.'" It Tender Yeu.a Diner (trying to cut tough bird) Walter, this chicken would have been much better If it had been served as an omelette. Boston Evening Tran--, script 8trange. A feminine lecturer on psychology advertises herself as "the woman who never wastes a word." This strikes ds as something new In femininity. POISONED HER OWN BROTHER : Woman Wished to Secure Young Man's Life Insurance, Newark Police Are Told. ! Newark, N. J. Slow poisoning of ! an eighteen-year-ol- d youth by his mar-- ' rled sister, who wished to obtain his life Insurance, was alleged by police ; of this city when they arrested Mrs. John Creighton, twenty-fou- r years ; old. The murdered boy was her broth- - er, Charles Raymond Avery. ;' Soon after It became known that the youth's insurance would go to his sister, police were Informed that the lad had been poisoned by his sister, by "a friend." An Investigation was made, and arsenic In large quantities was found In vital organs. Anonymous notes to the police also Insinuated that Mrs. Creighton poi-soned her parents. BETRAYED BY HANDKERCHIEF Strangler It Now Under Arrest In Paris, France, for Slaying Two Years Ago. Tarls, France. A strangling mys-tery two years old has been cleared up by s handkerchief In Paris, France, rierre Llmouiy Is under ar-rest. The hankerchlef Is the one which was stuffed Into the mouth of a wealthy woman when she was strangled to death. Officials, when Llmouzy admitted that he formerly lived near the scene of the killing, found out from the prisoner's rela-tives that a cousin had given the handkerchief to him. Skirt Pockets a Rum Cache. Lewlston, Me. Charged with hiding rlquor In his blind grandmother's skirt pockets, Ronald LeBlanc was fined 1100 and sent to Jail for 60 days. Le-Ula-used the d woman as a blind when officers searched his home. Bes Get Frisky at Auction Sale. Hamilton Tark, Pa. Thirty colonies of honey bees went on a rampage dur-ing an auction sale. The bees, prop-ert- y of George W. Tetzer, stung scores of persons who had gone to the house to buy them. The sile netted ?JriO. Woman Kills Self With Hatpin. Sun FranrlKcn.Itegpondcnt Iremusf physlclnns told her Fhe could nol re cover from n Illness. Mrs. Mi Jenru"- - stnhhed herself to deiith wit!, a hati'Ui while lying en a 1i,vm'' bud |