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Show ' 4 - . , . , , , ',. , - y , - ; - , ;' - . "y -,' - . . - -- , ' ' , ' ' v ....,-- . , ;4 - , ;;.v , , ,'THE P1NGHAM NEWS. BINGHAM, UTAH - v -- '.a: ' V'Al t f " ..,'' '""' ' i'l:.;.i' Vlil in iii.i. i.r.i,vi.i,n n ,. - " ' ...l i in .ii ii . ,. " iii 'i t 'tf SCOUTS (Ceadat4 by Ntloni Council of tb Bof Jim's Old Place V".,." ,'.f ;.i .. ! ,:!'.,-- .. ... ..." " ., 'vw. ' K ; Bakery Restaurant '. ... . ' : .I". " Combination Building ; wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm , " - WANTED Girl for General Housework. Apply Dr. F. E. Straup, 457 Main street, Bingham. v ., i1' 'nV -- ' ' D. Pezzopane Fancy Imported and Domestic Groceries. Foreign Money Or-de- rs and Drafts Notary Public; Steamship AgL Banco of Naples Correspondent SERVE: BREAD . .Have you ever sat down to a table where no Bread waa i served? How flat and tasteless the whole meal - seemed! ." , ",'""",-- ' . Bread is. the one food indispensable, and the only food of economy to-da-y. ; 1 "' ' GOOD BREAD is the Bread you eat twice as much of because it's so delicious. ' V . : Fresh every hour. STANDARD BREAD CO. r . 536 Main St., Phone . 187 ; BINGHAM CANYON Let MRS. NETTIE E. BERRY take your orders forallkinds of cut flowers and potted flowers. Phone 363ra - 215 ' " .... i t ALBERTA CIGARS Send th em to your old friends to . remind them of yourself and Bingham. 12's 25's and 50's in boxes of all Dealers. Theo. Marx, Manufacturer PHONE NO. 300 BINGHAM .GBEiCAimLE : General Merchandise r - --Freslvarf j Lark, Utah ; WALNUT CAFE ' j aA Little Better Than Good Enough" Private Tables for Ladies tl East Second South St. Salt Lake City, Phone Was. 1 0254 - 25HS9t38BSffi2SS8sBBlBBBBsSBEBBHSBMflS8fflH!CB $5he Troof oi the pudding is in the eating. So the proof oi good printing Is in the satisfaction of the user and the re- -' suits secured. We are specialists in the kind of printing that brings buii. ness and are equipped to handle anything in this line that yoa need. When in Salt Lake City se-cure your room at the NEW WASATCH HOTEL 78 West Broadway, for ac comodations like home. Jack Curnow and Chas. Uren ' Proprietors Matt Gontratto AUTO TRUCK SERVICE Long or Short Haulage Service you can depend upon FOR SALE Well Furnished light House-keeping Apartments. Always! occupied. Rent Reasonable, Best location in townA Bargian. Enquire 353 Main St. permitted to walk fn the light wid is anxioti3 that Lark have lights installed for the benefit oi of the campi' Mr; Pett ha3 con-feiTe- d with the County Commis-sioners on the subject and it is to be hoped in the near future, lights will be introduced by the officials. Miss Belle Whatcott spent a oleasant week-en- d at West Jor-dan with Mrs. W. H. Bennett. - Miss Josephine Lund of River-to- rt is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Dell Nell and on Monday evening a party was given in her honor at the Nell home. W. Kuphaldt met with an in-jury to his arm on Monday and after an investigation by Dr. Paul Richards of the Bingham hospital, the doctor decided to wt the injured member in splints. s Cliips and Shavings : From Lark " - v ,f ,,,f "" ; "' - s ' The truthfully depicted "Ilap-- ; penings on the Lark School 1 stage " written by Miss Lovetta t - Hatt, and published in the Bing- - I ham High school quarterly mag-- ( - azine "The Coppertonian" will i ' be read with much interest by her many Lark friends. ' . ' , Mi-s- . Ernest Silcox of West Jordan is visiting here with her , . husband. - r - , Miss Venus Walker was pleas antly surprised Saturday, eve-- i ning of last Week ,the occasion being her fifteenth birthday. - ames and dancing were the ' 'main features of the evening and luncheon was served to six- - teen. ;':'C..svv ' Miss Jo and Helen Lund, af-ter spending" some time visitinar Vith Mrs. Dell Nell returned to ... their home at Riverton, Friday. ' , Mr. and Mrs. I. Tripp former-- :ly of Murray, will make their . " home at Ijark for an indefinite period, j' ; Salt Iake visitors this week nv.- -, were ; ' Mr. and Mrs R. P. Nell, Mrs. Dell Nell, Mrs. Fahmi'and ' daughter Maxine and. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Hemmingseii. ; Mr. and Mrs. N. Neff former-- . ily of Riverton are making their ' present home Lark. - An enjoyable dance was , giv-en at the recently ; organized Lark club on Monday evening, last Bingham's "Aces of Har- - 1 . mony" provided the music and was much enjoyed by the large number who attended. ' ; The Bingham Mines Company manager, Mr. liner Pett, is anx-ious that the people of Lark be HONOR ROOSEVELrS MEMORY Ou the anniversary of the blrtn oi Theodore Itoosevelt, October 27, tcoutt In every part of the country united to ' pajrlos tribute to the memory of their chief scout citizen and bU scoutllkt ualltlea of ririllty, integrity, square dealing, public service and practical citizenship, . - v " ' "The two thoughts animating the demonstrations," says James K. West, chief scout executive, "were first, te do honor and to keep alive the mem-ory of a great American and good scout, who kept the scout oath and law htm- - self . and, secondly, ' to Inspire scouts and the public generally with a desire to be ..better . citizens, remembering 'such us these have lived and died.' " ; Ceremonies took the form of special troop exercises, public gatherings, speeches, rallies, tree plantings and . dedications in school yards, community centers, and on highways. ' One of the . most Impressive cere-monie- s was the third annual, pilgrim-- I age to Roosevelt's ' grave it. Oystej Buy," N. Y., attended by a thousand scouts of Greater New York and vU clnity ' uuder leadership of National gr out CommIs6ioner Daniel - Carter Beard. " r - ! yr I, ;, The plan to erect at Oyster Bay an exact reproduction of the cabin occu-'lle- d by the colonel when he lived a ranchman's life to the Bad Lands of North Dakota, has received favorable consideration from local and national onlclals. Logs for the cabin, accord-ing to the plan; will be contributed by troops from every state In the Union representing the 650,000 members In evry city, and nearly every town and hamlet In the Union, aU dedicated te the same olit-do- life,, study, manli-ness of character and virile citizenship associated with the Ideal scout and cithten. Theodore Roosevelt. ' "' ' : "" BABOON HOLDS OLD MANSION Mascot, Deserted by Bootleggers, Makes Night Foray and -- 4' Attacks Boy. . ROUTED BY POLICE DOG t v t, ' ' , ' j Search Parties Hunt Marauder in Vain tome Person Have Seen Animal at"' Night, but Have Been Uik y able to Capture Him. ' Babylon, L. L A baboon, believed to have been the mascot of seafaring bootleggers and left ashore after a rum-runnin- g expedition to Great South bay, has taken up Its home In the abandoned bouse on what was former-ly the estate of the late Cornelius Bergen, between Babylon and. Linden-burs- t The nocturnal forays of.;the animal, which Included an attack upon William, the flfteen-year-ol- d sob of Charles Elinger, the ; caretakep who lives on the grounds, have aroused the countryside, and hunting parties have been organised In which agents of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals have Joined. ; ' Unfrequented Places The Bergen estate, whllh Is now owned by Mrs. William B. Hawkins, comprises about 200 acres and lies be tween Old Country road and the shore of Great South bay. It la a lonely and unfrequented place, In the center of which Is located the old Bergen home, a three-stor- y' building now falling into ruin. Young : WUliam Elinger . went down to the creek in the dusk of. fall ' lng night several days ago to look after muskrat traps, taking with, him Wli-- ' liam Tell, a Belgian police dog. Tht boy was walking slowly along the side of the creek when he came suddenly upon the baboon, which apparently had just dropped from a limb of a tree. The boy shouted to frighten the animal away, but Instead the baboon made for young Elinger. It knocked horn down with sweep of oho long arm and was tearing at his clothing when, In fright, the boy called to his dog. As William Tell came bounding up the baboon met the dog with a swing of Its arm that sent William Tell flying back several feet. The dog returned In a Jump and closed In.. After a few moments of snarling and biting the baboon gave a screech of pain and fled Into the un-derbrush. v, ' , , , teen Several Times. " .. Young Elinger hurried home to re-port He sold he first thought it wa a man, for the animal stood as toll a himself, and William Is a big boy for his age. An Investigation next .d failed to disclose the baboon, but since then It has been seen several times, it It Knocked Him Down. A I was seen through the window of the old house moving about Inside. Some hunters say they saw it at one of the upper windows. One man declares that as he approached the honse he saw the animal climb out of a third-stor- y win-dow, seise the lightning rod and slide down to the ground. So quickly was this done and so surprised was the hunter that he could not get his gun to bW shoulder before the baboon had rounded a corner of the house and was put of sight , I A hunting party from Babylon came out and tramped in aln for hours through the estste. At the request 'of Mrs. Hawkins the sgents of the go-eiet-y for the Preycntlon of Cruelty fto Animals took up the search, but so far without result ' NOTICE . I, Andy McDonald of Copper-fiel- d, Bingham will not be re-sponsible for any debt, or debts contracted by my wife, Bertha Todd McDonald after this date, Dec. 7th, 1922. - j I, George McDonald of Cop-perfiel- d, Bingham will not be re-- j sponsible for any debt or debts! contracted by. my wife, Laura McDonald, after this date. De-cember 7th, 1922. What Stevenson thought of Music. Robert Louis Stevenson said: "To make a homo out of a household, given the raw material-- 2 to wit: a wife, chil-dren, ti friend or two, and a house-t-wo things are necessary. These are a good fire and good music. And m asinuch an we can do without the fire for half the. year.-- may guy. music is the one essential." . , THE ROAD TO KNOWLEDGE ' How do yau pack a blanket roll that's Dt tor a forest tramp? How do you build a crackling flr when all of the wood la damp? How do you stretch a sheltar tent and how do you make- - your camp? ; How Ao you cook your bacon and spuds so none of the stuff will burn? How do you know the things to take and . the things you inunt leave behind? How do you make a bed of boughs that's comfortably designed? How do you know the trail to take, and . the way that you should return? "i.Qo to the Evouu, go to the Suoutss go '' to the Boouts and Learn I - r Where are the etreams that teem with ' ' fish, and how do you JUvel there? Which ia the trail to the ptney woods whone fragrance Is on the air? low caa you keep to a faint biased trail aa your only thoroughfare? What la the secret of your craft and where did you get your key? How do you pilot a slim canoe through rapids that aeeth and teas? How do you pick the safest ford when there Is a stream to cross? How can you always And yourself wher-ever you chance to be? Follow the Scouts, follow the Scouts, follow the Booms asf Beet : r- - " ,v :;; ,.' what did you do to gvt so brow a, so husky and strong and straight? Where did you learn that easy walk, that breezy and swinging gait? Ami where did you set that fearUas . glanoe that challenges Chaace oi Fate? And why do you grin and blush a bit, yet hold your head so high? ; Why do you spring so readily to answer a call for aid? And why do you tackle each Job you And as if you had learned the trade? And why do yoa view this big round world with a confident, cheerful eye? I am a Scout and a First-Cla- ss Scout, and that la the reason why) Barton Braley in Boys' Life. A kCOUT IS KINO A little boy who was tying kits la a big wind lost control of it in a cross current The kite came down In a broad sweep, landing in the top of a high tree. The youngster was too 'sTnnll to'climB the tree o Tie broke the striae; as near to the kite as possible and vvcut 'uhjs sa2i; witt only tha ball of string in his possession, his heart broken because, of the loss of his treasure. On the wny home be met a boy scout who with characteristic observation noticed the Uttlo boy's de Jected look, and asked him what was the matter. When told of the tragedy the scout asked to be shown, the tree, which he promptly climbed, released the kite and restored.. It into the hands of Its delighted owner. lie might have beliaved in precisely the same fushlon If he had not been a scout but, being a Bcout, be Just naturally couldn't bars done otherwise. 6EE3 GOOD TURN rrom the Trenton (N. J.) Times, Us Its dally "Seen this Morning" column: "Two boy scouts carrying basket of clothes for colored washerwoman." PRESENT COMMUNITY PARK Scouts find opportunity everywhere to perform their dully good turns, pic-nic grounds not excepted. When scouts of Zillah, Wash., presented to the community 12 "Scout Park" acres for a picnic ground, they rolled EC3 --good turns" all Into one, for it had taken the boys, with the aid of off-icials and friends, one year to prepare and clear thj grounds, construct equip-nien- t, make trail and bridges, laj water mains, dig" ditches and pips city witter to the park, , - Drowned by Fish He Spssred. , Olg Harbor, Wash. While spearing flsh at Sunrise beach, near here, A-lbert Garnes. eighteen years old, speared a devil fish that dragged hla from his bow and drowned him. Nearby fishermen rowed to Ourncss' assistance but he was dead when taken from the water. Gnrnm made the mistake of fastening his line ts his botlj (Mead of to the r.oM. |