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Show ' " ' I' ' ' : THE BINGHAM NEWS t , TOWN OFFICIALS dF BING-HA- M CANYON Dr. F. E. Straup, President. Boyd J. Barnard, Treasurer F. W. Quinn, Clerk. Board Members, Boyd J. Bar-nard, Dan Fitzgerald, R. H. Ken-ne- r, J. A. Wright. Town Marshal, W. F. Thomp-son. Night Patrolmen, John Mitch-ell and Thomas Mayne. Water Master, Wm. Robbins. Health Officer, H. N. Standish 1 NOTICE Something new and te Funny Banquet Novelties, Ta-ble Decorations and Favors. Dance prizes and everything to make the world brighter. (Art Pictures) t Get our catalog Free for the asking. BIG INDIAN 141 Regent St. Salt Lake City When You Open the Season be sure your equipment is the best. Western Arms & Sporting Goods Co. 115 South Main St. OUTFITTERS OF REAL SPORTSMEN When in Salt Lake stop at THE ALTON HOTEL Modern Clean Quiet Rates: $1.00 day and up Sam Lyte, Manager 138 South State J i ; if I lit n4aL&vS AW NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION MEMBER No. 1855 A Genuine Tonic andjegulator The experience of people who have built up their strength through the use of Lyko shows that this prepar- - - i ation has splendid tonic properties, W. I is a genuine reconstruct and a val-- . " fl Y7 XX TY1 liable regulator of stomach, bowels, So Vl H Cll 1 11 1 1 other bodily functions. A Johnson j The Crtat General Tonle J Tents an tbt entire tjritem and 3k make luffith orfwii ict Yn'dVJ BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH -'-. tloo. cooatipition, ilecpleuneii - a or a ferallr n condi-tion. Get bottle today. V 'Baflular $1 JQ Size. Full 1 6 oj. The Grill Cafe Under the Management of FRANK CARR and GEORGE McKULLA has opened for business and will be in a position to serve the BEST and CHEAPEST Meals in TOWN. TRY US ONCE AND BE SATISFIED D. PEZZOPANE Fancy Imported and m Domestic Groceries 'IHik Foreign Money Orders and Drafts Banco of Naples Correspond IMTy Vi(jA STEAMSHIP AGENT fepSGEtorrl NOTARY PUBLIC pggg 541 MAIN STREET BINGHAM - Giving the Telephone Life v " ti You WiU Enjoy This Story j SHbzj Sp" DOESN'T LOOK IT $iLx. 7jV You can't always judge a 3rj(Fti7 1)0014 by its cover and vo mav JV-P- I " ifS think that coal is clean and L'W'lT iTu without dust or slag when yot Xfci lvW(f ' 1 ll buy it but the burning tells W ''t iin the tale. Our high grade Liber-IWrffcS&N- ff ftfffi y or Utah Fuel coal is well QTIEEii screened and cleaned, and burns JiSi Wlth a brightness and heat that LKL. tfZMk IK wlU cook and heat whei want-'"slf?3- "" NfV ed' ,when vou buv at the Citi- - Citizen's Coal and Supply Co. Phone 39 Bingham, Utah i The Evil j Shepherd j By E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM j There is no false glamor J about the people in an Oppenheim tale. Generally he presents the worst side of their character first. He shows how they drink and carry on the scene is England not America just as normal folks do in some countries; and then by slow degrees he begins to reveal their better ides. The final result is a pretty likable, clean lot of j folks who are more devoted to outdoor sports and healthy living than they are to dissi- - j pation. And the author has the genius to fit these people into romantic, even heroic roles, without making them either priggish or immoral and without destroying their naturalness and reality."The Evil Shepherd" is a lively, charming, thrilling tale. L Read It as a Serial in The Bingham News YOU can talk across the continent as If to face. Your telephone is th latch to open for you any door In the land. There is the web of wire. The many switchboards. The maze of apparatus. Thi millions of telephones. All are parts of a country-wid- e mechanism for g. The equipment has cost over two billion dol-lars, but more than equipment is needed. There must be the guardians of the wirea to keep them vital with speech-carryin- g elec-trical currents. There must bt those who watch the myriads of tiny switchboard lights and answer your commands. There must be technicians of every sort to construct, repair and operate. , A quarter of a million men and women art united to give nation-wid- r telephone service. With their brains and hands they make th Bell System live. Bell System P.llarr - IrMM Ml dS Amd AH Wmlil Tnl The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. Bingham and Garfield Railway Company Operates through Tackage Car Service, in connection with the Union Tacific system between Salt Lake City and Bingham. For convenience of its patrons heated ator cars are refriger- operated in this service, semi-week- ly for the protection of perishable freight when weather conditions warrant. H. VV. STOUTENI30ROUGII, A. W. MALY, Asst. Gen. Freight Agent, Agent Salt Lake City, Utah Bingham, Utah THE BINGHAM NEWSI i' Entered as second-clas- s mat-- ter at the Postoffice at Bing- - ! ham Canyon, Utah, under the i. Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Price $2.00 per year, in advance Single Copies, 10 Cents A Weekly Newspaper devoted exclusively to the interests of , the Bingham District and its people. Published every Saturday at Bingham Canyon, Utah George Reynolds Editor and Publisher Bourgard Building, Main St. Bingham Phone 91 BINGHAM STAGE LINE Schedule Now Effective Cars leave Bingham 8, 9, and 11 a. m. and 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p. m. Cars leave Salt Lake City 7, 9, and 11 a. m. and 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11 p. m. Local Office The Diamond Main Street Phone 41 FARES Round Trip $2.50 One Way .$1.50 Salt Lake City Office Semloh Hotel 107 E. 2nd So. S.t. Phone Was. 1069 Jf It Was :: : Local :::: Custom , .. , tt By JOHN PALMER (, 1114, WtaMra Nawipaptr Unto.) hXXTHAT Is it, Harry r Daisy " " clung to her fiance's arm nenr-ousl- y as they aaw the native crowd surrounding something that had just been taken by a boatman out of the river. "Don't look, dear. Just a suicide, I expect. They kill themselves for trifles, these natives." "How terrible," said the little bride-to-b- e, shuddering. "I shall feel more comfortable when our boat has sailed." Barry Beamish had been employed In the country for three years. lie had left a girl behind him In America. The day of their marriage had seemed Impossibly remote, and, In the end, he had done as nearly all his friends did had taken a temporary bride from the village. Almond Blossom I How faithful she had been I He had grown really fond of ber. And he had come to be thank-ful that there had been no children. That might have proved a tie, a bar. In the back of his mind there was always the dream of some day going home to Palsy. But the understanding between them had practically lapsed. And there had been an epistolary quarrel. Daisy had ceased to write. And Harry had settled down with Almond Blos-som. It was a most respectable me-nage. All his friends envied him. There had even come a time when he had thought of taking Almond Blos-som to the clergyman. But, after all, why tie himself, and why anticipate the future? The years went by. Three years. A letter came from Daisy. Her father was bringing her out on bis business trip he had substantial Interests In the country and had got Harry his Job. And did he care for her the same? If so? Then it was Harry had known that deep down within him there had al-ways been the same tug at his heart. He wanted to return to America. Daisy had hinted at a position which ber father wanted him to fill at home. And of course, if be answered her let-ter It could only mean one thing. Almond Blossom was watching him as he replied. Harry thought she did not understand, but she understood very well. 8he understood how to read his face. She loved him. She had Just gone on loving him in her submissive wsy. The day before the ship came in no use temng ner Derore, and Harry dreaded scenes he quietly said that their association must come to an end. She had always known that It was to be temporary. He was going to send her back to her father with rich gifts. She would be one of the richest girls In the village. Almond Blossom had listened to him quietly, end bowed in her quaint way. Not a flicker of distress showed Itself on her face. "You're a good girl to take It like that," said Harry, patting her shoul-der. "Some girls would have made an awful fuss, but you'll be well looked after, believe me. And then you'll have the chance of picking up rich husband." He was to meet Daisy and her fa-ther when the boat came in, and they were going straight on to Hongkong, and thence back to America. On the last morning Harry stole quietly out of the house while Almond Blossom was sleeping. He could not bear to say good-b- y to her. Yet he did look at her face, placid In sleep, and a curious feeling choked him. But he thrust that weakness aside. After all, these Orientals did not feel as Americans and Europeans did. So he turned his back upon the little house and all Its memories, snd soon he was at the wharf. "Harry 1" "Daisy I" Her a'ins were around his neck. She was frankly kissing him. All the past seemed like an evil dream. There was a delay of about an hour on the boat customs formalities. At last they were permitted to land. "How picturesque that canal scene Is I" said Daisy. "I wish I had my camera with me. Oh, look I What Is that. Harryr "Don't look, dear.' Just a suicide, I expect They kill themselves for trifles, these natives." "How terrible I" said Daisy, shud-dering. "I shall feel more comfortable when our boat has sailed. What do they kill themselves forT For lover "IxiveT No, they don't know what It meuns In our sense of the word." Rtmimbtr Your Friends. "Forgive yoh enemies," said Unclf Eben, "but don' git so Inthusinstk EDITORIAL about It dat you forgets yoh friends.' FORGOTTEN PRISONERS While sympathy was being drummed up for the self-style-d political prisoners slackers, spies, opponents of draft, nearly 200 military prisoners were en-tirely forgotten, left to serve their excessive long terms that court martials had handed them. A Chicago newspaper tells how one of the last freed I. W. W.'s leaving Leavenworth spoke to a military prisoner at the gate and said,"You went to the front in 1917 and we stayed behind, don't , you wish y5u had done the way we did? iThe military prisoners took the risk of battle, they endured the wet, muddy trenches, long, tiresome marches, interrupted meals they worked like slaves. A great deal of allowance should have been made fo the stress and strain of the times ; much should have been allowed for the un-- lamiliarity of. . military discip-line. There was an assurance made from Washington that in most of these instances the sen-tences were merely formal and were not carried out, altho, to be exact, there are now 176 of these men in Leavenworth, and in the light of the revelations regard-ing these forgotten prisoners some doubt arises as to that as-surance. It is said army rules forbid a prisoner to ask for clem-ency more than once a year, but it seems when members of the I. W. W. have been permitted to go scott free it is high time ' that something was being done for those who went through the tortures of hell "over there," V and that every one of the cases I should be reviewed, and quick- - ly too. Important Newt As the parting Instructions were be-ing given, the young traveler picked up his bag and started on his initial trip. "Good luck to yon," said his chief. "Wire us Important news." The following day this message was received: "Keached here safely, good ri)tn with bath, feeling fine." The manuRer wired back: "So glad, love and klases, good-by.- U. S. Grow New Tree The chaulmoogra tree of Slam and I'.untiH, which yields the oil success-fully used In the trentmatit of leprosy, Is being Introduced Into this country. A iieniiHDi'ut suyiily of the oil U as-sured. |