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Show vi.i,.,,. ..X?TmmwMxmmmmm. .... . i. - Tl -- - .M THE CINGHARl NEWS BINGHAM; UTAH --1 Land Graet at Sea. Fringing the pools left by tlie reced-ing tide may frequently be seen the long strands of a green weed. Its leaves, which look like so many rib-bons, are less than half an Inch Jn width, though often they are three or four feet In length. This particu-lar weed Is called grass-wrac- and. strange to say, it Is not really a sea-weed at all. It is a land plant which for some reason has taken to a ma-rine life. If you examine it carefully you will find real flowers growing upon It, each encased in a kind of sheath formed by one of the shorter leaves. No proper seaweed blossoms in this way. Why It should have chosen to go to the sea Instead of remaining on land no one can say, but probably it found that it was easier to live under water than on dry land. In some places It is so common that It Is harvested like hay, and Is used, after It has been dried, Instead of straw for packing glass, china and other delicate objects. Riant Way to Breathe. ; The fundamental of health also of beauty Is proper breathing. Most people don't bring the remote cells of the lungs Into rise. " Redudrf'the res-pirations to ten per minrV-f-- five consecutive minutes three! fi a day , , will insure full breathlrl For as you are walktaftlnstead of breathing as you ordinarily? do, make ten complete respirations per minute (ten Inhalations and ten exhalations). In other words, you breathe in for three seconds and out for three sec-onds, making a complete respiration every six seconds, at which rate your respiration will be nt the rate of ten tr minute. To simplify, make 50 complete respirations last you for five minutes. At the end of five minutes you will find that ycu will be breath-ing deeply and fllling"your lungs to ca-pacity. This is simply an exercise, and three or four times a day will be found sufficient, according to a De-lineator writer. , The Bingham News Entered aa second-clas- s matter at the postofflce at Bingham Canyon, ... Utah, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Price $2.00 per year, in advance A Weekly Newspaper devoted exclusively to the interests of the Bingham District and its people. Published every Saturday at Binghaiq Canyon, Utah George Reynolds, Editor Bourgard Building, Main St. Bingham Phone 91 MHiiaiimHiiiiaif4MfjsiawiAeHMiMM T. F. Bayard, Third Senator of His Time , The new long-ter- senator from Delaware, Thomas F. Bayard, comes frdra a family of senators, both his father, Thomas F. Bayard, and his grandfather, James A. Bayard, having served in the senate from Delaware. Moreover, he murried aDu Pont, of the same family as his opponent for senator, T. Coleman du Pont. He will be a striking figure in Washington. In his early fifties, dark complexloned, more than six feet tall and weighing about two . hundred pounds, the new senator Is built like an athlete. He wears a flowing black tie. He is a good mtxer. Mr. Bayard Is a graduate of Tale and a lawyer of ability. The only public office he has held In Delaware was that of city solicitor of Wilming-ton, an appointive office. At the last , election he was a candidate for mayor, but was defeated by Leroy narvey, brother-in-la- w of T. Coleman du Pont. His chief characteristic is his outspoken position on all subjects. He op-posed woman suffrage when his sister, Mrs. William S. nilles, was one of the national leaders In the movement. He opposed prohibition and said so. He was equally frank In declaring that now that the prohibition acts had been passed be would enforce them If it was his duty to do so. His frankness won votes. TOWN OFFICIALS OF BING-- . HAM 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. Bobbins. Health Officer, H. N. Stand-is- h. Bingham News Job Print Plant will be glad to take orders now for your personal Christ-mas and New Year's Greetings. Come in and see samples X L. GUS, Manager Bourgard Building PLAZA HOTEL Steam Heat Hot and Cold Water , 75 1-- 2 West 2nd South .. ,..- - Salt Lake City The Best Answer I to the Perplexing Gift Problem j Make this An I Electrical Christmas j I There is such a variety of wonderful electric rifts I that you can be sure to select something appro-- I priate for everyone you wish to remember with a useful, beautiful gift. ; ( u Toys for the yountcr?, household appliances ' I electric curlers, electric vibrators and heaters for i the ladies, and reading hmps and ny other fe'ifts for the mi. I QP Come in and see our lare assortment before ycu j make your final Christmas fclectiu: You ro M 4 welcome at any tirie. u M 4 J Utah Power & Light Co. j "Efficient Public Service" 1 4 Everything Electrical fcr the Home j lu-w- -. m., w, ZJ?.ZZZZZZZia CXSL-ESlTTi- " - " - - - j ( Don't forget Saturday's MEAT SPECIAL at Well's Groceteria Gates' Heiress Is to Wed Young Artist Dellora Angeli has announced that In the spring she's going to marry Les-ter Norrls. She's the nineteen-year-ol- d heiress to the $35,000,000 estate left by John W. Gates. He's the twenty-one-year-o- ld Bon of the undertaker of St. Charles, 111.' The romance dates back eleven years when they were school playmates and at-tended the St Charles Methodist church together. Dellora inherited her fortune from the widow of the financier, her aunt, who died In November, 1913. This di-vided the money between Dellora and E. J. Baker, brother of Mrs. Gates, with a provision that when Mr. Baker dies his share goes to Dellora. The girl receives the Income until she is thirty-on- e years old. The estate is managed by her father, K, F. Angeli, who reports that between 1919 and 1021, $179,892 had been paid out in educating and caring for the heiress. V x ) wsier wns grRaunieu irom xne St. uianes nign scnmu ana iroru me Chi-cago Academy of Fine Arts. He has been staff artist with the Farm Journal and Is now Illustrating for the Hamlltonlan, the official Journal of the Hamilton club of Chicago. Dellora has a million-dolla- r collection of European works of art, another million-dolla- r display of Jewel, a town house at Lake Forest, a winter home in Pacadena, and a summer lodge in the Wisconsin woods. She says they will have a little bungalow In St. Charles, where Lester can have a studio and she will have one old family servant to help her keep house. Did It Ever Occur to You That few good mothers rear bad wives and most good daugh-ters in their turn are splendid mothers. That slippery sidewalks are sometimes the cause of being ac-cused wrongfully. That how some typographical erors happen is mysterious. That Nero fell on his sword after he had burned Rome but Kaiser Bill took unto himself a wife with five children. That in buying a home and taking a wife, shut your eyes. That in many woman explains her mind was a blank when she killed her husband which proves the unloaded mind is danger-ous. That in many families the cus-tody of the children is awarded to the school teacher. That beauty doctors never seem to cure their patients. That every cinical bachelor would feel much better if he had his nose pulled once in awhile by the dimpled fingers of a baby. That there would be less ob-jection to the girls painting if they didn't all paint the same way and with the same coloring. That the world gets better or worse, as the people in it decree. That Secrtary of Labor, James J. Davis recently remarked, "We have three million men out of work right now in the United States." Why should we allow foreigners to come in this coun-try now and add to the burden. That now and then a woman is convicted of murdering her husband, which is we think as i should be. To let them all go free would rob husband killers of adventure. That last year, 1921, the peo-ple of the United States spent $10 a person for candy, some-body else must have spent a part of ours. That it is unfair to charge the income tax with having made us a nation of liars. All it did was to bring out the hidden tal-ent That the question may arise in. the near future as to how many people can be run down on a gallon of gas . That the only way to become wealthy is for a man to quit wishing. That one big firm in New York City refuse to employ blonde ladies. That in Barnum's day a suck-er he said was born every min-ute, that may not be the pre-sent rate but the supply still equals the demand. That we would prefer sitting in a Morris chair than to sit quickly on an icy sidewalk. That one of the problems of life is to get our neighbors to love us as we love ourselves. That when you need printing of any kind done meet, Leonard Gust, the printer with style to his work, he is manager of the Job Printing at the Bingham News office, and has the publi-cation of the High School mag-azine, "The Coppertonian", in his charge, which will shortly be on the press. The Needs of Bingham Bingham needs an organized club of business men who can and will boost for their town. Are the business men of Bing-ham satisfied with the business that is being done here today? Absolutely and positively we re-ply. "No". Daniel Webster is tus credited with the following para-graph which means just as much to a man's town as to his coun-try." Nothing will ruin the coun-try if the people themselves will undertake its safety, and noth--( Ing can save it if they leave that safety in any hands but their own." The organized clubs of Salt Lake City have done much to boost Bingham, we should try to do the rest, I mean the people of this camp. Last summer large numbers of members of Masonic orders throughout the East, spent just a few minutes apiece in Bingham having most of them brought here by autos and busses sup-plied by the Hotel Utah and oth-er like places of business in Salt Lake City. Will the people of Bingham lay down and say they are content to see this kind of business. The question now ari-ses, is there any place in Bing-ham say where 100 persons could find rooms, eats and the neces-sary accomodations which tour-ists as a rule are accustomed to? then if not why can't it be brought about. There is an avail-able site in Bingham today for just such an hotel that is need-ed. This country's greatest Mining magazine recently came out in its columns with the state-ment that "the Utah Copper , Mine was the largest mine in the world." If the business men of Bingham permit this publi-city to pass without organizing and boosting Bingham, then we cnn safely be looked on as a bunch of numskulls. Bingham has a wonderful lot of City of-ficials and it U doubtful if a more efficcient number of offi-cials can be found in any town twice its size. but they can't do this boosting entirely. Organ-ize andl boost your Town. Chicago Promises Horwood to Be Good A' 't - t S . ; , J Chicago announces that if Sir Wll-lur- a Horwood, chief of Scotland Yard and commissioner of metropolitan police, feels like leaving London and lsltlng the Windy City to recuperate, t will do its best to prevent anyone ;'rom selling him the Masonic Temple for (5 or the stockyards for $15. You ee, somebody sent to Sir William a box of poisoned candy at detective headquarters and of course he ate some of it Yes ; he'll recover, the doc-tors say. And there's more to the story. It appears that November 3 a cardboard box posted In a London suburb was received at Scotland Yard . addressed to the Hon. Trevor BlRhara and Major F.lllott, two of the assistant commis-sioners. This contained cake. The as-sistant commissioners were suspicious nd turned the cake over for lnvostljrn-ijn- n and analysis. The rundy box ulno liud been posted In a I.on'lm ulurl. uml the hundwritlng tiud the printing of the label wns similar to that tn the cake pnekape. Miss Enid Drysdule, the commissioner's private secretary, opened the box and the commissioner offered her one of the chocolates. She took a bite, and, Ootectlng a bitter toste, told the commissioner so. "Don't take one," die snld. But the commissioner, thinking that the chocolates were from friends, luughed at her and ate a couple of them, " West Wants Western Speaker of House Uov. J. A. O. I'reus of Mlnncsutn tlew Into Washington the other d:i uml liiiiiK'hgtl a boom for Keprcst'iitii-tl- Sydney jitrierxoti (portrait hen--with- ) of his (Unto for sic:il.or of the house. lie k:i!i1 one of the real rea-sons for the defeat of Republicans In the elect inn was the prominence of New KnylatKh is in the control of the senate itiid house. "The upheaval In the West," fnhl he. "Is due to a preat extent to the unpopularity and with congress. The West feels that It I runt rolled ly the East imd In the In-terest of the East, 'Tor this reason Itepresentathe cvdney Anderson Is hein;; st rough urged to hecimie it candidate fur speak-er to succeed Speaker (Illicit. The ojipof'tlon of many In New England, hut especially New York, to the St Lawrence waterway project Is thor oiighl.v resented at a time such ns this r2 I ' v) L 1 i - l 'V j- K'. . .U j. '4 when thousands of htiFhels of potutuc, ;u- - niii.ii- - n.c ,,,., t.u,t. U i ennuot net cars to bhlp thrs In. "President Ihiniing, ;ho favors the trenty, Is pouilar hut not concur;. hlc our peoplo fee! !s organized without due recognition to tbt ttnt," COPPER BASKET-BALLER- S PUT IT OVER THE RAILROADERS The Utah Copper team battled for honors with the O. S. L. boys of Salt Lake City at the Bing- ham School Gym. on Monday evening last The game was thoroughly enioyed by the fans which resulted in the Railroad-ers getting badly defeated. The returns were Utah Copper 41; ?t ' L' 15- - Come on bovs nc Utah Copper team are looking for trouble all through the win-ter months. APOLOGY We wish to apologize to our renders for the many errors which appeared in our last issue. THE EDITOR. KICK HANCHERO NOW OWNS COLUMBUS CLUH Hie Columbus Club Soft Drink Tailor h now owned by Nick Ranch ero, having boujrht fiiit his former' partner John Vietti. Mr. TJanehero has been cupped in this business for a number of years and handles a choice line cf cigars and soft drinks. Inclined to Mercy. Mrs. Malnmug I'd like to elt for my poi'tniit. Think you'll do Justice to lay features? pMiiear, the Artist Oh, lady! How could you thliik Uie so stem mid hard U UiuU |