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Show TUB BINGHAM NEWS When in Salt Lake stop at A. G COLE THE ALTON HOTEL Attorney at Law Modern-Clean-- 4-iet Rates: 91.00 day and up City Hall, Bingham Sam Lyte, I Manager Phone 285 138 Soath State - Watch OUR WINDOWS AND OUR TRUCKS For Special Bargain Offers. r . BETTER THAN A BEAUTY PARLOR TRY OUR FRUITS AND VEGETABLES FOR YOUR DAILY MEALS Wells Groceteria Phone 13 Murray Laundry WE USE ARTESIAN WATER BETTER THAN THE BEST "NUFF SAID" Phone 98 84 Main Street GEORGE STREADBECK Local Agent STOP AT THE Modern Hotel Neat, Clean and Home-lik- e. 530 Main St Phone 170 n I Baby Chix for Sale Purebred White Leghorn Baby Chicks. $9.00 hun-dred postpaid. Anconas, the best layers out, $12 hundred. Rhode Island Reds, best for meat, $12 hundred. Plymouth Rocks, $12 hundred. We pay postage and guarantee live delivery. If any dead, take a state-ment from the postmaster. All are good healthy purebred and strong chicks The Fulghum Hatchery Coalville, Utah. - - " MN m Bingham & Garfield Railway Company Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast daily merchandise ears from Salt Lake City in connec-tion with the Union Pacific System. USE COPPER- - Brass piping for $4500 cottage only costs $48.87 more than galvanized iron piping and will LAST FOREVER T. H. PERLEYWITS. H. L. DAVIDSON Aas't. Gen. Frt & Pass. Agent Agent Salt Lake City, Utah. Bingham, Utah I, Choicest Fruits and Vegetables From the orchards and gardens of our state. Delivered in Bingham Daily BILLY AND BILLS FRUIT CO. TeL 348. WE GIVE YOU ESTIMATES ON ALL KINDS OF PRINTING Give Us a Trial Patronize Home Industry BINGHAM NEWS PRINTERY 1 J GUST AND EWING, Proprietors i WHEN YOU THINK OF A CIGAR I REMEMBER "t 'ALBERTA' "The Cigar That Made Bingham Famous" Sold By All Dealers in Bingham & Elsewhere THE BINGHAM NEWS Entered as second-clas- s mat-ter at the Postoffice at Bing-- - ham Canyon, Utah, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Price $2.00 per year, in advance Single Copies, 10 Cents A Weekly Newspaper devoted exclusively to tht interests of the Bingham District and its people. Published every Saturday at Bingham Canyon, Utah Make all checks payable to BINGHAM NEWS PUB. CO- - Bourgard Building, Main St Bingham Phone 91 EVERY TUB. I don't know much of All and Cals. I'm not informed on economics; I skip the editorials And read the news and sports and comics. I hear that out in Iowa The farmers now are discontented, And other people, so they say Would like to see some law in-vented By which they all were guaranteed Good clothes, a car, and room, and feed. But all along I've always found That life is pretty much a tussle, And man, to keep above the ground, Has got to think and got to hussle. Some folks are always asking aid, Yes, each community has got 'em, Yet every tub that man has made Has got to stand on its own bottom. I do not mean to kick and blame, But every man must do the same. I raise ray children with a pen, And with a pen I clotthe and feed 'em, I write a volume now and then, But there's no law to make folks read 'em, No law to make the well get sick To help unfortunate physicians, No men who manufacture brick By circulating long petitions And all the helpless lumberman Can do is the best he can. The grocer opens up his store, A stock and other things he buys him. But there's no fine or sentence for The folks who fail to patronise him He has to rustle for his trade, Not wish for cutomers, but spot 'em Yes, every tub man ever made Has got to stand on its own bottom. And that's about the only way I ever saw to make things pay. The Jordan Journal. ImmmammmimmilMIMmmmmMm I " imuuuiiuiiiiiiiuiuiiuiuiuuiiwiKJiiwiiiumiiuiuuiuiiiuiuuuiuiiiiiujiuuiii THE THYROID GLAND If you stand before a mirror with your fingers on your throat just be-low your larynx or Adam's apple and take a swallow, you will observe some of the throat tissue go up and down with your fingers. This tissue is your thyroid gland. The thyroid gland plays an im-portant part in the process of con-verting your food into energy. It helps the carbon and the oxygen to get together. For this reason a person with an active thyroid is ordinarily lean and spare and has abundant energy for working day and night without giving out And for this same reason compounds contain thyroid extract A person with a poor thyroid can-not burn up enough food to supply him with energy, and so he Btores the unused food as fat here and there over his body. He tires easily. Peo-ple who do not understand may call him lazy. The thyroid gland burns poisonous waste matter as well as food, and so helps to keep up free from hurtful germs by destroying at least a large part of the food they live on. In this connection the effect of thyroid action is particularly notice-able in the intestines. Let this gland i once go out of commission and the in-- 1 testinal germs move right in and settle down. A good thyroid activity makes for youthfulness. It makes your skin pink and warm and moist, your hair thick and glossy, your eyes bright and your body resistant to cold. Poor thyroid activity gives symp-toms of old age. These symptoms de-velop in a young person upon the destruction of the thyroid gland. In slavery 'days it was common for a buyer to test the physical condition of a slave by pulling the skin on the back of his hand and then suddenly letting it go. If it went back with a snap the slave was considered young in his body regardless of his age. Nowadays it is commonly said that a person is as old as his arteries. So far as these tests go a person is as old as his thyroid gland, for it de-termines the elasticity of his skin and his arteries. Extract of thyroid taken from ani-mals hastens bodily development When it is fed to tadpoles, even the littlest of them, they cease to grow and turn at once into pygmy frogs. Chickens fed this extract out of moulting season will begin to moult In a week and will grow a new cover-ing of feathers in two or three weeks. If you have not already deadened your thyroid gland with coffee, you can get an idea of what it does for you under stress if you will drink some very strong coffee and watch the effect The resulting stimulation comes from the action of tthe bev-erage on the thyroid gland. There is a satisfaction in feeling of your thyroid gland, and in knowing where it is and what it does for you, particularly if you have a good one. Though very little is known today about specific methods of developing a good thyroid, yet it is certain that a normal style of living will add to its efficiency and prolong its activity. Every minute of time since Sat-urday noon has been devoted by the working force of the new Bingham News staff to the installation of the newspaper press and other equipment necessary to printing the News in its own home and to take care of a larger class of printing than heretofore has been done in the shop, so that it has been impossible to do justice to the news columns of the paper this week. Most of the heavy work is done, how-ever, and beginning with next week's issue we hope to make up for all short ages of the past TO MY FRIENDS During my administration of the business of the county assessor's of-fice for the last six years, a record of efficiency has been established and maintained, which has received the hearty endorsement and approval of the taxpayers and citizens, and has reflected credit on the Republican party. In the election four years ago I led the Republican ticket and in the convention I won over my opponent by a vote of three to one. Upon this record I am respectfully seeking renoraination. M. L. CUMMINGS. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE Advertising is no longer limited to the sale of merchandise. It may be used to spread information and stim-ulate business of various kinds. Itev. Russel R. Keltzing, pastor of the Community church is taking it up as a means of stimulating attendance at his services.- A large well edited cir-cular letter is being sent out to the people of Bingham and attractive adJ vertising in the local papers, calls at-tention to a series of timely subjects or sermons designed to show the re-lation of the church to the working-ma- n and which should prove interest-ing, entertaining and beneficial. The series as outlined by Rev. Keltiing covers a period of seven weeks be-ginning with Sunday, September 17, t 7:30 p. m. Special features are announced in connection with the reg-ular lecture program for each Sun-day evening service and a cordial in-vitation is extended to the general public to attend. , To be honest to earn a little and to spend a little less, to make upon the whole family happier for his presence; to renounce when that shall be necessary and not to be embittered, to keep a few friends, but these with-out capitulation above all, on the same grim conditions, to keep friends with himself here is a task for air that a man has of fortitude and delicacy. Stevenson. OUR LONDON STYLE LETTER The romance of Scottish tweeds told by our J style observer abroad BY OUB LONDON STYLE OBSERVER I August: I wonder LONDON, i men realize, when they put on a suit made from a superfine material, the amount of art and romance which has gone to the making of the cloth. Weaving is no longer the simple process it used to be. Decoration, pattern and-colou-blending, all have to be con-sidered ; dyers and finishers work in conjunction with highly ad-vanced chemists. Scotch tweeds carry romance with them. They seem to speak of their environment; to have borrowed from Nature the secret of her wonderful colours. The skill f thfir manufacture, and the thoroughness, almost sym-bolical of the Scottish character, has earned for the Scottish woolen industry an honourable place in the textile world. From the homespuns of Harris and the Highlands, and the beau-tifully soft products of the Shet-land Islands, to the cloths of the Lowland counties, the manufac-ture of cloth from the fleece of the sheep is carried on through-out the entire country. It is from here that Hart Schaffner & Marx import many of their fine fabrics. The origin of the word "tweed" is disputed: Some say it arose from a clerical error for "twill," and others that it was given to the cloths produced in towns on the river Tweed. Whatever the actual derivation, a more or less peaceable population plied the shuttle on the Tweed at a time .vhen the moss troopers were plundering on the Border. Until early in the nineteenth century the native sheep sup-plied the bulk of the raw ma-terial and even today more sheep are reared per acre in the coun-ties of Roxburgh and Selkirk than anywhere else in the world. Nevertheless, the home supply by no means meets the demand of the Scottish manufacturers, who have to buy fine and coarse wool from all wool producing countries. There are endless varieties of Scottish cloths and each one has its particular use in the men's wear world ; the lamb's wool and dark Cheviot coatings for formal wear ; smart silk adorned Cheviot and Saxony suitings for town use; rough tweeds for the coun-try ; tightly twisted thorn proof cloths for sports and soft loose comfortable Shetlands for golf-ing. Then there are fine fleecy overcoatings, and wonderfully coloured checkbacks as well as black and dark grey cloths for , town overcoats. WHERE DOES IT LEAD TO? i Socialists and welfare workers who are urging state insurance against unempolyment, accident, health and Industrial hazards are not finding ;much encouragement in results of .'similar socialistic laws in Germany and England. ' Prices of German products are so high that the country cannot sell abroad. It is stated this has resulted largely from social welfare laws ; which forced employers and workers 'to pay $631,000,000 to 1925 for al--' leged welfare benefits, while entire exports for that year were only $1,681,000,000.' - Most of the cost of these "welfare benefits" gots to pay salaries of of-ficials and other red-tap- e expenses connected with all government under-takings. A German clerk earning $30 a month must spend three per cent of his salary for national insurance, his employer being required to pay the : same amount for him, while they : share in addition three per cent for ' unemployment and accident insurance and four per cent on compensation insurance. This means that the worker pays $5.50 a month out of a salary of $30, in addition to his income tax, and after paying these charges to the government he can look forward to receiving a pension of from $6.25 to $7.50 a month after he has reached the age of 65. KEEP DIRT FROM MILK While some of the dirt in milk comes from the air, the hands and clothing of the milker, and unclean strainers, pails, cans and other uten-sils, the greater part drops from the body of the cows during milking. Straining removes the coarse parti-cles of dirt but eliminates neither the fine dirt nor bacteria. The process Improves the appearance of the milk but may give a false impression of the real cleanliness of the milk if the results are used as the sole guide. Cheese cloth and wire strainers, be- -' cause of their coarse meshes, are un-satisfactory for straining milk. Ab-sorbent cotton and filter cloth, which kept clipped are much easier to clean. The use of a hooded or small-to- p milking pail also aids materially in preventing dirt from falling into the milk. -- , can be bought from drug stores or dairy supply houses at comparatively moderate cost, remove most of the sediment --from milk. Since the body of the cow is the chief source of dirt in milk she should be groomed frequently. In addition the flanks, udder and adjacent belly should be cleaned with a moist cloth just before milking. These parts if sugar industry is none too promising, leading authorities on the subject state there is considerable optimism in the outlook for the future. Sugar like all products and commodities, has its good and bad years, but the demand is constant and continually increasing. PROTECT BASIC INDUSTRIES While the present outlook for the1 |