OCR Text |
Show ' 7 vi THE BINGHAM NEWS A ' 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. Robbins. Health Officer, II, N. Standish- - When in Salt Lake stop at fJy THE ALTON HOTEL Modern Clean Quiet Rates: ?1.00 day and up Sara Lyte, Manager 138 South State mt sassBBassBBssaaaaaas Seeing Machines Repaired Our work guaranteed on any make of machine. See us before buying a new one JOHN G. LEWIS Phone 114 85 CarrFork Feel and Look Well and Strong SOLD BY If you don't "feci like yourself," if you are weak, drowsy, tired or lack-ing in vital energy, you need a good tonic and regulator to put your sys- - Lv sv" w tem in natural condition. Vou can k J I I 1 soon I IA1H1 regain your old spirits with Johnson The Great General Tonic Compounded from pure Inirredl. 7 cnt which regulate the bowels, v J'hlT.t'SS.r BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH ZZ and have a strengthening effect jjT-jf- on ,he bodily tissues. Try bottle today. " Regular $1 .50 Size. Full 1 6 oz. D. PEZZOPANE Fancy Imported and m Domestic Groceries Foreign Money Orders 1lcm and Drafts BlmtA Banco of Naples Correspon- - STEAMSHIP AGENT 5322 NOTARY PUBLIC SitS-S-? 541 MAIN STREET BINGHAM DOESN'T LOOK IT fe$:13 You can't always judge & &7 ihl 00011 y its cover and you may a - (f5XL think that coal is clean and 1pf&--W 1 TW without dust or slag when yoi Jr SYWlJ r I lu buv it but the burning tells Vy;i '"'f1 L ' 'Jl the t-- le- Our high grade Liber- - ?&riSM wM4 ty or Utah Fuel well lir?HCi&2 screened and cleaned, and burns K ,rTJlrr Wlth a brihtness and heat that fIPjC .Jk 5v will cook and heat when want-arp.- -- XA ed, when you buy it at the Citi-- Citizen's Coal and Supply Co. Phone 39 Bingham, Utah f OnlroningDay j , Now you can have the joy of owning $ The Latest Model Family Size f WONDER, 'JUNIOR,'' ; y The Best Ironer Lowest Terms Ever doiVH I offcrcd - tfwSa t ' The small weekly payment of 12 00, a m tlliah 1 . ' I If desired, will be added to your 4 V7f j M L III monthly servles bill. ' O . Amazing Low Price w 1 all Can Afford It ' - X ; ; Simplex is the WorltVt Leading Electric Ironer 1 ' ' la tae Sre lrr, this wonder has open end My, how it T Iroaer cUlaaaarral Slraplri, wlik all Irons) 2 Slmplri Merits. mivc hours and hour of tlm J Tka bMuir of It It beautifully finished and at- - I , Is no larger, nor does It take tractive. T , up any mora room than a aew- - you can Iron easily and com- - ! ( lng machine and can be moved foitably while seated on an Z , about a easily. ordinary chair, X This wonder Junior Klmrlex turns the hardest 1 , task of tha week Into a pleasant occupation. X :: 0ZfZg& This Introductory Sale ; WV" Positively Ends Feb. 16 iWjlfFAM POWER! i i Up &LIGHT CO, EFFICIENT PUBLIC SERVICE i :-- i Bingham and Garfield Railway Company Operates through Package Car Service, in connection with the Union Pacific system between Salt Lake City and I.injrliam. l or convenience of its patrons heated refriger- ator cars are operated in this service, semi-weejd- y, for the protection of perishable freight when vreather conditions warrant. II. W. STOUTENBOnOUGH, A. W. MALY, Asst. Gen. Freight Agent, Agent Salt Lake City, Utah Lingham, Utah thing to be proud of, but many a child of good breeding and of good parentage has gotten into trouble on his or her own ac-tions. Abraham Lincoln never spent much time bragging about his ancestors, yet he was never as-hamed of them, nor did he de-pend upon them for his success in life. The lady who picks a leap year husband for what he has or for the ancestors he has, may come to grief if she does not look the fellow over and find out as much as she possibly can about him, and not his grand-father. Then again some mothers have very foolish notions who their girls should marry. When some one else picks the girl's husband, love soon grows cold and wears out. , EDITORIAL A MAN OR MONEY WHICH? A certain schoolma'am was recently asked whether a pair of stockings would hold all she wanted for Christmas. She re-plied "No, but a pair of socks would." Iu other words, she confessed that she wanted a man. A woman to insure happiness ahead must use common sense in tying up with a man. Whom to pick is the big question and most women can have their choice. Some folks get the no-tion they should marry a man with a pedigree, rather than to take a fellow with plenty of pep. Other girls look for a man with a heavy purse. They have no use ifor the man who cannot give them ease and luxury. The fel-low who has had his day and fortune and wasted both will never make a good mate for a real woman. Of course, if the woman amounts to nothing it will not make any difference whom she mates with. Many women and men forget the corner stone of a happy mar-riage is true love, the happiest homes are not the richest, the happiest families are those where health and honorable pur-suit after some worthy ideals is the purpose of life and living. Trace the offspring of one fam-ily and you will find in this flow of humanity all sorts of human beings, good ancestry is some-- 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 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 NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION MEMBER No. 1855 ing the result of a gift of Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Garvan of New York, in memory of their daughter, Patricia, is being con-ducted by the American Chemi-cal Society. Every high school and secondary school student in the coilntry is eligible to partic-ipate. Six cash prizes are being offered to the winners in each state and six scholarships to Yale or Vassar will be awarded in the national competition be-tween the state winners. Each contestant may submit one es-say not to exceed twenty-fiv- e hundred words which must be confined to one of the following six subjects: The Relation of Chemistry to Health and Disease to the Enrichment of Life, to Agriculture and Forestry, to Na-tional Defense, to the Home to the Development of the Indus-tries and Resources of Your State. The best essay of these six subjects in each state will be awarded twenty dollars in gold, and six best essays will be se-lected by the National Commit-tee from among the state win-ners. The writers of the winning essays will be awarded four year scholarship to Yale University or Vassar College, each scholar-ship to carry with it five hun-dred dollars a year m cash in ad-dition to tuition fees. National and state education-al officials have endorsed the project and over twenty thou-sand sets of reference books, in-cluding The Life of Pasteur, Creative Chemistry, The Riddle of the Rhine, Discovery, The Spirit and Service of Science, and the Future Independence and Progress of American Med-icine in the Age of Chemistry, have been donated to schools and libraries all1 over the country. Booklets and posters describ-ing the contest have been dis-tributed and it is estimated that more than a million essays will be written by High School boys and girls. Through the gener-osity of the publishers the Com-mittee has been enabled to offer sets of the reference books to in-terested individuals at the actual cost of printing. This was nec-essitated by the great demand for the books and the fact that the funds of the Committee did not permit the free distribution of books to those other than schools and libraries. Committees sihoilar in form to the National Committee are be-ing formed in each state and to these state committees will be entrusted the duty of selecting the six best essays written by the boys and girls of their state. These committees will be an-nounced through the committee in charge and through the press. The competition will close on April 1, 1924 and on that date all competing essays must be in the hands of the designated state authorities. Booklets describing the con-test and sets of reference books at cost, may be had upon appli-cation to Alexander Williams, Jr. Secretary, Committee on Prize Essays, American Chemical So-ciety, Munson Building, New York City. Committee on Prize Essays : II. E. Howe, Chairman. W. D. Bancroft, Charles II. Henry, Alexander Williams, Jr Secretary. AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Committee on PVize Essays Headed by Herbert Hoover and made up of men and women leaders in practically every field of endeavor, a National Commit-tee formed to act as judges in the American Chemical Society Prize Essay Contest was an-nounced today. Dr. Charles H. Mayo of the Mayo Foundation of Rochester, Minn., represents the medical profession on the committee; F. E. Weyerhaeuser, the lumber field and Julius Rosenwald, of Sears Roebuck and Co., Chicago, the merchants of the country. Prominent women on the com-mittee, will be Alice Ames Win-ter, President of the General Federation of Women's Clu4s, Ida M. Tarbell and Jane Addams. Dr. J. R. Angell, President of Yale University and Dr. II. N. MacCracken, President of Vas-sar College, have accepted mem-bership, representing the nations educators, while scientists will be represented by Dr. Robert Andrews Millikan, physicist, who has been the recipient of the No-bel Prize, Dr. J. C. Merriam, the head of Carnegie Institution and Dr. Edgar F. Smith, past presi-dent of the American Chemical Society and former Provist of the University of Pennsylvania. Gen. J. J. Carty, Chief Engineer of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, United States Senator Arthur Capper, who will represent the agricul-tural interests of the country, Robert J. Cuddihy, of the Liter-ary Digest, George Eastman of the Eastman Kodak Company and United States Senator J. W. Wadsworth, Jr., Chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Military Affairs, are also members of the Committee. The Prize Essay Contest, be- - The Bride of the I I Snow J By JUSTIN WENTWOOD ($. 1114. Wutlil Newspaper Union.) CLOUGH came slowly back, death In his heart. He came slowly back to the little trapping cabin, to the won-derful woman who waited for him there. Now be law her, tall, fair as a goddess, her wonderful golden hair hanging about her shoulders. She was waiting for him his bride of the snows. Twelve months before he bad found her. She was lying beside a guide, Jean Partout, whom be knew by sight, and an elderly man with white hair nd a stern look, somehow softened In death. The man and the guide were dead. The blizzard which had over-taken them had klllud them. The girl was breathing. Clough had taken her to his cabin, thawed her frozen feet and bands, poured hot liquids down her throat. She had awakened, ber mind a complete blank as to the past And Clough could discover nothing of It. He never learned who the old man had been. But he knew that the guide, Jean, lived fifty miles away at a small mining village. He had gone there, only to discover that Jean's wife had gone away, leav-ing no trace. Nothing was known of the old man and his daughter. They must have come from a long distance. Perhaps Jean had picked them up In some distant town. Neither could Clough find where they had been bound for. For three months the girl lived In the cabin. Attachment sprang up be-tween thefu. Then, one day, the mis-slon-had stopped at the door of the little place. "My friend," he said to Clough, "you are not one of your people nor of our faith, but It Is not right that you two should continue living here unmar-ried." The three had held a consultation. "What do you rememberf Clough had asked Marie so be bad called the girl. "Nothing," she answered gently. "I was born here." "Will you marry hlmr asked the mtssloner gently. And she had agreed. So they were married. And now Clough bad learned who his wife was. The old man bad been her stepfather Emory, the mining mag-nate. He had been on his way to In-spect a new property, and the girl had persuaded him to take her when they were overwbelmed by the early No-vember blizzard. She was a wealthy heiress, and they bad been advertising for ber, though it was surmised that what had happened had occurred. And the bitterness of death was In Clough's heart as be went back to her. He took her In bis arms j he showed her the furs he had taken from the traps. "Why are yon unhappy?" she asked, later in the day, resting her cheek against his. Clough could bear it no longer. "I have found out who you are," he told her. She looked at blm with mild sur-prise In her blue eyes. It did not seera a matter of great Importance. "They gave me an old newspaper which bad your photograph In It. They recognized It as you. Tou are a wealthy heiress. Ton are being sought for." "Well dearr "Well, don't you see! It means the end." She took bis face between her hands. Tou have never told me who you are," she said. "IF Clough laughed. "I am the ne'er-do-we- ll son of a wealthy family. They cut me off forever, years ago. I have lived so long In the wilds that I have become like any trapper." "No, dear. Why shouldn't you come back with me and resume your place" He thrust the suggestion aside. "I have done with all that And I won't stand In your way." "Then may I stay with you?" She was kneeling beside him. "I only want you, Harry. Will you let me stayf "Herer "No, In the farther West that we have always dreamed and talked about I don't want to go back to that life either." "Tou will give It up for me?" he de-manded Incredulously. "But I have given It up for you, dear," she answered gently. "I hnve only been waiting until you told me. For, you see, I have remembered oh, since we were married." How Ha Gets Nectar. The ailult butterfly feeds on the nectar of (lowers which It sucks up through the proboscis, says Nature Magazine. This proboscis Is formed of two tubes Inter-locked so as to form a complete tube, and when not In use Is colled up like a watch spring. Sea "Orange" on Rock. A dose ally of the Is the which occurs on rocky shores from New KnKland northward, says Nature Magazine. When this anlmnl has the tentacles withdrawn It rather resembles half an orange stuck on a rock, as It Is a bright orange color. Must Bs Trained. I'nless a mnn has trained himself for his chfince, the chance will only iniike Miii ridiculous. A great occa-sion Is worth to a mnn exactly what his antecedents have enabled him t make of It. Use for Old Collars. Rave all the men's old white linen Cullii rs, wash out the starch, Iron flat, fold two ends toK,'tlier, with the worn side on the liisldc, and stitch all ths way around. These make excellent holders, und they can be hung up by the buttonholes already In them and are easily laundered. S Plenty af Ceurta In Egypt Egypt possesses at least three con-current Jurisdictions. The native courts deal with all crimes committed by natives and all civil disputes be-tween Efyptlan subjects. Ths mixed courts, staffed with Judges representative of all the Euro-pean powers holding capitulations In Egypt, decide cl?U esses between Eu-ropeans of different nationalities or be-tween Europeans snd natives. And the consular courts of the various pow-ers decide all eases between their own nationals and charges . of crime brought sgalnst such nationals. Finally, the "Shsrla," or native re-ligious Moslem courts, decide all cases of Inheritance and of what In America would be called "chancery" matters, for Mohammedans, while the different patriarchal councils act In similar esses for Jews, CVints, Armenians and fhers. Detroit News. ' It Funny? It Is funny about some "realistic" lioxellsts that they never write about any likable people, yet there are lots of them. |