OCR Text |
Show L. D. S. CHURCH Evening service on Sundays, 7:30 p. m. Sunday-schoo- l, 10:30 a. m. Primary, Monday afternoons at 3:30. Priesthood meeting on Mon-day evenings at 7:00 p. m. Relief Society meets on Tues-day afternoons at 2:00. Everybody cordially invited to attend. Remember the Folks Back Home They'll be thinking of you about holiday time and longing for your presence. with them personally, but Maybe you can't be representative in one you can send a personal of, our wonderfully fine steel engraved Holiday Greeting Cards that will be cherished because it came from you. See our complete line of samples now! Bingham News Print Shop Bougard Building Phone 91 THE BINGHAM NEWS Entered as second-clas- s matter at the postoffice at Bingham Canyon, Utah, under the Act of Congress of March 8, 1879. Price $2.00 per year, in advance A Weekly Newspaper devoted ex-clusively to the interests of the Bing-ham District and its people. Published every Saturday at Bingham Canyon, Utah George Reynolds Editor and Publisher Bourgard Building, - Main Street Bingham Phone 91 YvV-rv;- iy If NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION MEMBER No. 1855 Matt Contratto Auto Truck Service Long or Short Haulage Service you can depend upon Phone 124 Main Street When in Salt Lake stop at THE ALTON HOTEL Modern CleanQuiet Rates: $1.00 day and up Sam Lyte, Manager 138 South State Feel and Look Well and Strong If you don't "fee! like yourself," if you are weak, drowsy, tired or lack- - oULU BY jng in vital energy, you need a good tonic and regulator to put your sys- - tern in natural condition. You can I 1 your old spirits with chramm-- igm r f 11,6 Great Gener,j Tn,c jonnson ,A Compounded from pure inured! p tnti which regulate the boweli, E M kidneyi and liver, put test into SSajr the appetite, iteady the nervei BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH --i!?r nd hare a itrenprthening effect Vsa on the bodilr tissues. Try I J bottle today. Regular $1.50 Size. Full 16 ot SAVE TIME Trouble Clothes On Washday by using the efficient Meadow Lark Electric Washer THE Meadow Lark is so simple in construction, and so sturdy that it operates smoothly and almost with-out any noise the Meadow Lark will not "get on your nerves." THE Meadow Lark is so designed that it washes with double efficiency yet it will not injure the finest, daintiest fabric. SAVE YOURSELF this winter from the colds and the sicknesses which come from washing in the ed way. Save the money that you would have to spend for laundry expense if you did not do your washing. The Meadow Lark will mean true economy this winter. WE WILL be pleased to demonstrate the Meadow Lark for you and show you its many features of superiority. imh foweriight Go. Gficimt "Public Service D. PEZZOPANE Fancy Imported and Domestic Groceries Foreign Money Orders and Drafts Banco of Naples Correspondent f Steamship Agent Notary Public 541 MAIN STREET BINGHAM feRqp DOESN'T LOOK IT ?f1:H You can't always judge a hTZVmh J" hl 'fts coyer and you may TiSJaWf iK ltho.ut ust or slag when you mWjl W feVh1 bnnng tells friSKkmrUI !he ta& Pur hih grate Liber-- fefiliSttil flnml ty or U,tah Fuel coal is well kMVWm3 Sene? cleaned, and bums W P<0Sr brightness and heat that WWL -- - NX W!H ck and heat when want-- ' LP ed- - ,when you buy it at the Citi- - Citizen's Coal and Supply Co. Phone 39 Bingham, Utah O'Donnell & Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS Bingham Canyon Phone 17 NEIL O'DONNELL, Manager Itfain Office, Salt Lake City. Phone Wasatch 6161 Furniture For Sale At 436 '2 Main St., Bingham BINGHAM STAGE LINE Schedule Now Effective t 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 FAKES Hound Trip $2.50 One Way $1.50 Salt Lake City Office Semloh Hotel 107 E. 2nd So. St. Phono Was. 10GO . Bingham and Garfield Railway Company withlnrK Bingham. For convenience of its paSons he ?y. and ator cars are operated in this service ff wnger-protectio- n of perishable freight when S warrant. conditions H. W. STOUTENBOUOUGH, A. W. MALY, Asst. Gen. Freight Agent, A t Salt Lake City, Utah ,5ing,,am( Just Arrived A shipment of 1923 catch of the finest kind of LUTE FISH at 28 cents per pound at WELLS GROCETERIA WHY KICK NOW? Some calamity howlers failed to vote at the municipal election last week. They do not attend meetings, neither do they vote, then if something happens that does not meet with their appro-val, immediately they make the statement that a clique runs the town. These people look with sus-picion upon the enthusiastic person who gets out and works tor the best of the community. All men and women citizens have the right to vote, provid-ing they have been in the com-munity long enough, but few use the right compared with the number who possess the right. The non-vote- rs al--e often too lazy to go to the polls, or too inert mentally to study the elec-tion issues in order to make a rational choice. So they stay at home on election day and let their neighbors and friends do the voting, then if the election doesn't suit them, they begin to howl, long and loudly. They frantically state their twon and state is going to the dogs, and while they shout they make no effort to alter condi-tions. This is a poor attitude for an interested citizen to take, if you think your town is going to the dogs why don't you get out and try to prevent it. Get out be-fore the election and go to the polls and vote, if you think a certain clique dominates in your town affairs why get out and talk your heads off after elec-tion. To be a citizen is not only a " privilege but a duty. You rave because the office-hold- er does not perform his duties and then sleep mentally on election day and refuse to perform your du-ty as a citizen. Keep still about cliques and organizations if you are not go-ing to use the power given you. Help make the minority a ma-jority, if you think the majori-ty is wrong. If you can't help don't criti-cise, because you have'nt the right to be a critic when you fail to perform your duty. cause of confusion, accident, loss of property, and loss of life. Uniform traffic laws, the same the country over, will pro-mote safety. The objection urged against uniform traffic laws that traffic conditions are different in dif-ferent localitiesi does not hold in the face of the obvious pow-er of the locality to modify or add to the uniform law for spec-ial conditions. There are many observances which, made uni-form, would make for safety such as the system of signalling for a stop, slow up and turn, a uniform rule as to right of way at crossings, safety procedure at grade crossings, a heavy pen-alty for such dangerous prac-tices as passing another car when coming to a curve or top of a hill, etc. With forty-eig- ht States and thousands of municipalities, all making their own traffic rules, the motorist is more or less at sea as to what he can and can not, should and should not do. But when the National Govern-ment builds roads for the Na-tion, a national traffic law will be inevitable as a national po-lice force for the national high-ways. 'A paved United States in our day" is not only devoutly to be wished for, because of the material benefits it will bring, but because of the safety the uniformity of traffic rules will provide, when the Congress au-thorizes a system of national highways which will serve all the States as a good State high-way system now serves all the counties in that State. EDITORIAL UNIFORM TRAFFIC LAWS ON NATIONAL HIGHWAYS Present Chaos Must End When Nation Builds Roads Traffic laws which differ in different States and different v towns in the same State, are a SALE OF ANIMALS FOR DAMAGES State of Utah, County of Salt Lake, ss. In the Tenth Precinct of said County. I have in my possession the following described animals, which if not claimed and taken away, 'will be sold at public auc-tion to the highest bidder at Dry Fork Estray Pound in tenth Precinct on Friday the 23rd day of November, 1923, at the hour of 2:00 p. m. Two Holstein Cows, one the other branded CH on the shoulder. ' Said animals are held by me to secure the payment of $50.00 damages done by said animals upon the premises of the Bing-ham Coal"& Lumber Company on the 5th day of November and for 30 days prior thereto, 1923. Said animals came into my possession on the 6th day of November, 1923. W. F. THOMPSON Poundkeeper of Tenth Pre-cinct, By A. D. Clark, Deputy. November 8, 1923. COMMON FOODS A SOUP Is never out of seaioa and on a chilly night makes a good supper dish. Baked Dean 8up. Tut three cupfuls of cold baktd beans, three pints of water, two slices of onion, and two stalks of celery Id a pan and simmer thirty minutes. Rub through sieve, add one and ons-hs-Jf cupfuls of stewed tomatoes, season well with salt, ptfpcr and bind vtltb two tablespoonfuls each of butter and Hour cooked together. Serve hot with croutons. Cream of Cauliflower teus. Soak the vegetable, head dowa, la slightly salted water. Reserve one half of the flowerets after cooking the cauliflower until tender. Rub the re-mainder through a sieve. Cook one slice of onion, one stalk of celery, oae-ha- lf bayleaf, and one-fourt- h of a cup-ful of butter Ave minutes. Remove the bayleaf, add one-fourt- h cupful ef flour, nnd stir In four cupfuls of chick-en stock, add the cauliflower and two cupfuls of milk. Season with salt aid pepper, strain and add tht flowerets. Broiled Kidneys. Order veal kidneys with the suet left on. Trim carefully, split, arrange on a buttered broiler and broU tea minutes. Remove the pieces to but-tered toast, pour over melted butter and season with salt, cayenne and lemon Juice. Garnish with parsley. Steamed Apple Pudding. Mix nnd sift two cnpfuls of flour, fcsir tenspoonfuls of baking powder, one-hal- f teaspoonful of salt. Add two tablespoonfuls of butter and three-fourth- s of a cupful of milk ; toss on a floured board, pst and roll out. Place four apples cored nnd cut In eighths in the middle of the dough, sprinkle with sugar, cinnamon or nutmeg and a little salt; bring the dough op around the apples and place in a but-tered mold. Steam sn hour and a hslf. Serve with cream and sugar. (Q. lull, W(ra Nwipr Uia.) IN THE JUSTICE'S COURT in and for the Tenth Precinct, Salt Lake County, State ol Utah. Spiros Kaliptsas, plaintiff, vs. Stefanos Kaliptsas, defendant Summons. The State of Utah to the de-fendant. You are hereby summoned to appear before the above entit-led court within ten days after the service of this Summons up-on you, if served within the County, in which this action is brought, otherwise within twen-ty days after the service, and defend the above entitled action brought against you to recover upon first cause of action the sum of $150.00 and legal inter-est, and attorney's fees in the sum of $25.00 upon a promis-sory note. Upon second cause of action, the sum of $75.00 and legal interest on account of money loaned by plaintiff to de-fendant at his request. And in case of your failure to do so, judgment will be ren-dered against you according to the demand of the complaint. Given under my hand this 15 day of November, 1923. E. E. DUDLEY, Justice of the Peace IN THE JUSTICE'S COURT in and for the Tenth Precinct, Salt Lake County, State of Utah. Peter Giamalakis, plaintiff, vs George Lambakis, defendant-Summ- ons. You are hereby summoned to appear before the above entit-led court within ten days after the service of this Summons up- on you, if served within the county in which this action is brought, otherwise within twen-ty days after the service, and defend the above entitled action brought against you to recover the sum of $75.00 with interest from April 17, 1919, on account of one certain promissory note Also attorney's fees. And in case of your failure to do so judgment will be rendered against you according to the de-mand of the complaint. Given under my hand this 12 day of Juno, 1923. K. E. DUDLEY, Justice of the Peace. Rapid Work. TIh. rj.pl.lii, with ,IV, . ,.,,,. Mrik"s w s nt !y. I"K Ims.- -I Is m I, tllllt ,,, ,,,, not l.f will, . nnk.., ey,. |