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Show f ' "MAY. Bffl p, gi, BIB PDItETW, PWflHAM, CTAH BINGHAM CENTRAL ' On laat Monday Dr. Paul 8. Richard and Dr. James West-woo- d were with us and Inoculat ed W9 children-for- - Diphtheria and vaccinated 109 for Small- - pox. A number of these children were transported to Bingham Central from Lark, Copperton, Highland Boy, and Copperfield. None of the children, as yet, have felt any 111 effects and are com-ing to school regularly. Parents are to be congratulated for per mitting their children to have these treatments, and the School Board Is certainly to be con-gratulated for arranging for it to be done free of charge. If work of this sort continues In Jordan District, the time Is not far distant when sickness will be a thing of the past. A week ago Thursday the teachers of Bingham Central planned a canyon party but old man weather interfered and caused the canyon to be placed in the office where the lunch was spread and devoured. But, the canyon party was held last Monday, nevertheless, and a very fine time was had. Principal Bell and Mr. Cox had to do all the work, of course, but the praise for their cooking was suffioient to pay for the work. Regular luncheons are being planned for the winter, probably to be held In the office Instead of the can-yon. All the teachers of the Jor-dan District are called to an institute on Friday Oct. 1. De-partmental meetings will be the principal order of the day. The children of all schools will be dismissed at 11:30 so the teach-ers may be at Jordan high at 12:45. I Miss Tholen, our Art teacher, has printed our year' el08an' "No Serious .Accidents" and post-ed It in a tonspicuous place so that It is constantly before the students. The students are sub-scribing to it heartily and are making a real attempt to be very careful in their play-O- n last Wednesday the first grades, more than ninety child-ren, and their teachers, Miss Lang and Miss Nlelson, made a trip to Hogan's Dairy, to Neff's Chicken ranch, and to the Fox Farm. They came home tired but certainly thrilled. When the children went up. The question was, "Which cow give butter-milk" T Mr. Hogan was stumped by the question and let the children guess which cow rt was rather than to tell them. Mr. Cox's room has organized and selected the following offic-ers: President, Mildred Sumnlcht; Vice Pres., Oeorge Anagnastakls; Secretary, Gordon Ramsey; Trea-surer, Patsy Snow; Reporters, Betty BrtmhaU and Eddie Tobia-so- n. They plan to take up sev-eral projects this winter and carry them through to comple-tion. Come In and see Miss Niel-son- 's first grade room's barn. Say, it la a beauty. A barn, a lean-t- o shed, a corral, a real hay fork, n'everything. They will begin to put on the side walls, the roof, put in the animals, etc. now. Are the children thrill-ed? Come and see if they aren't. We have a new teacher com-ing at once to take Miss Martha Rathjen's place who decided to take unto herself a husband. It was all audi a surprise that most teachers were too dumifoundecT to wish her anything more than fewer children to deal with. Mr. Pete Graham of Marshall, Min-nesota, is the lucky fellow. In about one week we will divide the two first grades and make another grade and have another new teacher. Forty-aev-e- n children In one room and one grade and 44 in the other are too many children, hence the decision to get another teacher. The present kitchen will be made into a class room, the kitchen moved up stairs, and the book room moved to Mr. Cox's room, where a partition will be made. The .teacher has not been chosen as yet but she will be a good one, you can de-pend on that. Until we can get a good one, the rooms will re-main as they are. Lark Notes -i- f- j Mr. and Mrs. Max DuBois and daughter Ann returned Sunday after a two week visit In Wash-ington and Oregon. Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Oleason and family arrived home Satur-day from Illinois and Nebraska. Miss Alta Oleason left Monday for the Holy Cross hospital, where she has accepted a position on the staff of teachers. Mrs. Maxlne Hatch is visit-ing relatives in Los Angeles, California. Miss Lydla Larson of Sullna Is a guest at the home of her sister, Mrs. Thomas Atkinson, during the illness af Mr. Atkin-son, now a patient in the Vet-eran's hospital. Mr. and Mrs. James McDonald and son Jimmie are spending a week in the canyons ot southern Utah and at Pish Lake. The U. S. Mining company have now completed thirteen new modern homes, a new change room for employes. Misa Jessie Seal and Mr. Le-la- Nelson were visitors in Mona, Utah, Saturday and Sun-day. Miss Ion Peterson and Mrs. Clara McOmie left Saturday for Provo where they will enter the B. Y. U. Mr. and Mrs. James Brogan and daughter Margaret return-ed Monday from Boston, Mass. where they visited the past month. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Seal and family attended the State in Salt Lake City. Mr. George Reynolds spent Saturday In Salt Lake City. Mr. Wallace Nell left Sunday for Logan where he registered at the U. A.. C. The picture of Miss Aloha Eastman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Eastman was pub-lished in the Salt Lake Telegram on Tuesday. Miss Eastman is shown holding one of the pig-eon exhibits at the State Fair. I STRAIGHT BOURBON .gXXX WW r.TUs whiskey is 2 fjJMrZ 'yean old. Stored fWfCeWB a temperature controlled ware- - jEJ . houses. Ufi 2 klLv PINT MviilM QUART rSjSSS No. 63 ft ?V N "ST KENrUCKV STRAIGHT BOURBON WWSffi JJ A 90 PROOF Whiskey. PINT QUART No. 61 No.M (m& Golden WcJJtng lmkiM BOURBON 6Uun BLENDED STRAIGHT WHISKIES JOjn 90 PROOF fjgfr PINT QUART No. 202 No. 203 Entire contents Copr. 1937, Schenley Distributor, Inc N.Y. M3HSKSHZHXHSMXM1M&HSHXHXHZMXMXNSMSHXHZK1EMXMZMXMXH Mercury j ! JBO- - & 25C l For a full-leng- th Novel s Here at last are the books America has been longing tor. De-- J signed by America's foremost book designer well printed g handsomely bound in a special English-finis- h cover paper. At j g a price which has brought long, loud applause from every Z S section of the country 26c for a full length novel. z M M se These great book bargains are made possible only because s z leading book publishers and authors are accepting a low roy- - s g alty, because the books are printed on special high speed jj presses In quantities of 100,000, and because THE AMERI- - jj CAN MERCURY America's leading literary magazine has j M launched the enterprise without charging any overhead or N H editorial expense to It. , H H To date we have published 4 books all distributed through N H the better newsstands of Amerloa M a z H COMPANY K "An extraordinarily moving and an Import J S ant book..." Saturday Review Literature. 5 f THIRTEEN STEPS a powerful, startling novel paced by breathless action and a strange love story. z EVERYHINO 19 THUNDER described by O.O. Mclntyre 8 as "the most absorbing book I've read In five years.' s THB POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE described by the g famous F. P. A. as "the most engrossing, uiuaydownable book that I have any memory of." g N It your news dealer 1b sold out and cannot supply you with z the books, use the coupon below for these great bargains. fiend 26c in coin or stamps for each book desired or S1.00 J for All four books to THE AMERICAN MERCURY, 670 g : Lexington Ave., New York. g " N H Enclosed find $1.00. ( ) Send me all four books. z Enclosed find c. Please send ( ) Company K ( ) Thirteen x 8teps ( ) . Everything is Thunder ( ) The Postman Always g I Rings Twice. g ' ' ' - ;.- - , n ? NAME .. Hs ' . g ; ADDRESS ...... .v h j ?J American Mercury Books 570 Lexington Ave. New York, N. Y. g I ilXMZZMZKZMZMZMZMZMXMXMXMXMZMXMXMXMXIIXMXMXMZMZMZHZ WINE IN ALL VARIETIES Fire Preveitiei Week October, 3- 9 WSnat WflflU YflDU dO tO help . . . ? These figures tell the story of WASTE- - Face the fact, you yourself through carelessness or indifference are partially responsible for America's FUL DESTUCT10N due to annual fire bill--- - 10,000 lives, 10,000 injuries, $500,000,000 property damage! Face the further fact that rou have paid your share of that bill in taxes and insurance premiums. Finally, consider the possibility LAKLLLudiNll JJ. that next year your life, or the life of a dear one, may be numbered among the 10,000, that your property ANNUAL FIRE 1937 RECORD OF BINGHAM CANYON 1926 TO may be listed in next year's toll. WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? Year No. of Fire Alarms Damage Principal Cause Certainly there are numberless things you can do. Much progress has been made in the knowledge of 926 32 $ 8,960.00 Sparks on roof FIRE, it's causes, and its prevention. Science has contributed no end of equipment both for preventing 1927 30 - 57,339.00 Sparks and Defective flues and fighting fire. Modern building materials and methods of construction, modern heating systems fire 2928 extinguishers, warehouses, safety deposit vaults and professionalgarment cleaners all offer their share in 34 2,965.00 Sparks on roof conquering man's most terrifying enemy. 929 26 300.00 Sparks on roof 1930 21 772.75 Sparks and Overheated stoves Take advantage of these agencies for your protect Ion. Adopt the precautionary measures suggested be-- 1931 24 22 735 00 " low. Do ' Sparks on roof everything in your power to lessen that tragic waste of fire. You owe it to yourself, your family Iq2 le: and your neighbors. 4590 00 Sparks on roof 1933 20 3,430.50 Sparks & Gasoline Explosion 1934 9 3,327.50 Improper fuse plugs . :' Efleveai Rules of Btyre WTevemtim Z tZ 5l:.rL.,. 1 Avoid using gasoline, kerosene, benzine 7 Watch your heating system and chimney. Total 232 $112 i ' or naptha for cleaning purposes. They should be kept clean and In perfect work-- o.a i spsrk ' yom " "mo-- .MS-- - Proclamation 8 Keep matches beyond the reach of chil- - . i 3 Take care lest dry waste or oily rags ac- - ton and y0ur children beyond the reach of any Throughout North America the period from October 3rd to 9th this I cumulate In some out of the way corner of your kind of fe. year will be known as FIRE PREVENTION WEEK. During that tim house. Store cedar mops in proper containers. various organizations will redouble their efforts to reduce the losses 4 Build your rubbish bonfire where there 9 Do no leave your forest camp fire be- - SS!l?y Svery year fires a terrible toll in human lives awf i is no danger of spreading and watch carefully. fre it is totally extiguished. ;n" y 0Te than 10'000 men, women and children burn to death" ' ' In fhOTy:fI!,do1?r0perl)r worth nearly a half-billio- n dollars is destroyed 5-- Have your electric wiring inspected regu- - 10 Put ashe9 ln metal containers only States alone. larly and repaired when necessary. - cTnv' John E Dahlstrom, Mayor of the Town of Bag. 6 Make sure that your match is out before 11 Never use gasoline, kerosene or benzine endingnS 2,' Proc,alm the week beginning October 3rd throwing it away. to start fire. SJ22?? 9th as FIRE PREVENTION WEEK and urge the citizens ral nS"70,? l? ,take an earnest interest in the occasion- - Bingham Volunteer hremen ' J0HN. i of Bingham ? 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