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Show j raiPAtMAt , me THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM, UTAH ; ; .". Pafd Three - j DALLAS, TEXAS-Hour- ly growth in the population of the United States will be recorded by the U. S. Department of Commerce in an ex-hibit at the $23,000,000 Texas Cen-tennial Exposition, to open in Dal-la- a June 6. Births, as recorded in reports of the Federal Census Bur-eau, will be reported on an electri-cal census machine in the Federal building at the Exposition, v - " j DALLAS, TEXAS Scenic won- - j ders of American national parka will be displayed for lsltors to the Texas Centennial Exposition by the United States Department of the In-terior. The $25,000,000 World's Fair opens in Dallas June 0. Murals and colored models of the most beauti-ful spots in. the parks will be shown, as will a model of the capi-to-l building in Washington. from the floor of Heaven. And the snow and the rain and the dirt and the stones fell from Heaven Into the nothingness. And he was pleas-ed with his work. By and by when he had thus poured for a great many many days he looked down and saw below him a great mountain which he had builded with the rain and the snow, the dirt and rocks. And far below the mountain he could see a great j plain which stretched away and away as far as he could see for great was the quantity of dirt and rock which he had poured.' Seeing the mountain, he was curi-ous to know what lay beyond and what wonder the dirt and rock had worked. So he made the hole big-- j ger until he was able to crawl ' through it and step down from the floor of the sky to the summit or the great mountain which he had made. When he had come down he found that the earth and the stones had spread out and formed this vast world. But it was a world of bare rocks and dirt; and he at once wished for something to make It more beautiful. (To be continued.) UTE LEGEND OF CREATION Part I beginning of time there In the mountains, no streams, no were no hunting grounds and no forests. In thse days there wcre no red mCn roaming the plains, no buffalo, no antelope, no deer, and no other liv-ing beings. Even was there no earth, but only the blue sky and the ; clouds and the sunshine and the rain. The Manltou then dwelt only in the center of the sky where he liv-ed all alone, for there were no oth-e- r gods in heaven.. Then as now he was ruler of the sky and the sun and the rain. The lightning and the thunder too were at his command, and the sun shone and the rain fell at his desire. But by and by he grew tired and lonely and wished for neay things to see and new work to do. So he took a stone and whirled it round and round until he bored a hole through the floor of Heaven, which is the sky. And the hole he made larger until he could look through it at the nothingness beyond. And he was pleased. He then took the snow and the rain and poured them through the hole. With them he also poured a . great quanity of stone and dirt NOTICE FOE PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, Gen-eral Land Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, April 28, 1936. NOTICE Is hereby given that Alice H. King, of Salt Lake City, Utah, who. on March 7, 1931, made stockralsing homestead entry, as amended, No. 049786, for Lot 4, Sec. 21, Lot 2, SEy4 NWy4, Sec. 30 Twp. 2 South Range 2 West, NEy4 Sec. 17, NEMi SEy4, Sec. 20 NWy4 SEy4, NEy4 SWy4, SH Ntt Sec 25, S4 NEVi, Section 26, Township 2 South, Range 3 West, Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Thomas F. Thomas Register U. S. Land Office, at Salt Lake City, Utah, on the 16th day of June 1936. Claimant names as witnesses: Mrs. Edna Rasmussen and LeRoy Everett of Magna. Utah, George. Haynes and Howard Haynes, of Salt Lake City, Utah. THOMAS F. THOMAS, Register. Date of first pub., May 1, 1936. Date of last pub., May 29, 1936. What's the Big Hurry ? ! BJnMJ'?- - WELL FOLKS,- -1 MADE THE ' ' Jftj ' PA 90 MILES UP HERE IN . J-- ' JWO HOU , . affdfietv a?v some of.the things he DID on the way up ggg WM& Trunin Im. C. Stli Stnim. Between 1925 and 1934, Inclusive, Many of these deaths happened the rate of death from automobile because driver took chancea and accidents Increased 17 per cent In drove too fast for conditions, aa urban territory of the United States. Illustrated above. That speed Is a But while this change was taking more serious factor la deaths oa place, the rate of death Increased al- - highways than on city streets Is In-most 100 per cent in rural territory, dlcated by ths fact that at city street (Urban territory Includes all towns intersections last year deaths from and cities more than 10,000 pop-- almost 300,000 accidents numbered nlatlon, and rural territory the only 6,000, less than half the Ities from accidents on highways. Last year there were nearly 160,000 This Information shrieks a warning automobile accidents which hap-- about the danger of driving too fast, pened on rural highways which no matter how good a driver a pr-- resulted In close to 14,000 deaths, son regards himself. Dry-FO-R HIGH-CLAS- S PRINTING, SEE THE BULLETIN Candidates Wanted The Army air corps training cen-ter at San Antonio, Texas, is look-ing for qualified candidates. Unmar-ried men between 20 and 26 years of age, who meet rigid mental and physical requirements, are eligible as cadets. I Subscribe for The Bulletin NOW. 4 ON Thousands are killed or injured every year when blow-ou-ts throw car out oj control WHY YOU SHOULD ENLIST HOW IN THIS GREAT WAR 36,100 people were killed In traffic accidents In 1935. 895,280 were injured. Many of these trage-dies occurred because motorists "took a chance" on worn or unsafe tires. What if you had a blow-o- ut speeding along with your family in the car? Would you be among the "lucky ones" who came out alive? Don't take that awful chance. FREE INSPECTION Here's what we do for your protection: 1. Inspect your tires for signs of failure. 2. Remove puncturing objects that might cause serious trouble. . 3. Check air pressure of all tires including spire. 4. Check for dangerous weak spots that might mean a blow-o- ut when you least expect it. And if you need extra safety, extra blow-o- ut protection for carefree driving this spring and summer, we want to show you the new y$W Goodrich Safety Silver- - ' v s town the only tire in V? the world that gives you VV Golden Ply Blow-ou- t A X hV Protection. fP jZPtv,Vl' A ) Cat This ImWamTODAYI , V H - '"'' JolnthUwronunnaf f"" lipA iWV' :, 1 tire Juf drive in. I Bt,V"fA . I Wf'U give you our ef I SO .; . . - purr FREE T1RK IN- - ' J ifv. - I what more, w. will b. I ;tet r i, ' 1 Iliad to get for you the lvSwl 1 iBL A "S.i s v famou 8ilerton v.JsK. 1 iWti.L ICit Safety League emblem ;ft 3 fVVI f i SvTSiS 1 with the red Safety Re-- J It If 4"'9 I A ' ic Hector. Ifi absolutely I CANYON MOTOR CO. PHONE OR CALL 333. MAIN AND MARKHAM jt M Princess Theatre I SEMI-MONTHL- Y PROGRAM ; Matinee daily at 1:30 p. m. Evening, 7:lS and 9. SATURDAY ONLY, MAY 9 DOUBLE BILL Saunders of the River Whh Paul Robeson -- and "THE LAST WILDERNESS" The greatest picture of wild life, starring Howard ; Hill, the world's greatest archer. f Also Chapter 4 of Serial. Admission --lOe and 25c SUNDAY and MONDAY MAY 10-1- 1 : DANGEROUS j With BETTE DAVIS and FRANCHOT TONE ; Admission 10c and 25c i TUES., WED., and THU. MAY 12-13-- 14 A Tale of Two Cities j A With RONALD COLMAN Admission 15c and 30c ! FRIDAY and SATURDAY MAY 15-1- 6 DOUBLE BILL The Widow From Monte Carlo I I With Warren William 'and Dolore Del Rio j I And The Last of The Pagans I With MALA and LOTUS Also Chapter No. 5 of Serial. Admission 10c and 25c f SUNDAY and MONDAY MAY 17-1- 8 MARY BURNS, Fugitive 'L Mth SYLVIA SYDNEY and MELVYN DOUGLAS Admission 10c and 25c ' J TUES., WED., and THU. MAY 19-20- -21 I THE DARK ANGEL I With FREDERIC MARCH, MERLE OBERON and j HERBERT MARSHALL ;; Admission 15c and 30c FRIDAY and SATURDAY MAY 22-2- 3 DOUBLE BILL j CHATTERBOX With ANNE SHIRLEY and PHILLIPS HOLMES And THE MAN HUNT With RICARDO CORTEZ, WILLIAM GARGAN and MARGUERITE CHURCHILL Also Chapter 6 of Serial 5 Admission 10c and 25c fj ' ' I ' ..... cutd Cufitf too f TEST against the best any other low priced car can do!" Drive as many of the other low priced than any of the other three leaders. More cars as you care to . . . particularly the power per ton, and smoothness do other other three leading "makes." Then take low priced car approaches, a 44 Discovery Drive" in a Terraplane. TEST BRAKES Terraplane is the only You will find very little difference in low priced car with latest, finest hydraulics, price for the model you want . . but and a separate safety braking system oper-- a big difference in what you get for atjng from the same brake pedal if ever what you pay, needed. Plus a third braking system from JUDGE STYLE Terraplane against the easy handling parking brake, the other three, with the only 1936 design MEASURE SArETY Only Terra- - that is entirely new. plane, of the leading four, has a body all CHECK SIZE AND ROOM Full of steel with solid, seamless steel roo 1 15-in- wheelbase in Terraplane... up to COMPARE ECONOMY Terra- - 3 inches more than the others. And 145 plane averaged 23.95 miles per gallon in cubic feet of inside space . . . more head the Los Angeles-Yosemi- te Economy Run, , room, leg room, seating room. with 3 passengers and baggage with no TEST EASE Or HANDLING Some- - coasting. thing brand new here . . . Tru-Lin- e Steer- - CONSIDER RUGGEDNESS We'll ; ing and Radial Safety Control, patent ap- - show you owner records of 125,000, plied for. Exclusive in Terraplane. 150,000 miles and up. Ask any other low TRY RIDING COMFORT Terra- - priced car to match them, plane's Rhythmic Ride, against the ride you jU8t come in anfl My, "Show me. get in any other low priced car. We'll back Terraplane ... every time. CHECK PERFORMANCE 88 or 100 adderley a niCAols horsepower in a Terraplane ... 3 to 9 more Terrcplane Deal ) - Talc a "Discovery Drive" 88 or 100 H.P. . .'. 115-inc- h wheelbase With the Electric Hand C E5 jTX EST Flick a finger... and gears shift! The new fc JtJ wy to drive . . . easier . . . safer. With a Jr TU tltar floor in front . . . real foot-and-Ie- g l J fJr comfort for three in the front seat! No gear or brake lever to stumble over. and up for Dt Luxe Models, f. 0. b. Detroit. That's the magic of the Electric Hand, Standard group of attessories extra. an optional extra not available on any SAVE . . . with the new HUDSON -- C. I. T. otter lew prieed car. Budget Plan ... very low ' monthly payments " j Let Bingham Canyon Owners Tell You Why They Bought TERRAPLANES HERE ABE A FEW . . . OTHER NARZES ON REQUEST AL. ABLETT.. Carr Fork ART COOK 17 Main St. JOHN HANSEN Carr For PAT O'MALLEY. . . .Heaston Hfhta. bingham garage Adderley Michols 87 STREET ICHT BT HUDSON TEBBAFLANE. $595 AND UP HODSOK SIX. 1710 AND TJ?i HUDSON SUH STRAIGHT EIGHT. S760 AND PP. F.O.B. DETBOIT " ' : BINGHAM & GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY Ship your freight via. Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast daily BMrcbandis cars from Salt Lake City in wnnection with the Union Pacific System. Use Copper Brass piping for $4,500 cottages only cost $48.87 . mors than galvanised Iron piping and will Last Forever T. H. PERLEYWITS, ' ) J. H. CULLETON. Asst. Gen. Freight 0 Pass. Agt. Aw Slt Lakt City. Utah Bingham. Utah I 2 --J Clipping New Deals Division of Press In-telligence employs a staff of 60 to read, clip, index, and file news stories and editorials, and make sur-veys and opinions for officials. Some 400 dailies are handled and a bul-letin distributed to 450 government officials. Besides thfs work, other government departments maintain independent clipping bureaus. d The House voted to In-crease Army airplane strength to 4,000 planes in five years, to create air reserve trained corps in colleges, and to authorize the President to call Into active duty 1,350 reserve flying officers. t The University of Utah Chronicle may soon be appearing again. The edition has been a week-ly paper during the past year. |