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Show Lv. Mqr TOE BULLETIN, BtNCHAM, UTAH Pintut. EST FOR HIGH-CLAS-S PRINTING, SEE THE BULLETIN A EIGHTEEN 0ibX UMONTHS LcSlC' BOTTLED AT lWr5& uGknPwM DIRECT FROM AK BARRtlS AT ANY PRICE Q 3f?S o LOST Rimless spectacles. Between Copperfield and Bingham. Reward to finder. M. Lamoreaux, Copper Hotel, Bingham. For Good Teeth and Strong Bones Um Hogan Product There are none better. TODAY They stand for: Purity Quality Service HOGAN'S "Always the Best" V f r-- 1 BINGHAM & GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY Ship your freight via. Bingbaa and Qarficld Railway. Past daily merchandise can from Silt Lake City in connection with the Union Pacific System. Use Copper Bum piping for 14,500 cottages only con $4S.B7 more tban galvanised icon piping and will , Last Forever T. H. PERLEYWITS, J. H. CULLBTON. Aest. Gen. Freight V Paee. Aft Ago Salt Lake City, Utah Bingham, Utah t ' I IV X j M 1 - ' ; 1 IT'S ACTUALLY MORE ECONOMICAL ' m0 - ty 7 TO HAVE 2 OVENS ON A RANGE Yl , fP BOILING, BAKING OR EVERYDAY SgllflT - ROASTING. THE SMALLER, RIGHTNANP ' V3 II151PI ovtM ,s AMPlY m"'m m u tgS SS CUBIC VOLUME TO K EAT. THE HIT ' HAND 0VEM IS SO URCC IT H010S l " omi CAM BE USED. T0 CETHR FOR A COMPLETE t - friP' .f3fSXrp C"o00uKtIN"C"TtHrAicT : ' S!E ' " CHEAPER CUTS OF MEAT ; :. will own CAM It MA5I DEUCI0UI.. IQUAl IN NUTRfTWS. Y0WR IVE$ PALAT ABILITY AND FLAVOR TO EXPENSIVE CUTS..IFC00KE9 THE CORRECT ELECTRIC WAY. YOUR COPY Fit EE COME SEE THE NEW 8StillgIl011Se " You'll find economies and AC- - jLHL!i ' ' TUAL MONEY SAVINGS you 0,0' never, dreamed possible. You'll see ... ga--J uz that you can now nave hosts of new conveniences in cooking; and an Puium 6 A W A A " automatic perfection of results that " I n will delight you. I Ji J Regular $ 1 47.50 Y rn sPeciaI This Month If $119.50 J Ul $25.00 FOR YOUR OLD STOVE - ,,1,lr" 1 BALANCE ONLY $94.50 "THE BIG STORE" A NAT I ON A I DISTILLERS PRODUC T I : 7 (O) M U j Id) 1 w in n i windsoftA KC33 CODENo. 50 Y xssife'sX iSri I No. SI-- IK Pint I ) V N.. 49-- 43 Qt 7 llm 7 ",TOM,,:"To, No.51-A-C.llo- n iwVt- - TT y MODtCTS M I "u"" olict" New Verk' N Y" TF M Ui " BINGI 1 g a person with a weak, unreslst--r ing ' character is drawn more ana moro-IuT- o the clutches of wrong i doin. Through a very carefully pre-- r pared Involved plot, Elliott brings f Eppie, Godfrey's child by a secret marriage, into the life of Silas. I Silas learns to care for her, beUev . i g that she was sent to him In I place of his gold, which Dunstan . has stolen, though he is not con-nected with the crime, because he dissappears for other causes. Godfrey's secret wife dies, and the , marriage remains a secret until God frey, a changed man, confesses to , Nancy, when he wants to claim Ep-pie sixteen years after Silas adopt-ed her. Eppie makes her choice to stay with Silas, and all ends well. As a ;whole, the Junior Class enjoyed the book very much. , Helen Erickson Smiles. Smiles are wonderful things. See-ing a genuine hearty one makes you want ttf hang your own face witn wreaths. There are many kinds of smiles; take the rare sweet one that Is meant just for you. That is a heart warmer. There are smile which are just smiles; and there are smiles which bring out the humor-ous twinkles in your eyes. There are "please leave" smiles and also "forced" 'smiiles. There are moth-er- s smiles and don't forget babies smiles. There are also the "mooney-smil- es which sweethearts usually display, and the "left over" smile one meets on busy streets. I like most all kinds of smiles, don't you? If you don't you ought to try a sample of a smile and find out what it's like. Chizuko Ishimatsu O agio Show. The magic show presented bj Company in the Bingharr rye and m School Gym Monday afternoor well received and .thoroughlj lyed by the audience. Mr. Fryc aS a good psychologist and th udents quite approved of him and s Tag. Any skeptics in the 0wd were' invited to lend a hand and so wer the performance evinced in spite of themselves, ,rdn Game and Dance. The most exciting game of the ason was the one played at Bin im last Friday.. evening, when, th iners tilted with their traditional fS the Jordan Beet Diiggers. In ,ite of the fact 'that Bingham lost , one point it was an excellent ,me and the fans were well plea The Pep Girls presented an.effec-,-- e stunt, their new uniforms show-- g off to good advantage. The Student body dance' after the ime was well attended. Everyone ijoyed the good music played by e "Smooth Key" orchestra and e crowd was in high spirits, so p dance was a success. Ian Marner. The Junior class of thc.Bingham igh School has just finished study g George Elliott's well known noi-l -- Silas Marner". The story takes ace in the early part- - of the nln-ent-h century in England. The erne of the story has to do with a an, Silas Marner, who ii.un justly mvicted of a crime and seeking litude, goes to a little out of the ay town, Raveloe. Here, Silas; the eaver isolates himself and becomes miser. Other characters of the ory are, Godfrey Cass, who be-im- es the victim of his unscrupu-u- s brother Dunstan. Godfrrey be-- CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS The United States Civil Service Commission has announced open competitive examinations as fol-lows: Radio Inspector, $2,000 a year, Federal Communications Commit-sion- . Junior billing-bookkeepin- g mach-ine operator, $1,440 a year. All States except Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Minnesota, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, and the District of Columbia have received less than their quota of appointments In the apportioned departmental service at Washington, D. C. Full Information may be obtained from Miss Althea Christensen, Sec-retary of the U. S. Civil Service Board of Examiners, at the post of-fice In this city. Most of us are more likely to for-get the speech when the hour of trial arrives. Again, it is to be won-dered whether the dinner suffered by lack of the address, no matter how good it might have been. In this connection it is to be remarked that there was a sound plank in the platform of a by-gon- e Detroit politician who said that he believed in short speeches and long eats. Bad Juck often picks strange dates for its appearance, as the life story of almost everyone will prove. It seems, however, that a ' California car owner is entitled to whatever prize may be awaiting the person with the strangest story along that line. His car was smashed on the day he made his final payment upon it. It Is said that more than two hun-dred acres of timber are required to furnish the paper that goes into the single Sunday edition of a wide-ly circulated daily. That is bad for the forests, but it happens that the printing of newspapers is destined to go on, and nobody is greatly con- - those outside of his party as well as those within it,' formally retired at three score and ten, only to be call-ed back to repeated public service even by those who opposed him politically although they did not under rate his ability. At eighty-fou- r Mr. Root was considered cap-able of carrying out an important mission for the United States abroad. At that age many a man cannot find his way to and from the post-offic- As to when a man Is "old", one must fall back upon the gen-eral rule that circumstances alter cases. A prominent foreigner, temporari-ly resident in Washington, when charged with failure to appear and make a speech, reported with cha-grin that he had forgotten all about it, a circumstance that suggests sev-eral things. In the first place, it must be great to be primed at all times to such a degree that having to make a speech can be forgotten. cerned about the fact that when he pockets his newspaper he has bought for a nickel, and is carrying oft, a tree that may have required 50 years for its growth. The answer to the wall over the decrease in the supply of wood is to ben answered not by frowning on newspaper pub-lication and other activities which consume that substance, but by de-vising a sound forestry policy which will meet the g mands made upon the woodlands. A labor leader argues for the re-duction of working hours as ameans for spreading employment, which may be sound doctrine as to the male population, since It is possi-ble to hire two carpenters instead of one. How it can be applied to the housewife is not so obvious. Clear-ly it will not do to have Mrs. Smith No. 1 and Mrs. Smith No. 2. When it comes to doing away with long hours for housework, all rules seem to fc.iL Current Comment While a heavy snowfall covers the northwest and gales are ripping off roofs in the mid section of the country, Congress is trudging to and from its place of business, or more accurately speaking, riding in autos to and from its official work-shop, through weather that in most sections of the land would be re-garded as resembling the calm ot of early spring. Although the wea-ther may be serene, the same can-not be said of conditions within the walls of the capitol. Perhaps first andi foremost "there is the serious ' question as to what ought to be done about the Supreme Court. TJ on the one hand there is painted the picture of a small group of over-worked old gentlemen wielding too much power and impeding the na-tion's progress. Upon the other hand, the court as at present constituted is regarded as representing concen-trated mature judgment defending every path along which oppression might likely to tread. Between these two extreme opinions Co&. gress must decide, or assume th more difficult task of selecting a satisfactory middle ground. When is a man too old for his job, whether on the supreme bench or elsewhere? Mr. Taft thought that judges should be retired at 70, and Elihu Root, whose recent passing at 92 was marked by the regret of , rTRIBCTES OF DEITY SET FORTH IN SERMON "Mind" is the subject of the in all churches of Christ, :ientist, on Sunday, Feb. 21. The Scriptural citations include e following: "Great is our Lord, id of great power: his understand--g Is inflnate (Psalms ' 1475). Is it God in the height of heaven? id behold the height of the stars, iw high they are! Acquaint now yself with him, and be at peace: ereby good shall come unto thee" ob 22: 12, 21). Correlative to the verses is the llowing from "Science and Health th Key to the Scriptures" b sry Baker Eddy: "The universe fleets and expresses the divine bstance or Mind: therefore God seen only in the spiritual uni- - verse and spiritual man, as the sun ip..&een in the ray of light which goe3 out from it. God is revealed only in that which reflects Life, Truth, Love, yea, which manifests God's attributes and power" (p. 300). |