OCR Text |
Show ' THE FRESS-BULLETI- K CASTOR I A . For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears " Signature of For Your Transfer Busi- - ' I ness, Moving, Freight ' or Express pf Call 177 or 41. I BUTLER TRANSFER Frank Butler, Mgr. $ 3 PHOTOS g Studio and Home Portraits, g 5 Enlargements, Commercial n J Photography, Views of Bingham. 5 S J. E. CARLSON, 2 5 467 Main Street. m After a hearty TnS meal, you'll VTP avoid that V ite stuffy feeling iv If you chew y . a stick of Other benefits: to teeth, I That's a good deal to 11 get for 5 cents! I jj f " --The Flavor Lasfs -- ' I " f Phones p Office Wasatch 2493 Res. Hyland 2131 P DR. DAVID H. LEWIS 4 Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat J Glasses Fitted i Suite 1008 Walker Bank Bldg. $ $ Salt Lake City S SCOTTISH RITE 5 5 MON NOTICE S Lodge, Bingham Number 72, A. 0 S F. and A. M., working in the " Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, g Symbolic A. F. M., affiliated g with Universal Free Masonry g throughout the world meet every second and fourth Tuesday at the hour of 8 o'clock p. m. at 5 Smith's hall. Visitors welcome, g iiuiilllUlllllllllliAli R. R. THOMAS ij Voice Culture and Singing jjj j! For information call at jjj !l High School after 3:15 III li P. m. II :: is I Central Bank I Of Bingham j I Capital and Surplusl$70,000.00 OFFICERS I Wm. R, Wallace; President. R. T. Dahlquist, Cashier 1 Stephen L. Richards, V. P. Delia O. Coakley, Asst. Cash. 1 DIRECTORS . I William R. Wallace John F. Bennett 1 Stephen L. Richards John G. Condas I Henry T. McEwan I John Contratto g John M. Hays John D. Murdock Nlck Balic I I Richard W. Young George Pragastia I The directors of 1 this bank are successful business I men of Salt Lake and Bingham, and are at the head 1 " H P of some of the largest business concerns in the State I of Utah. ' j I Banking in all its branches --We invite your account Bonds bUgt and S'd at New York Quotation IBROVVAt-BLOO- D j I ISHOE POLOSIKIES I BEST FOR HOME SHINES SAVE THE LEATHER I THE BIO VALUE PACKAGES I Also PASTES and LIQUIDS for Black, Tan and White Shoes r-- : - i Good Things to Eat Reasonable Rates and Prompt Service. CWliFE Opposite Town Hall. Open Day and Night. Tables for Ladies. Phone 243. Meals Served to Accommodate the Shifts. IBIBHINIIIIBIII1B1ICIBIEBBBBI3 S Pocket Billiards, Great Variety of Soft 5 8 Drinks, Cigars, Tobaccos At The Oxford f M g 8 First class barber shop and steam heated, g rooms in building 5 --SaillllUIBBIIBBBBlBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBflflBBBBBBBBBflBflBBBBI! HER LIFE FOR HER PUPPIES Airedale Never Hesitated When Called Upon to Make the Supreme Sacrifice to Duty. Again a mother has given her life for her young. This time the setting Is the San Francisco waterfront, down where whistles scream, hoists squeal and rattle, engines chug and there Is a me-chanical ensemble of Industrial noise the long day through. The principals are dogs a wiry-hnlre- d Airedale mother and her four puppies. A scow was home to the canine fam-ily. One day a swell overturned the basket in which the pups lay, and ov-erboard they went. There was no human aid near. But' the mother leaped to the rescue of. her drowning offspring. One by one she brought the little pups to safety. But before she could reach the last one It drowned. Men found her on deck, still holding the body of the dead puppy, and with the three others scrambling and whin-ing around her. The mother was too exhausted to move. They sent for a physician, but when he arrived the rescued pups were orphans. To the burden of her own six pups, an Irish setter who lives vaboard the same scow, has added the care ot three foster childern, the orphans of the Airedale mother. E D I T O R I A L S (By I. H. Masters.) ANOTHER VIEWPOINT. The New York World has been vigorous in its denunciation - of the action of the New York legislature whereby five Socialist ; assemblymen were unseated. , The World, Charles E. Hughes and anany others have pronounced the ousting of the Socialists a blow at representative government. They point out that law and order forces have been appealing for the use of the ballot instead of destruction to bring about political changes. They declare it is illogical, then, to deprive regularly elected representatives of a .certain group the right to represent that group. . One of the ousted Socialists is only 28 years of age. The World draws a lesson from his accomplishments in the following editorial: "Out of weeks of time-wastin- g in Albany, nothing has yet stood out with the sharpness and evidential value of the brief testimony of Asseblyman Waldman in his own behalf. It con-tains a lesson for both sides. "Even now Mr. Waldman is but 28 years old. Coming to the country a boy of 18, he learned English, prepared for a technical . school, won a B. S. degree, became a civil engineer, gained in competitive examination an engineering post in the traction tunnels for the city and became an assemblyman all in eight ambitious, industrial years. "The raw Ukranian boy who could do all that under such lieavy handicap in a time so short must have brought to this coun-try qualities of talent and energy whose potential value should be apparent even to a Speaker Sweet. Mr. Waldeman attacks his work as an assemblyman with the same eager mind and tireless vigor; other Socialists in the assembly and the board of aldermen have set similar examples of industry applied to public questions not necessarily political. "Should not Mr. Waldman, on the other hand should not his friends and defenders begin to see that the country which offered him the opportunity for such swift advancement, and whose best non-Social- ist elements have come to his defense now that he is unjustly accused, is not in such dire need as he may ' have supposed of social and political revolution ? "It is not in man to avoid making mistakes; wise men ar " those who best profit by them. Have not both the Sweets and the Waldmans of America made mistakes chiefly through arro-gance and ignorance? Is it not time to begin learning the lesson f their efforts. DIDN'T QUITE GET THE IDEA Japanese Geisha Girl Meant Well, But American Traveling Man Remained Hungry. Baron Rempei Kondo, president of the Japan Mall Steamship company, said at a dinner that he gave recently in New York : "The Japanese are a very clean people. I know an American traveler who will testify to this. "The traveler, half famished, made hi? way one day Into a teahouse in a remote Japanese village. The geisha girl ushered him Into a spotless, airy room, and brought him a cup of un-sweetened tea. As he could speak no Japanese, he tried to explain by signs thut he wanted a full meal, but the girl, though she smiled politely, failed to understand. "So the traveler thought he would resort to another means. He took out his notebook and pencil, drew a fish and an egg, and handed the drawing to the geisha. This time she laughed delightedly, cluppiug her hands and ran from the room. "The traveler was pleased. He waited contentedly for his meal. Five or ten minutes passed. Then the door opened, and two attendants staggered In with a portable bath, brimful of. hot winter, and fc.cake of soap." CHURCH VS. MOVIES. The Interchurch World movement recently asked one thou- - sand workingmen-wha- t was their favorite "social" agency the movies, the labor union, the church, library or what? The replies were set down in the form of a vote. It was found that the labor union, the organization which plays a great part in getting increased wages, was an almost uni-versal favorite. The movies ran the unions a close second. The lodge was popular, also. Many of the men declared they set aside one night each week to attend lodge. The surprising thing developed that a great number were studious. Several declared their favorite form of amusement was obtained at the public library. There were a few who said they enjoyed visiting art galleries. But the Interchurch survey found that one of the oldest of institutions fared badly with the workingman. That organiza- tion was the church. The report of the survey announced that aione of the men questioned was hostile. He was indifferent. The account cl the survey concludes: "The labor union, the lodge even the movies provided a good enough medium for the workingman's hopes and aspira- tions. It did not take much questioning, moreover, to show that - the agitator of social unrest, who has his strongest hold in the city, also was becoming a powerful attraction in social gather-ings. , "From the survey the Interchurch World Movement has drawn the conclusion, right or wrong, that any organization which wishes to interest the worker must be as practical as the labor union, as interesting as a movie and as stimulating as a debating .forum." Startled Even New York. Mrs. Carl Lamb, of Philadelphia, wife of Lieutenant Carl Lamb, U. S. N., recently startled New York by walking down Fifth avenue with a rag doll about twelve Inches tall tied to her arm by a silken cord of about the same length not a pretty doll at all, "just cute," Mrs. Lamb said herself. "Of course, he's got a name," she said. "He's Patsy Dooley. His brother, Thomas Squeellx, Is In Philadelphia with my sister. I have no intention of starting a Fifth avenue fad. I made Patsy to take to China and keep me company when I go there within a few months." AMERICANIZATION AND WHY. Why has the fire insurance business inaugurated an Ameri-- - canization movement? Because its members are average repre-- 1 sentative American citizens and because they have a special tradi-tion of public service to live up to. Fire insurance agents are found in all communities except the smallest villages. They are not visitors, but permanent residents, partaking of all of the: natural interests of their communities. There is no class in the United States which is more completely representative of the solid, progressive American public. Consequently, the remark-- , able response in pledging loyalty and in seeking means for doing real constructive Americanization work does not mean merely' that fire insurance men are loyal; it means that the average American is loyal. The great significance of this enrollment must not be over-looked. It is probably the first real testing of national Ameri-canism that has been made since that of the war itself. "DIVIDENDS AS REGULAR AS THE CALENDAR" YOU TAKE NO CHANCE When you invest your surplus funds or savings In a high class security of a local company the prog-ress of which you can watch. Salt Lake & Utah Railroad Company first preferred Btock is a safe, well secured investment paying regular quarterly 7 per cent dividends. Present price yields better than 7 per cent on par value of $100.00 per share. Ask for descriptive circular and other information. A. J. ANDERSON, Auditor, Salt Lake & Utah R. R. Co. P. O. Box 1169, Salt Lake City. Or J. W. McHENRT, Traveling Representative, Murray. 8ALT LAKE & UTAH R. R. CO. Salt Lake City, Utah. Strike Oil In Morocco. Important petroleum development are expected from the French districts of Morocco where one small well, lo-cated at Dgecel, Is producing three tons of oil a day. Twelve more wells are being drilled. Government com-mittees supervising supplies of gaso-line for France are considering leas-ing the petroleum springs at Pechel-brow- Aisnce, a short distance north-west of Strasbourg. Exemption of pe-troleum from import duty is contem-plated, and many Important Industries are transforming their furnaces so that oil may be burned instead of coal. Hard-Wea- r Department Advertisement "Bedroom suits, oak and satin walnut." Woodn't suit ua; our pajamas must be of more pllabla material. Boston Transcript Chinese Masons Celebrated. A sea lion, a fusillade of crackers, a banquet, and the rnlsing of the Chi-nese flag, Indicated to the Victorian town of Echuca that a branch of the Chinese Masonic society had been formed. Chinese from all parts of Victoria attended the ceremony and the mayor and councillors of 'Eehuca were guests. The Chinese master of ceremonies was interviewed by re-turned soldiers who objected to the flying of the Chinese flag alone. Aus-tralian and British flags were at once hoisted to the top of the flagpole. urk.bh Women. Turkish women nev-- r Rer In Chris-tian houses nnk'ss as occasional chnr-wome-ir washerwomen. Greek and Artnenlnn women, on the other hand, are the mainstay of the Cons'aptlrople housekeeper ; even Turks ofte; employ them to keej) their big house. Soldiers Left Books Behind. Mystery surrounds the "(lumps"' of books which are snld to be lying In various camps in France, awaiting dis-posal. At one enmp 400,000 volumes are said to have accumulated, and there are reported to be still larger collec-tions at other camps. Inquiries In official quarters and among the organizations which sent out books to the troops during the war have failed to trace (he owners of these derelict volumes. Great Value ot Redwood. Redwood lumber Is largely used oil the Pacific coast, as It lias great nat-ural resistance to rot and Are. Heart redwood when placed In contact with the ground will remain in good condi-tion for 25 years or more, whereas a great many other species rot out Id a few years. The redwood lieartwood Is also able to repel the attacks of fungi, because of the presence of tannin, oils and reslna ob-noxious to fungi. . Used as Washboard. The sides of a new vacuum washei for luundry purposes are corrugated bo It can be used as a washboard. To Develop French Water Power. A bill for the canalization of the Rhone and the employment of water power was introduced In the French chamber of deputies on August 9. The cost of the scheme Is estimated at francs ($482,500,000) and the total power to be obtained will not be less than the equivalent ob-tained from 5,000,000 tons of coal, or one-fift- h of the coal production of France for 1918. Keeping Up the Good Work. "I'm tryln'," said Jud Torklns. "not to be one of the fathers who get over cheer when they fold up the Santy Glaus suit an' .put It away In the at-tic" |