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Show THE BINGHAM NEWS, BINGHAM, UTAH Got Even With Dad. Before Jebson, Jr., went in for his examination Jebson, Sr., impressed upon him not only the flat of his hand, but some sound advice. "Answer every question shortly and concisely, and you won't be fur wrong," said Jebson, Sr. Jebson agreed, but before the ex-amination he had to fill up a form which asked: "Description of father." Jebson wrote: "Stout old man, with red face and whiskers." When in Salt Lake stop at The Alton Hotel I t j Modern Clean Quiet Rates: $1.00 day' and up Sam Lyte, 138 South State Manager Boost For Paved Roads to , Bingham. I Say It With I Flowers il Give us your orders for all kinds of cut flowers, I potted plants and ferns I I NEIL O'DONNELL I Phone 17 I -- DOESN'T LOOK IT . T&P i You can't always judge a Vj&m-JS- t - H yvvr book by its cover and you "M-r-J- rzZ--2 rEM mav think that coal is clean ryM-- rFVl5 and without dost or slag M When .you buy it-- but the I e burning 'tells the tale. Our G$mBW W high grade Liberty or Utah tSfwJ5i' - WW1 Fuel coal is well screened and f T cleaned, and burns with a jrk brightness and heat that will m cook and heat when wanted, '5 N when you buy is at the Citi zen's. Citizens Coal and Supply Co. Phone 39 Bingham. Utah THE BINGHAM & GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY Operates through Package Car Service, in connection with the Union Pacific system between Salt Lake City and Bingham. For convenience of its patrons heated refriger-ator cars are operated in this service, semi-weekl- y, for the protection of perishable freight when weather conditions warrant. II. W. STOUTENBOROUGH, A. W. MALY, Asst. Gen. Freight Agent, Agent Salt Lake City, Utah Bingham, Utah DON'T ASK YOUR NEIGH-BOR FOR THE LOAN OF THIS PAPER WHEN YOU CAN RECEIVE IT 52 WEEKS FOR THE SMALL SUM OF $2.00. SEND IN YOUR SUB-SCRIPTION NOW. NOTICE! Did you ever buy a guaranteed used car? All our Studebaker used cars are guaranteed for 30 days. YVe have a variety of excellent cars Prices right Terms right. We fit your pocket-boo- k. Big 6 Studebaker 7 passenger. Special 6 Studebaker 5 passenger. Nash Touring 5 and 7 passenger. Nash Roadster. Buick Touring cars. Name the car We have it. Our salesmen will be in this city every Monday and Friday. Headquarters GROVER'S GARAGE, 128 Main Street. T. W. Naylor Co., Studebaker Distributors 175 East 2nd South 118 South State Street Phone Was. 3251 Phone Was. 12G6 SALT LAKE CITY Open evenings 8 p.m. Sundays 9 to 5. WE STRIVE TO PLEASE BINGHAM STAGE LINE Schedule Now Effective 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 FARES Round Trip $2.50 One Way $1.50 Salt Lake City Office Semloh Hotel 107 E. 2nd. So. St. Phone Was. 10G9 Royal Candy Co. TWO STORES. . IIome-Mad- e Candies, 1 Chili and Tamalet 2 Light Lunches t BINGHAM, UTAH f x I BUY REAL BLANKETS BEFORE WINTER f ! AT A SAYING j ! EVERY BLANKET GUARANTEED NOT I TO FADE OR SHRINK f I LESS TIM COST I 5 t Beacon Indian Blankets (Wigwam), regular price . 12.00. ( ur sale price, $5.95. Size. IHKM). Beacon .Indian Blankets (Sachem); size (ilixHO; l.cautiful de- - t .signs and enlors. Regular price, $1.").(J(). ()ur .special t sale priee, $7.40. Beacon Traveling Robes, heavy, WixM); just the thing for f auto or camping. Regular price, ifiOO. Special price 2 $0.98. X Beacon Red Blankets, sie (KixsO. Regular price, $12.00 to irl.l.OI). Special price, $0.98. t Stock on Hand for Immediate Shipment I i ' ! Moab Navajo Rug & ! Blanket Company I ! 1 II Resent Street, Salt Lake City Xt O'Donnell & Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS and EMBALMERS Bingham Canyon Phone 1 7 NEIL O'DONNELL, Manager Main Office, Salt Lake City. 1W W.imU.!, 6461 The Bingham News Entered aa Becond-clas- a matter at the poatoffice at HinRham Canyon, Utah, under the Act ot Congress of March a, 1870. Price $2.00 per year, in advance A Weekly Newspaper devoted exclusively to the interests of the Bingham District and its people. Published every Saturday at Bingham Canyon, Utah George Reynolds, Editor and Publisher Bourgard Building, Main St. Bingham Phone 91 Condenser Vernier Leads Over Others Attachment Is Regarded as Superior to Type Now Being Used. Bv H. B. PHELPS There are a great many vernlero now In uae, but the one here described Is superior to the present type In the following ways: It takes up no extra panel space; does not cause the con-denser to turn hard; Is manipulated by a long handle, and la easily con-structed. The design can be easily adapted to any condenser providing It has metal end plates. This vernier attachment consists of three parts, namely, the haudle. the bearing tube and the rotary plate. The bearing, B, la a piece of brass tubing which should make a good running fit on the condenser abaft and la Just long enough to fit between the dial and the shoulder on the abaft. The handle, C, la a piece of stiff brass with an Insu-lating knob, soldered to the outer end This Vernier Attachment Can Be Easily Carried Out on Any Con-denser With Metal End Plates. of the bearing tube, The rotary plate la aotdered to the opposite end of the tube and should be soft copper or aluminum so that when the tube Is In place, the plate can be bent Into ex-actly the light position. In this form, the vernier will turn around with the main condenaer shaft This fact la Dot a serious objection; however. It may be remedied by placing a sheet of mica between the rotary plate and the end plate, allowing a little friction ao aa to keep the rotary plate from moving with the main control. Thla vernier attachment provides a means for the fine variation necessary la close tuning. The Book of Job. Although she did not study the Bible closely she had heard about Job and his mysticism and was inter-ested. "I thought all the tlmo that the story of Job was In the Uible but I hunted all through the one we had and I couldn't id it," she told a friend, and then she added: "But I know some one who has a real old Itlble, and I'm going to get it and see If it doesn't have the story In it I" BELIEF IN ZONING GROWING Figures Show That Mora Than Fif-teen Million Americans Now Live In Such Communities. More thnn 15,000,000 Americana live in zoned cities, towns and villages, ac-cording to figures complied by the di-vision of housing and building of the Department of Commerce. This li about 27 per cent of the urban popular tion of the nation, and indicates the growth of the movement for the "city beautiful" throughout the United Stntes. The department reports that on January 1, 1923, there were 109 zoned communities In the United States as compared with 55 on Janu-ary 1, 1022. The largest zoned city in the coun-try Is, of course, New York, while the smallest coned village has only 131 inhabitants. New York city has been zoned since 1910, and at present 81 per cent of the population of New York stute lives In zoned communities. Sec-ond to New York comes the state of Oulifornla with 71 per cent Minnesota Is third with 58 per cent. New Jersey is fourth with 57 per cent, and Utah Is fifth with 55 per cent. In the num-ber of communities zoned, New Jersey leads the country with 81; New York state Is second with 17, California Is third with 14, and Illinois la fourth with 10. Twenty-tw- o of the fifty larg-est cities are now jsoned. As a rule, the zoning regulations provide that the city, town or village be divided Into districts and that cer-tain districts be set apart for residen-tial purposes and others for manufac-turing. The laws cover the height of the buildings and the percentage of the land they are to cover. This keeps the gnrage and the factory out of the residential districts, making for clean-liness and more sanitary as well as more pleasant surroundings. SMALL TOWN HUMOR j AND PHILOSOPHY By BUCK CAMPBELL If you think before you speak you amy have nothing to buy. Splendid campaign issues can be manufactured by machinery. The man who toils for a dally wage seldom has the gout. If you nurse a grievance long enough it will develop into a festering sore. -- If you want to commit sui-cide take the moonshine route. It Is surer, ltesults guaranteed. Whenever the time comes, if It does, when the men who cre-ate wars have to fight them, there will be no more wars. Occasionally you will find one of those fellows who claims that the world la on the down grade, and you can l)et thut he never did anything toward mak-ing It better. Editorial LEAD SITUATION IS IMPROVED The price of lead seems to have struck bottom and has again taken an upward trend, which promises to reach 7 cents and possibly 7J cents, as quickly as it slipped from that high es- -' tate during the past few weeks. Last week the price started to advance, and' this fact is taken by the gest authorities in lead to mean that other advances will follow. , While the decline in price has not resulted in any curtailment of production by the mining companies of Bingham, it has nevertheless produced a depressing feeling with the leas-ers of the camp at a time when conditions had given an optimis-tic outlook for the industry. The first explanation for the cause of the slump seems to have been the correct one, that it was due to the weakness of the London market and the consequent ten-dency to dump foreign lead on the United States market. This was averted by successive cuts in the domestic price to meet the varying stages of the market in Europe, a movement which prac-tically prevented the importation of foreign lead. The upward turn in the price is said to re-flect improved market conditions in Europe, removing the menace of foreign competition in the do-mestic market. The outlook is more hopeful for an adjustment of affairs in general in Europe, and if this proves well grounded the demand will soon absorb the foreign output of lead, which will leave the American market unhampered and insure the leas-ers and mining companies a prof-itable market for domestic lead. Simple Way to Mount Your Spider-We- b Coil For those nslng, or contemplating the use of spider-we- b coils, the follow. Ing will be found an extremely simple and efficient means ot mounting them on a panel, and novel aa to the meth-od employed In providing the neces-sary variation of coupling. The center or secondary coll ts mounted perpendicular to the rear ot the panel and ts stationary. The pri-mary and tickler colls are attached to Splder-We- b Coil Mounting. the panel by means of small binges. The springs K and K-- l tend to hold the coll 8 out against the cams P and which are made of fiber or hard rubber sheet Nuts Z and Z-- l provide the necessary pressure adjustment against springs T and Y-- l. which cause sufficient friction to keep the cams from moving of their own accord. The rapidity and extent of variation of the primary and tickler colls deiend on the curvature of the two cams. Thus, cams may be mude for rapid or slow adjustment, or a combination, to meet the requirements of the circuit. Tills method ot mounting has the added advantage of practically elimi-nating disagreeable capacity effect HAVE DESIGN IN PLANTING And It la Well to Have Trees and Shrubs in Place Before the House Foundations. Never plant without a plan. It will cost you less In the long run. Tour home will be more beauUful, your planting permanent, your house and lot more valuable. Don't make the mistake of waiting until after your home Is built before planning and planting. It is Important not only to locate your house properly on the lot you should plan the walks, garden, borders, etc., before the house foun-dations are In and Immovable. Don't forget to observe nature's way of arranging shrubs, trees and flowers. In the woods you seldom find trees growing In straight lines, stiff and for-mal. Study the margins and outlines of woods and thickets. You will no-tice Indentations, bays and openings which give you beautiful pictures and vistas. Don't overlook the soft edges, strong, yet hnrmonlous contrasts which nature provides so abundantly. Don't permit your planting to ob-struct the sunlight and ventilation of your home. Don't needlessly cut and prune trees. A good tree on your building site may be the key to a successful planting plan. A good tree, ten years old, Is worth many dollars. Keep It and care for it. TOWN OFFICIALS OF DING- - HAM CANYON Dr. F. E. Straup, President. Boyd J. Barnard, Treasurer F, W. Quinn, Clerk. Board Members, Boyd J. Bar nard, Dan Fitzgerald, R. II. Ken-ne- r, J. A. Wright. Town Marshal, V. F. Thomp-son. Night Patrolmen, John Mitch e!l and Thomas Mayne. Water Master, Wm. Bobbins. Health Officer, II. N. Stand-is- h. Time to Plan la Now. There Is scarcely anything In the smaller places that may not be changed, the city planner finds. For example, In the smaller cities, railroad approaches may be set right; grado crossings eliminated; water fronts for commerce or recreation, or both (Chicago la doing fine work In that direction); open spaces muy be acquired eveu in partly built-u- p sec-tions; a satisfactory street plan can be carried out and adequate main thoroughfares established; public tuiidlngs can be grouped; a park sys-tem can be composed for gradual and systematic development. "AH of these elements of a city plan," says Mr. Nolcn, expert city planner, "are sooner or later. They noiy be had in the smull city with relative ease and slight cost." Col-- I ller's Weekly. Honeycomb Coil May Be Easily Duplicated The amateur enjoys nothing more than to duplicate the results of the manufacturer In his own way. Take a turn around two of the pins Instead of one, as Is the usual practice. Start the winding by taking a turn around one of the plus. Then lead the wire around the eleventh and twelfth plus I ( f f f tut t, By This System of Winding Unit Honeycomb Colls the Appearance of the Commercial Product May Be ' Duplicated. on the opposite side, then hack to the twenty-thir- and twenty-fourt- h plus on the lirst side, then to the tenth and eleventh pins on the oppovi),. sii,., t(,en hack to the t euty-M'con- nnd twenty- - third pins on the first sliie, tt nil so on. After the tirt layer is wound it will he readily seen that an cxa.'t duplicate 0f i the machine wound coil I? obtained. j (4 Melon. and Invention naa tu.llo Nw ) Homei Reflect Community. The future history of America will I"' shaped in large measure by the character of Its hwies. If we con-- ! Untie to he a home-lovin- g people we shall have the strength that conies only from a virile family life. This means that our homes must he attract-ive, comfortable, convenient, whole-some; they must kfep pace with the progress mmle outside the hou.se. As Is the home, so la the Community '"and the nation. Realty Course Popular. JCcal-eMat- e courses are growing more i"iiilar In nearly every part of the country. All the largest cltlen have one or more of these courses g.i- - ir.fr. and they are attended not only by prospective sniecmen but also by In-- ' anil prospective home ownvrs. Every Day, in Every Way. A nc..nti-- t say that man's skill n ft 0:1 u,c, re highly developed In h'w Acconllns to this. l'.,i!,. itofh's uniinNori ouht to he a tutjiht itvee! hull flayer when he grows up. |