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Show ( - ' THE BINGHAM NEWS, BINGHAM, UTAH ' " When in Salt Lake stop at The Alton Hotel Modern Clean Quiet Rates: $1.00 day and up Sam Lyte, 138 South State Manager Boost For Paved Roads to Bingham. It With y ! ISayyour orders for y of cut flowers, t : and ferns O'DONNELL 17 f t MJCT1 DOESN'T LOOK IT -- srT i&y 1 Cv You can't always judge a tjmXZ4 gM book by its cover and you KfzJ' iXw may think that coal is clean Hr-fft- Q and without dost or slag ff'qff IB when you buy it but the -- f I US burning tells the tale. Our KwfjSSSmlMl Fuel coal is well screened and OTgSfiiS cleaned, and burns with a fr XV brightness and heat that will fa IMLm- - 'k cook and heat when wanted, 323 N when you buy it at the Citi- - zens. 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-weskl- y, for the protection of perishable freight when weather conditions warrant. H. W. STOUTENBOROUGli. A. W. MALY, Asst. Gen. Freight Agent, Agent Salt Lake City, Ufeh Bingham, Utah DON'T ASK YOUR NEIGH-BOR FOR THE LOAN OF THIS PAPER WHEN YOU CAN RECEIVE IT 62 WEEKS FOR THE SMALL SUM OF $2.00. SEND IN YOUR SUB-SCRIPTION NOW. 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. 1069 NOTICE! Did you ever buy a guaranteed used car? All our Studebaker used cars are guaranteed for 30 days. We have a variety of excellent cars lerms Prices right 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. Friday111' Sa!esmen wiU be in this cit' everV Monday and Headquarters GROVER'S GARAGE, 128 Main Street. T. W. Naylor Co., Studebaker Distributors PhonalUth 118 South State Street Phon w SALT LAKE CITY Open evenings 8 p. m. Sundays 9 to 5. WE STRIVE TO PLEASE j Royal Candy Co. j 1 TWtf STORES. t Home-Mad- e Candies, 2 Chili and Tamalet j f Light Lunches I t BINGHAM, UTAH ! BUY REAL BLANKETS BEFORE WINTER ! AT A SAYING I : EVERY' BLANKET GUARANTEED NOT TO FADE OR SHRINK - LESS THAN COST ! ; Bcon Indian Blanket. (Sachem) ; izc Cfewv i,cami,u, siRiis and coI.ts. Kteular urice tr.m 1 sale price, $7.40. ' 0ur 6l'cclil1 t Beacon Traveling Robes, heavy, (ICxSO; sir iS vcia'rice: I Stock on Hand for Immediate Shipment I Moab Navajo Rug & j Blanket Company !" Ml Regent Street, Salt Lake City O'Donnell & Go. FUNERAL DIRECTORS and EMBALMERS Bingham Canyon Phone 1 7 NEIL O'DONNELL, Manager Main Office, Salt Lake City. Phone Wasatch 6461 I Western Brevities ji from th Many ' l! Western States i; Salt Lake City. Frank Proudfoot suffered a fractured pelvis, when he fell from an electric car on which he was working In a repair shop. Stockton, CaL One man wai killed and fifteen persons Injured In a fire which sturted In the Pbllson hotel here. The fire was one of the most spectaculur and disastrous in the city's history. .1 Alameda, Calif. One person , was instantly killed, another died several hours hiter and three others were seriously Injured when the automo. bile in which they were riding was struck by a Southern Pacific electric train.. Sun Francisco Thomas E. Flynn, former publisher and editor of The Wasp, a San Francisco periodical.. shot and killed himself In the locker room of the Olympic club. He left a note saying that was the cause of his act Washington Sale of 8O.0O0.UK) board feet of timler of the Mormon lake and Sawmill springs unit on the Conconin national forest in Arizona at an average of $2.25 per thousand feet was approved by the department of agriculture, Ogden, Utah Myron B. Niles, an employee of the postofflee department in Ogden for the past ten years, lias been appointed a postofflce inspector for the states of Washington. Oregon, Montana and Idaho. Mahid, Ida. Seven car loads of beef cattle were shipped last week from Mulad to Ogden. Phonelx, Ariz. Property damage estimated at more than f75,O00 was done by a terrific wind and rain storm In the vicinity of Olandale, Ariz. Ilenefer, Utah. Opal Itichins, died of burns suffered when a con. from which she was pouring coal oil on the kitchen range, exploded. Cheyenne, Wyo. Injuries received by Eddie Burgess, full blooded Creek Indian of Schulter, Okla., In the Chey. enne frontier days contest, proved fatal. , Snlem, Ore. James Arnold, one o( the four prisoners who escaped from the Oregon penitentiary returned vol. nntarlly to the Institution. Sacramento. A sixty-stor- y lodge building to cost 7f0,000 Is to he built here by the Sacramento lodge of Elks. Petaluma. Calif In connection with the Sanoma county fair, this city, known as the world's egg basket, will celebrate egg day on August 18. Martinez, Cal. The smelter furnac,. here of the Mountain Copper Mining company, having mines In Shasta county, California, were lighted for the first time since 1918, prepanitory to resumption of activities. Blverton, Wyo. W. C. Whltnker, one of the best known stockmen In Wyoming, and Lloyd Jennings an em. ploye, lost their lives in the flxd when the waters swept away the house In which Jiey were sleeping. Mexleali, Mexico Conditional re. lease of six of nineteen men accused of murder and mansluaghter In con. nectlon with riots here on July 14. ha been ordered by the oourt-martl- a; convened In the case. Ogden, Utah Marlon Jamln, 1, years of age, of Grand Island, Neb., had his right foot crushed he. nenth the wheels of a UnKtn Pacini freight train at Castle Rock. Utah. San Francisco. The passenger steamer W'almea and the freiKQtet Susquehanna wero in collision t"ic entrance to San Francisco harbor, the Walmea suffered slight dumage. Pueblo. Colo. Seven cars of a westbound freight train were derailed on the P. A R. O. W. railway near Shoshone, a few miles east of Glen-woo- d Springs, Colo. Spanish Fork, Utah. Word has been received here to the effect that Nathan Clayson, Jr., aged about U.'t years, had been acclilsntally killed at Angeles. No particulars of the tragedy were received. Monte Rio, Calif. Joseph Peering, hotel manager, was wounded by holdups .who escaped with toot of over $.1,000 alue from the River view hotel here. 1,0s Angeles William L. Cross an aerial photo&rapher, and a lady com. panlon were killed at Santa Fe Springs, when the plane Cross was driving suddenly went into a nose dive and clashed. Salem, Ore. Four convicts escaped from the state penitentiary brick yard here hy concealing themselves in a freight car which was shunted out of the prison grounds. Plackfoot, Idaho Mls Dtlna Stf. fens, Was seriously injured when thrown frm a wagon hitched to a! tfnm that ran away. I.os Ansoles A new federal grand ,1ury impaneled here was Said to have begun an invcHtlgntton of allesei ol ' stock frauds in southern California. No such spirit is permitted among the Bingham Canyon Loyalty' a the key-stone of our creed, loyalty to church, to home, to our fellow citizens, and to the nation. We believe that a fervent love of country and a strong nationalis-tic spirit are necessary virtues and qualities of which we are proud, not for which to apolo-gize. We believe that Ameri-cans have certain moral and spiritual qualities which set them apart, and have faith in the ulti-mate triumph of this people. With those fanatics and agita-tors who seek to destroy our in-stitutions, lower our ideals, or submerge our nationalism, we have neither patience or sympa-thy. This virile spirit of patriot-- ism is part of the requirements for a Kiwanian in Bingham Can-yon. This ideal must have pen-etrated his soul, if he be a true Bingham Kiwanian, for other-wise how can he help to realize the common purpose and work for the common welfare of the community? How can he be a builder without having that in himself out of which a success-ful builder comes? That this-idea- l is the test oath of a Bingham Canyon Kiwanian is clear to all who have watched the club this last year and seen what it has accomplished. As she grows in experience and numbers, it will be more and more her ideal. The ' Bingham Canyon KiwaniaiT, without fuss or feathers, just does things and gets there. As a rule its mem-bers have, in private life, just puttered around to make it com-fy and happy and joyful for everybody. They treat their friends in just the same old way and do not exploit their vir-tues. In fact, the success of the Kivvants Gub of Bingham Can-yon has been just because its members are dandy fellows, who try to do things just a little better than the other fellow, tak-Jin- g one rung- - after another in the ladder of success. Why should they not have put over the paved roads and their other undertakings? .. Editorial I BINGHAM CANYON KIWANIANISM i ! (By Rev. John M. Ryan, C. S. C. I of the Holy Rosary Church I of Bingham.) 1 Less than a year ago the Ki- - , camrHe JUjof Bingham Canyon into 1 existmf-- , Peculiar physical and Social conclKknls' of the world's gratest copper camp i necessitated that the members of . " the Kiwanis be men of action, capable of seeing what ought to be done, and doing it. Men who had been led to see how flimsy and fragile are the usual bar-riers they, set around their own class and group. Men who have had to realize that in a world torn by class dissension and con-flict, all men are at heart pretty ? much alike the employer and the laborer, the scholar and the I untutored, the statesman and the ' humblest voter, the man of proud ? ancestry and he of modest birth. This is the feeling of brother-hood, and this is the urge to unselfish 'service that goes to make up Bingham Canyon Kiwanian, As we learn to love God more and to sympathize with our fel-- , lows, so also do we come to ap- - ; ; . preciaie our nation. Throughout f the land today there is a growing spirit of cynicism in national af-fairs, a distrust in America, her government and institutions, a lack of faith in her accomplish-ments, aims and ideals. It man-ifes-ts itself in a destructive crit-icism of our art, letters and in-stitutions, a distortion of our achievements, a belittling of great Americans, a scorn for the patriotic virtues, an undue con-descension to foreigners, an en-couragement of outlandish prop-aganda, a general contemptuous-nes- s for things domestic, and an uncalled for praise of things alien, j The Bingham News '' y EntereTaileoonIa the postoffioe art Bingham Canyon, Utah, under the Act of Congress of '? March 8, 1S7, ' " Price $2.00 per year, In advance " A Weekly Newspaper devoted t exclusively to the interests of the Bingham District and its people. Published every Saturday ' at ; Bingham Canyon, Utah r. Ceorge Reyvblds, Editor and Publisher ; Bourgard Building, Main St. " Bingham phone 91 ;;Newo Notes ;; I! From All Parts of J ! UTAH i i Ogden Redustion In the price of gasoline 3 to 6 cents a gallon within the week was predicted here by of oil distributing compan-ies. J-Mantl The Manti fish and Game club has recommended a closed sea-son on chickens In Mantl canyon this year to the state fish and game de-partment American Fork. Zane Adams, suf. fered a crushed ankle, necessitating an amputation of the foot, in an auto-mobile accident near the point of the mountain above American Fork. Provo. The recoyery of a Ford roadster which was stolen from in front of the Chautauqua tent was effected by th sheriffs office. Provo. Three truckloads of min. nows, from the state fish hatchery at Sprinerille were placed in the Provo canydn streams by members of the Utah County Fish and Game Pro. teethe association. Provo Ed Young of Provo was nr. rested for intoxication ly a loc&J police officer, and upon his arraign, ment before City Judge J. B. TucKer waafined $50. Murray Jose Grosse. alles Jim Pane, living at Holliday, was arrested and charged with voilatjng the pro. blbltion law. A thirty-gallo- n still, eleven gallons of whisky and 400 gal. Ions of mash were confiscated. Punguitch At a mass meeting at Panguitoh steps were tnken for the the organization of a new tank to take the place of the lately defunct State bank of Garfield. Ogden Fifty dollars fine was im-posed upon P. Beck by Judge D. H. Roberts in the city court when he pleaded guilty to the charge of speeding an automobile upon the Canyon dugway. Bingham. The Odd Fellows hall In Copperfleld, which was recently purchased by the Utah Copper com-pany, is being torn down and a num. her of modern brick houses wiU be constructed. Moab. D. H. Madsen, state fish and game commissioner, has notified K. C. Clark of Moab that a supply of trout fry Is ready for shipment from the state fish hatchery as soon as It can be, taken care of here. Pleasant Grove. Word was receiv-ed by V. V. Lim of the accidental death of his brother, Arthur Lim, at Casper, Wyo. No details were given as to the nature of the accident. Tark City. The service station owned by William Mawhlnney was entered and most of the stock, con-lsitln- g of tires and tubes, tohacfjt' and cigars, was taken. Hyrum Leland J. Brown, 15, was accidentally fntnlly shot while on a camping trip in Blacksmith Fork canyon. Ephraim A barn owed by Frank Anderson was destroyed by fire. The fire was caused by lightning. Elslnore Fire burned the roof of the Wiley , Herrings house before It was extinguished. The loss is esti-mated at $1,000. Smlthfleld The cutting of dry farm grain commenced this week. The dry farm grain here this year Is bet-ter than has been for the past few years. Ogden. Retaining walls are under construction at all dangerous points in Ogden canyon. Marysvale The outbreak of ty-phoid in Marysville, which occurred several weeks ago is laid to the eat- - f lng of infected ice cream In a report made to the state board of health. t4 Hrlgham City. Shirley Anderson, 1 had his right foot amputated Just above the ankle at the Pearse hog. J pltal. The foot had been crushed un- - J der the wheels of a moving freight 1 train at the Oregon Short Line rail. nmd yards. 4 4 Ogden. During warm weather all dogs In Ogden and Weber county I must he mur.iled, according to 1'r. f Knv II. Wilson, city and county phy- - 4 siclan. I Loiran C. V. Cardon was elected 4 president of the Camber of Commerce 1 to succeed Vr. It. O. Porter. J Ogden. Struck by the steps of an T Incoming train at the Interurnan de- - pot, Mrs. Fannie Young, 50, is at a $ local hospital suffering from a num. her of bad bruises. X Provo. Hyrum West of Pleasant Grove wa? sentenced by JuU'e J. H. j Tucker to fiO days In the county Jail X for ilrlvlu an automobile while In. j toxlrated. Provo. The assessed valuation of 4 I'tah county fr VMS Is now complete and shows a total of $.11.074,0 to, us t compared with $!U,2r.7,9H7 for VT2. i Hrlgham City. A cur .driven by a f tourist, ran off the Stats highway unj X llpiwd over. The occupants J mith slight bruiies. ": l'OWN OFFICIALS OF BING-- , HAM CANYON Dr. F. E. Straup, President. Boyd J. Barnard, Treasurer F. W. Quinn, Cleric Board Members, Boyd J. Bar nard, Dan Fitzgerald, R. H. Ken-ner- , J. A. Wright. Town Marshal, W. F. Thomp-son. Night Patrolmen, John Mitch ell and Thomas Mayne. Water Master, WTm. Robbins. Health Officer, II. N. Stand-is- h. |