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Show (FROCKS OF DARK TAFFETA; I VARIETY IN HAT STYLES ALTHOUGH the extensive and family of crepes still ahowa a disposition to' crowd all other fabrlca off the earth, In the roster of summer dress goods a few Irrepressible favor-ites bold their own. Taffeta, organdie, gingham, and foulard are among those present In every representative col-lection. The first three, having tex-tures entirely different from crepey weaves, provide for variety in the who create, its millinery Into many lovely bypaths, and fashion for thla particular summer has brought a wealth of inspiration to designers. The philandering breezes of midsummer are not more unfettered than the genius of these same designers whe undertake to reflect the glories of the season in bats that are laden with It blossoms and fruits and gny with Ita colors. An appreciative public gives them encouragement and blithely they PRETTY DARK TAFFETAS FOR AFTERNOON tyles, while foulard Is a rival for crepe In suppleness and at the snme time a wonderful medium for color combinations, in a season that Is bent on making the most of color. Along with crepes It plays its part In simple chemlge dresnes and draped effects and we might even have too much of a good thing In thee lovely stralcht-lln- e frocks if it were not that taffeta and organdie and gingham make differ-ent but equally fascinating models that rescue u from monotony in the mode. In the colorful company of slim, summer frocks along come pretty black taffetas for afternoon, like those shewn here, neither colorful nor slim. But entirely confident of their charm. In black especially, and In navy or proceed to translate even dawns and noons and nights Into headwear. NuturaDy variety in hats is unen-dingthere are hardly two alike but many of them have wide brims, and variations of the poke bonnet appear amohg late arrivals. Materials are airy, colors benutiful and very gen-erously received, nevertheless the big black hat that belongs to midsummer Is not without a following. A fine example of the k hat appears at the top of the group illustrated. It Is made of hair braid, its brim curves upward, and Is widened by a border of chiffon. Narrow silk braid forms a .simple scroll design on the underbrlui and a flat rosette of feathers centered with a Jet cabochon UNENDING VARIETY IN FA.TS brown, taffeta frocks know no such word as "fail" In their appeal to dls. criminating women. They have been develoted In many ways, most of tbem with self trimming, relying on the adaptability of the silk for decora-tive features, as In the frock at the right of the illustration. Here tnffeta makes the plcot-edge- d niching thsi trims the long sleeves of georgette end the four panels of georgette that float from the waist line to the hem. The bodice Is shirred Into corded seams and extended tnte a girdle. la the frock at the left four panels, longer thnn the skirt, ore attucbed to It with HQiiures of heavy lace and edged with av tooth trimming of the taffeta. The suiue trimming adorns the short sleeves. fc"UiiiKT ejifWv the faiUi'-- of Uiowt pnt an end to the matter of decora-tion. Another black hut has Its wide brlin upturned at the front. It Is a spirited shape, fittingly trimmed with a flare of fancy feathers thut spring from a cluster of flat roses. At the right of tlie group a leghorn hat finds Its nsual place In the summer's sun, with huge dahllus set Mat agulnst its crown. The hat of straw braid at the bottom of the group barely hints at the poke bonnet In lrt shupe. Its Indented brim Is bound with silk and lout its crown are prtieH with roses nnd other flowers The Bingham News 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 Clark and Reynolds, Publishers. Bourgard Building, Main St. Bingham Phone 91 Tombstone at Parents' j Grave Seized for Debt New York. A tombstone on a plot in a cemetery can be seized and sold at auction to satisfy a debt for an unpaid balance on the stone, it was decided by Jus-tice MacCrate in Queens So- - preme court. The makers of the monument, which was ordered by Joseph.;: Brandl, said that their attorney is arranging to, auction the stone. The firm contracted with Brandl August 26, 1020, to put up a monument and four name posts on bis lot in Calvary cemetery for $1,250. Brandl paid $475 and had the bodies of bis father, mother and two sisters burled in the plot. Other Installments were not met, and after trying 'vainly to find Brandl, the company brought suit & Littli PROBABLY NOT "1 presume my letters to her will be read In court?" "It's quite likely." Bald the lawyer who had been engaged by the de-fendant In a breach of promise suit. "1 dread that The pet names I called her will make me look foolish." "1 wouldn't worry," said the lawyer, soothingly. "The court is used to heating terms of that sort and I don't suppose you thought up any. new ones." A 1922 Model. "I want tc marry your daughter, sir." Tm merely her father." "Of course, and that's why I thought It best to consult your wishes." "Thank you for the compliment, young man. The only time that girl ever consults my wishes Is when she pauses to ask If I'd rather give her a chock or cash." HE DIDN'T UNDERSTAND "How high can your etar reach?" "Huh 7 She's a singer, not a nigh kicker." All Satisfactory. Hla wife has not a bit of sent, Yet thla don't make him blue. For though his helpmeet ta so dense He la a noodle, too. . Prepared. Willis I told my wife Bhe must be-gin to economize and that she must keep account of the housesold ex-penses. Oillls Is she doing it? "She has made a start. She hat bought a $50 desk, a $00 Cling wblnet, and has ordered a $150 adding ma-chine.'' Answers. The Main Idea. "We are here to give the people what they want," said a young mem-ber at a committee meeting. "Shh, my son," said a veteran of-fice holder. "You still have a great deal to learn. We are here to make the people think we are Indispensable In getting them what they want, whether they get It or not." To Bt Prepared. Mr. Perks I want to take up boi-ln- My wife , Instructor But you can't light your wife. Mr. Perks I know it I'm not even going to try. What I want Is to be able to stand punishment." Ameri-can Legion Weekly. Those Mad Wags., She My husband has a phonograph this winter and I must say he seems more contented than he ever was be-fore. ' He I see. To paraphrase Shake-speare, "This Is the winter of his ." DISCORD. Wlfcy You should stop fiddling-awa-your time. Hubby And you harping on tht, strinR. Fooling the Men. A damjei li prankish thing. Phe'll fool you any day. blie lia hir heart upon a string And then h yanks away. Far Thinking. First Doctor What makes you think the patient will die if we don't perform the operation? Second Doctor Tlint I. n't the point. Tills is a new disease, and If he should live without the operation it would a precedent. Life. . Consistent Peter (after harvest Thanksgiving service) Mummy, what are they go-ing to do with nil those apples? Mother They're going to the poor people at the hospitals, darling. Peter (recollecting n recent orgy) Hut 1 thought people went to hospitals to be cured of t u tinny pain? -- Punch. Revlted Veriion. "Helcln riili't (VHu II book without hai in;,' n box of candy close nt hi ml." "in u case llk( tin t reiidiii' inttk. "in a full fhipper." SPAREDMMA SAKE 0F?Af,!ILY Bigamist Placed , on Probation - When Loyal Wife's Plea ? Wins Judge. j TWO WIVES DIFFERENT Second One Wants Man Sent to Prison , as Example While First Wife Asks He Be Returned to His Family. Detrolt. For a stage setting, a somber courtroom ; the chief perform- - era, a confessed bigamist, his loyal wife, the girl he wronged ; the plot a struggle for mustery between the wife's desire to restore to her children ' ' L their fathw.and the girl's demand for " p. justice for her baby and herself; the wife won, y William IL Orton was brought be-- fore Judge Thomas Cotter In Muni ' f cipal court for sentence. Last week j be confessed he had wed BuWa Nicholas June 6, 1921, although he had I a wife, Florence Evans Norton, daugb- - ter of a wealthy Brockton (Mass?) ' manufacturer, and three children, Hv- - lng. Mrs. Orton accompanied ner hus-band and the detective who brought him here from Brockton. When he pleaded guilty she expressed a will-ingness to adopt Huldn's three-months-o- ld daughter. Hazel, If the court made a condition of probation. Two Women In Court . When Orton faced Judge Cotter hla wife and Hulda stood on either side of him. Flanking Hulda were her brother, Arthur Nicholas, and Arthur's wife, with whom she and the baby have 6een living. A probation officer stepped forward and handed to the court a report recommending Orton to be placed on Ave years' probation on condition that he pay Hulda (J I ; week for the support of the child. " ? "Do you want your husband backf Judge Cotter asked Florence. "I surely I do," she answered. "I love him, no matter what he has done, and my children need their father." "And vou?" the ludue turned to Hulda. "What do you say?" The girl'a j eyes flashed. She dug her fingers Into . l the supporting arm of her brother 4nd r bit her lip. I "1 want him sent to prison," she I cried. "Slake an example of him. I j want Justice. Ills word Is no good. 1 Put him where he can't do this to some other girl." Florence threw her nrms about Orton's neck and wept. He comforted i her. She dried her eyes and addressod f the Judge. j Wife Begs for Mate. "She'll get $3 every week," the wife t assured. "I'll see to that. Will make i ( i t ft ft I "What Do You Sayr only $25 a week, but we con scrape along. Please let me take him home." "I deserve no leniency for myself," Orton Interjected. "I am thinking only of my wife and children." "It's high time yon started thinking of them," Judge Cotter told him. "If It wasn't for them you'd be on your way to the penitentiary to serve Ave years." The court announced that Orton would be placed on five years' proba-tion, but warned that If he failed to pay the $5 weekly to Hulda he would be brought back to Detroit and sen-tenced. BLACK HAND FORBIDS BOY VICTIM'S TOMB Threaten to Kill Father of Giu-seppe Varotta, Who Squealed on the Gang. New Tork. The fear of the Black Hand has never yet been lifted from the heart of Salvatore Varotta, al-though It has been almost a year since his five-year-o- son, Giuseppe, was kidnaped and his body thrown into the Hudson river, Frequently agents of the Black Hand come to the corner where Va-rotta struggles to make a living by selling vegetables and fruits from a pushcart, and tell him that the Black "You'll Qst Killed." Hand still remembers that It was on hla testimony that five men were ar-rested for the crime, and that one of them Is AW in the death-hous- e at Sing Sing awaiting execution. Varotta saved every penny possible Cor many months, enough to make a deposit on a monument for the grave of his son. This will bear a portrait of the boy and thla Inscription: "Here lies the remains of Giuseppe Voretta, a boy killed by the Black Hand. He was kidnaped by the Black Hand on May 24, 1921, and bis body was found In the Hudson river, off Piermont, on June 11, 1021. Erected by bis father." "Nobody but me and my wife knew of the monument, we thought," said Varotta, "but the Black Hand found It CJt. A mrs cauc to my pufchbtand and said: 'You mustn't do that, Va-rotta. YouH get hurt, Varotta ; you'll get killed." "Then the man ran away before 1 could call the policeman, who stands near my pushcart all day." AMERICA FIRST Uncle Sam may not know it, but Europe will make him pay for the World War if it is possi. ble to do so. If not by one way then by another. Americans traveling abroad this summer will find Europe a capable coun-try for them to get rid of their dollars.- - It is said that the Amer- - ican who can tour the continent without having to pawn his shirt would be a fit competitor for an Armenian pawnbroker. Barbed wire pockets are the only things that make certain the retention of a nickel. The European trades-- . man, piled to his eyes with native paper money that is scarcely worth the paper' on his walls, spies the American dollar from afar, and the ways he goes after it would shame a Shylock. French hotels have increased their rates until they make the Alps look like rolling hills. Ger-many charges the equivalent of $100.00 for vising a passport,and short change artists, dishonest guides, thievish interpreters and all their kind are reaping a gold-en harvest in Europe. It seems everv time an American turns around the Government plasters a tax on him and if he doesn't turn around he is doubly taxed for not doing so. Steamship transportation is double the pre-war rates, and the service has fallen considerably. Along with it all is the underlying contempt of Europeans for anything American and the insolence born of American open-handedne- ss during the war. We are a patient people, but patience never was a virtue when Europea treatment of Ameri-cans is concerned. This summer one should spend, their money where they will not be robbed by European highwaymen. Spend your money in the land of the free, the great U. S. A., where "America First" must be our fa-vorite slogan. And to the people of the State of Utah we would advocate a good big boost for our State. Utah with its picturesque scenery and its matchless South-- . ern wonderland. Let us one and all investigate the beauties of America first and.keep our. dol-lars on this side of the pond. Boost for a bigger Utah and help to make a bigger and a better Bingham. The First and Seventh Day. The fourth commandment of the Jewish law distinctly commands that the seventh day of the week shall be a day of rest, on which no work of any kind shall be done. The early Chris-tians observed the seventh day for a , lObi tiflie, beCt&K it Wft.ihtf luW oi the land. The fact that Jesus arose from the dead on the first day of the. week led them to meet again on that day, and it gradually became a custom for them to meet on the first day of the week for Christian fellowship. AVIATOR ATTACKED BY EAGLE King of Birds Breaks Neck Against Airplane Strut In Battle In Air. Quantlco, Va. A combat In the air between ao eagle and a marine corps plane, In which the king of the air loet his life, took place near (Jiun- - tlco. Lieut. R. O. Sunderson, flying near the flying field, saw a flock of birds and gave chase. An eagle which had been hovering high over the flock wheeled on his approach and at top speed flew directly toward him. The bird struck one of the wire braces of the plane with such force as to break the brace and the eagle's neck. The bird then was caught In the braces of the plane. The eagle measured seven feet between the wing tips. Cruelty In Trapping Animals. One-fourt- h of the animals caught by steel traps are wtrthleHs. Fifteen per cent escape by chewing off a leg. Many are eaten by other animals and all suffer lingering torture. The Ameri-can Humane society offers prizes ag-gregating $300 for the best essays the public with this cruelty and showing how It may be remedied, Scientific American. Pirate Beee. Bandit wild bees invade the tame hives near Grays Harbor, Wash., and steal and carry away the honey to their hives in the forest. More than one-thir- d of the domestic honey gathered in this district has been stolen by the robber bees. The wild bees make their homes In hollow trunks and cedur trees, where several swarms work on a community basis. ROMANCE OF GIRL, 14, JARRED Sheriff Arrests Bridegroom en Delin-quency Charge Few Hours After Wedding. Itrt Clinton, O. The romance of a twenty-two-yenr-ol- d youth and a fourteen-- year-old girl was blocked here by Sheriff C. J. Starkloff. Earl Williams, twenty-two- , and Burn Besso, fourteen, daughter of Fred Besso of Port Clinton, eloped and were niurrled at Monroe, Mirk. Stark-loff found them a few hours after-ward nt the home of Williams' parent here. Chnrges of Imvlng contributed to the delinquency of a minor have been made agnlust the youthful bride groom. lie pleaded riot guilty. Bull a placed at Jl.WJO. Town in Clsea by Itself. George, a new town on the Colum-bia river, in Washington, will be la a class by Itself, for when coupled with the name of the state It regards itself as the most patriotic place In tlx 1 'nlted Shite. Another acquisi-tion of Humes Is a little crosgroadH 'Hinge in Klir'.viiHt county culled Jnzj. Struck by Lightning In Chair. Fort Wayne, Ind. While sitting In a choir at his rooming house one after-nooo- n OrvJlle Callaway, age twenty-thre- e, wag struck by lightning. 1'uth Uutson, a idster-ln-law- , wus slttlnj; on the arm of Callaway's chair and, al-though shocked, was not hurt serious-ly. Culluwuy was taken t a hospital. lit will recover. |