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Show ' - ' TIIE BINGHAM NEWS, BINGHAM, UTAH ':f The Bingham News Entered as second-clas- s matter at the pestofftce at Bingham Canyon, Utah, under the Act or Congress of March 8, 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 Reynelds, Editor and Publisher Bourgard Building, Main St. Bingham Phone 91 high walls of reserve and claim you choose your friends. Maybe those you choose care nothing for you. Maybe they don't want your friendship. Be friendly; lend a helping hand to the man or woman who has proven to be your friend, irrespective of na-tionality or creed. We are all human, plodding along life's highway, and we can all be friends if we just will be. And some day, like the writer, you will appreciate the helping hand of a friend.' What Is Friendship? What is friendship? Who are our. real friends? These are age-ol- d questions. One does not know if the people whom we meet and entertain are real friends or not. We wonder if ' they would be friendly if we couldn't entertain them. If ( trouble should overtake us would these people who claim to be our friends offer their services, or would they seek someone with-out troubles. Some time since ' we were present at a funeral service where there were only about ten persons. There was a short burial ritual; there were no mourners ; there was no moistened eyes; there was one spray of flowers. His friends tolerated him in life and forgot hi m in death. Still he' was a fellow human gone to meet his Maker. There are people in Bingham who do not know their neigh-bors. Is it right? We think not. Doesn't it seem selfish on your part if you are not desirous of meeting your neighbors and ascertaining their names. No one should live apart from his fellow-being- s. You can be too independent. Some time you will need help. Do you prefer paid help, or the help of a real friend? In rural communities everyone speaks to everyone else. Why shouldn't these conditions exist here. Think well of the other person and he will think well of you. Don't enclose yourself with the "Heartatorium" of the Salt Lake Telegram paid a recent visit to the "Greatest Copper Camp," the editor of the "News" has been persistently tagging her to give our readers her "Impres-sions of Bingham," but, friends or not, she evidently is not "let-ting the cat out of the bag," and is not making enemies. But the fact that she has already prom-ised to pay another visit to the camp in the near future is, we believe, ample proof she is desir-ous of seeing more, and may be of people that I had never seen before; that I wondered what kept the houses from falling off the walls; that I felt a strange sense of great . lengths and heights, minus breadth; that in the hypnosis I found myself wondering quite out loud if the chickens and cows that I saw had not been especially built on long narrow lines, the better to fit into this plan of Mother Na-ture? , "What if 'I don't want my, host and hostess to know that I wondered secretly if they, too, were becoming a part of the "in- - sensible rock,' when I asked them at breakfast what in the world was the occasion of the terrible fuss going on during the night, only to have them look wearily at each other and ask in patient tones; 'Did you hear any- - thing, dear? I didn't.' "What if I'd tell you the truth as indicated in the foregoing? The answer is, I'd never get in- - vited again, and besides, you'd think me a poor reporter. And since I like you all a lot and want to come again; and since the truth about me being a bad reportetr would hurt, I just won't say a word. So there. I know my lines: 'Silence is gold- - en," and even though we are very old friends, I refuse to let you mislead me. "Nope; nary a word will I write." (Miss Kaye was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Neil O'Donnell at the Bourgard Apartments when she visited here.) induced in the near future to give the dear "old camp a real boost. "What was my first impression of liingham? "As you ask it, I gasp again, and over me comes that very strangeness that possessed me as I dismounted from the stage on my recent visit to you: a feel-ing of overwhelming desire to see my surroundings, accompan-ied by the inability to look in any direction but UP. "As I sit me back and review my sojourn in your midst, with all the serenity of looking back-ward, I fear it is just a shade shamefacedly. I think I feel a little guilty that I I, 'who am sometimes called the champion question answerer, wouldn't have been able to answer a single question about the physical as-pect of Bingham until now. And now after letting it all be such a surprise to me, I answer most-ly in gasps and interjections, wearing threadbare the first statement I made in Bingham: 'I didn't think it would be like this,' which, being overheard, prompted you as a thoroughly alert member of the Fourth Es-tate, to suggest this article. "So now, with this assignment in hand, I query me: 'What, oh what, am I to write? What can I, a seasoned writer of heart-bal-do when my impressions, if truthfully expressed, would make me seem a primitive little big-eye- d wonder child, out on my first exploration of things foreign to my little world? What if I don't want you all to know that this is the first time I ever saw a mining town? What if I hoped to keep secret the fact that I thought I'd see in the far-fam- ed Bingham a beautiful, shiny, broad-streete- d little city, complacent there in the solitude of the hills, proud that she's cop-per lined, haughty because she's copper bound, luxurious in her own rich grandeur? What if I'm a little abashed now at the fact that even after I arrived and found I was still in the work-a-da- y world, I thought you'd stop that horrid, world breaking blasting at least during- - Miss Kathleen Kaye of the Salt Lake Telegram Refuses Since Miss Kathleen Kaye of the night that you'd not wholly ignore the fact that you were entertaining a timid guest from a less boisterous world? What if I blush as I think of how I called my hostess during the night to join me in my front bedroom (practically over the street), to tell her there must be a riot and the troops called out for something, only to discover that somewhere, somehow, the world was 'changing shifts?' What if I don't want to confess to you all that I thought your town too quaint and funny for words that I saw some kinds SAVAS BROTHERS ; & JIM KOROBASk H f Wholesale & Retail Greengrocers s I FRUITS & VEGETABLES OfAD Kinds DAILY I XJT ; I; We deliver anywhere any time X ;x ;Xx - ;1 Phone 293 BINGHAM 4, Main Street ; : ;x I ; j THE OUTLET CLOTHING STORE h ; H, r :; ; N UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT " 1 if if i ;; Clothing, Gents Furnishings, Shoes and 4 ;j Hats at Popular Prices f H. WEISBERG, Prop., 505 Main Street, Bingham $ l ,HRy,No) Egg! DOESN'TLOOK IT f f'fX . j 5Va You can't always judge a 7V"j " jfrni book by its cover and you " '. -- 1 rfC anc without dust or slag TjL iVqI ' ' 1 i when you buy It but the "gMi f I in burning tells the tale. Our 1 --v2ibsJi hjEPfflM high grade Libertv or Utah PaTiiilfll Fuel coal is wel1 screened and i MP" cleaned, and burns with a W) WiJk wK brightness and heat that will Mj-- ik A cook and heat when wanted, s? N when you buy it at the Citi zen's. Citizens Coal and Supply Co. Phone 39 Bingham, Utah LADIES, don't forget Mrs. Parsons' Millinery Sale, Tuesday. DONT 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-SCRIPTIO- N NOW. KILLS RATS and mice that's RAT-SNA- the old reliable rodent destroyer. Comes in cakes no mixing with other food. Your money back if it fails. 35c size 1 cake enough for Pantry, Kitchen or Cellar. 65c sue 2 cakes for Chicken House, coops or small buildings. $1.25 size 5 cakes enough for all farm and storage buildings, or factory buildings. Sold and guaranteed by BINGHAM MERCANTILE CO. 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 thi3 service, semi-weskl- y, for the protection of perishable freight when weather conditions warrant. II. W. STOUTENBOROUG1L A. W. MALY, Asst. Gen. Freight Agent, Agent Salt Lake City, Uah Bing-ham- , Utah WAT-SNA- P KILLS BATS Also mice. Absolutely prevents odors from carcass. One package proves tills. RAT-SNA- P comes in cakes no mixing with other food. Guaranteed. 35c size 1 cake enough for Pantry, Kitchen or Cellar. 65c size 2 cakes for Chicken House, coops or small buildings. $1.25 size 5 cakes enough for all farm and s, storage buildings, or factory buildings. Sold and guaranteed by BINGHAM MERCANTILE CO. O'Donnell & Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS and EMBALMERS Bingham Canyon Phone 1 7 NEIL O'DONNELL, Manager Main Office, Salt Lake City. Phone Wasatch 6461 c7ts0"erjbom (fXrftP Spend m BaJ "ek In Salt I VP V' La City Ootober 1 to I. The week of Uuh', treatest Fair. ipCv .M' P h Make hoJ,d tQT the family, Hvil J fTOAn, 2 tims of education and amuse-- !W u$ttZ Meet 5rour frlsnd-- ,,I the 'IT 4 'J IH umPer yields of orchard and 1 1 farm the products of factory and 'hAarJ? f"f mine the blooded livestock and wWfij if greatest auto show In hlBtory. iCjy Se th6 flrwortt. the aerial cir-j- f A NC feus, the racs, the auto polo, and m HV V Uk trlp down the Midway Y,r on t a Fair. Cppyjj Ocfpber Jo6 NOTICE! s - . . 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 Prices right-Te- rms right. We fit your pocket-boo-k. Big 6 Studebaker 7 passenger. Special 6 Studebdker 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 tnday. Headquarters GROVER'S GARAGE, 128 Main Street. T. W. Naylor Co,, Studebaker Distributors 175 East 2nd South 118 South State Street Phone Was. 3251 . pn0ne Was. 12G6 SALT LAKE CITY Open evenings 8 p. m. Sundays 9 to 5. WE STRIVE TO PLEASE Sugar is Advancing Buy Now $10.04 per sack, Delivered Free by Wells Groceteria Editorial NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION M&SIBER No. 1855 VOTE AND BOOST FOR BETTER WATER "The Farmer's Worst Enemy Rats. The Farmer's Best Friend Rat-Snap- ." These are the words of James Bax-ter, N. J.: "Ever since I tried RAT-SNA- P I have always kept it in the house. Never fails, Used about $3.00 worth of RAT-SNA- P a year and fig-ure it saves me $300 in chicks, eggs an feed. RAT-SNA- P is convenient; just break up cake, no mixing with other food." Three sizes, 35c, 65c, $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by BINGHAM MERCANTILE CO. CITURCHNOTI Holy Rosary Church, Bingham Sunday Masses: - ' Every Sunday, 10:30 a. m. First Sunday, 8 :30 and 10 :30 a.m. Copperfield Second and fourth Sundays, 9:00 a. m. Highland Boy Third Sunday, 9:00 a. m. Sunday School after Mass. Rev. John Ryan, C. S. C, Pastor. It Hurt. A stone carver was on the witness stand describing the way In which he uid been asnuulted by the defendant: "He walked right Into my yard and dammed me up against one of my tombstones," the witness said.. "Did he hurt you." inquired the court. "Hurt me?" roared the witness, "why, I've got 'Sacred to the Mem-ory of stamped ail down my buck." Philadelphia Ledger. CHURCH NOTICES L. D. S. Church Dr. S. C. B. Sorensen will de-liver a lecture on "The Book of Mormon" on Sunday evening at ;7:30 p. m. at the ward house. Everybody cordially invited to attend. Evening service on Sundays, 7:30 p. m. Sunday-schoo- l, 10:30 a. m. Primary, Monday afternoons at 3 130, Priesthood meeting on Monday evenings at 7:00 p. m. Relief Society meets on Tues-day afternoons at 2:00. New Nosei. German surgery has profited so greatly by the lessons learned in re-storing disfigured frees of wounded soldiers that it is now possible to sub-stitute a person's face almost entirely. Particularly in affixing new nose or In Htralghtening out old ones have the operators come to be regarded as per-fect Missouri Definition. A puncture is a little hole found in motor ccr tires at long distances from phones or garages. Burlington Junction Post. TOWN OFFICIALS OF BING-HA-CANYON Dr. F. E. Straup, President. Boyd J. Barnard, Treasurer F. W. Quinn, Clerk. Board Members, Boyd J. Bar nard, Dan Fitzgerald, R. H. Ken-ne- r, J. A. Wright Town Marshal, W. F. Thomp-son. Night Patrolmen, John Mitch ell and Thomas Mayne. Water Master, Wm. Robbins. Health Officer, II. N. Stand-is- h. |