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Show '' ' - ;. THE B1NUHAM NEWS. BINGHAM, UTAH . - V .. - ' ''jj;,;; Matt , Contratto AUTO TRUCK SERVICE Long or Short Haulage Service you can depend upon Phone 124 Main Street -- yifr CaUformaH Board and Room STEAM HEAT AND BATHS Italian Cooked Meals JAMES ROLANDO, Prop. MAIN ST. BINGHAM Let MRS. NETTiE E. BERRY take your orders fcrallkinds of cut flowers and potted ikwsrPhone 363m - 215 When in Salt Lake City se-cure your room at the NEW WASATCH HOTEL v. '78 West Broadway, for ac comodations like home. Jack Curnow and Chas. Uren Proprietors D. Pezzopane Fancy Imported and Domestic Groceries. Foreign Money Or-ders and Drafts Notary Public, Steamship Agt. Banco of Naples Correspondent, Banking Headquarters Make our bank jour financial headquarters visit us often ni.d consult us freely. If you e:ui dismiss from your mind the fact that our only function is to recent deposits and pay checks, we can "nToatly increase our value to each other. " Bingham State Bank ' BINGHAM, UTAH OFFICERS L. S. Gates, Pres. Sherman Armstrong 1st Vice Pres. C. E- - Addcrly, Vice Pres. Leo F. Tictjen, Cashier ; Strength and Your Foundation Solid foundations are necessary for tall skyscrap ers or they would fall Men who would succeed must have a safe and sound st?.rt or they would fail and go backwards. Start to succeed by saving NOW at The Central Bank of Bingham Bingham, Canyon, Utah SERVE BREAD : Have you ever sat down to a table where no Bread was served? How flat and tasteles3 the whole meal seemed! Bread is the one food indispensable, and the only food of economy to-da- y. GOOD BREAD is the Bread you eat twice as much of because it's so delicious. Fresh every hour. STANDARD BREAD CO. 536 Main St., Phone 187 , ; BINGHAM CANYON " LADK iElfiiiliiE General Merchandise Fresh and Cured Meats Lark, Utah Jerome BOURGARD V The Old Time Meat Market at the old Stand where you can always rely on getting the BEST of MEATS. FISH and FOWL- - PHONE 5 WALNUT CAFE ALWAYS THE BEST , "A Little Better Than Good Enough Private Tables for Ladies 61 East Second South St. Salt Lake Cily, Phone Was. 10254 John A. Warmack CANDIES & CONFECTIONERY Fountain Goods of All Kinds Ecrth:r in (he Tobacco Lin?. We came West to take a Change liKOAIIWAY at West Temple 0 Wist ;hl So. St. Phone Was. 8154 Sa!t Lake City i, A JACK'S PLACE G. M. Gregory, Prop. We Se-- ve the Best of Everything Soft Drinks and Eats Phone Wasatch 2881 j 77 Wet 2nd South St. Salt Lake City ' Study Our .Ads ttuiiiiuei'. I'm goliig to send all gifts, aud I'm sure every one will be better pleased all around." "But Just how," Inquired Mr., "Just bow are you going to do this with no extra money?" "Easy," she answered. "Oh, they'll be bumble gifts, of course! But the! elaborate cards they get out nowadays cost as much as small gifts. Our cards cost DO cents apiece aud we bought 20. Now, why not 40-ce- presents in-stead? They carry twice as much sentiment. All our friends will think better of us und we save money." "Huh!" said Mr., returning to his paper. NO MOF.E CHRISTMAS CARDS i " i j Woman Has t.UJs- - Up Her Mind to Make Real Gi.tj to Friend at Hjt Holioa Se.ifcon. ; "Next au-is'.w- " started Sirs.' "Yell, I kl.ow," Intel rupted Mr. ! "Next Christum"." placidly pursued Mrs., "I Kbsill give ail gifts and ,lio curds ut nil.'" j "Hull!" iriiint'd Mr. "Whut'd y' want to i, l aiiUi ji.t us?" ".Not tit all," replied his wife. "I won't spend u cmi more than I spent thi your. l!ut I've sworn olT cards They don't i:ie.ui aii.vthln:; any longer. llui.iiess tli i, is a: d banks send tlie'n in:t. Tl.e.i're 'iminion as tlie in the lip and the nip. That accidents are still hap-pening through the carelessness of people who refuse to keep ice and snow off their side-walk- s. Get busy or you may be the next to get injured. That the telephone' muddle is not settled yet. Did you get your account straightened out alright. That Lincoln's Birthday should have been celebrated differently in this great mining camp. That as soon as the camp be-gins to assume a little life some parties are desirous of spilling the beans. That a man can lie easier when talking on the telephone than if he had to talk to the party face to face. That according to Miss Kaye of the "Salt Lake Telegram" Bingham was named in honor of Sanford and Thomas Bingham who herded cattle and horses in this vicinity. That the Kiwanis Club are do-ing more good "day by day in every way." ' That it is said Jim's Old Place will soon be ed Jim's New Place and from latest reports it will be enlarged in the near fu-ture. Did It Ever Occur to You That the Citizens' Coal and Supply is now handling some of the best coal seen in this camp for many a day. Give them your orders now. That there's many a slip twixt That a noose is the bachelor's notion of the tie that binds. That Eve knew nothing about cooking and less about horticul-ture. That women should have equal rights when they can earn as much money as men for dig-ging a sewer. That the( question of where man sprung from 13 not half as important as to where he is go-- i ing to land. m j That a man's personality does not count for much when his feet 'slips from under him, and he executes a dull thud on the icy sidewalk. . ' j That human nature brings all the happiness, all the sorrow, and causes all the trouble in the ! world. j , : That one way for a diplomat 'in put his foot into his mouth 'is to te'l the truth. c - That thera is no reason ,to make marriage my harded, it scares many bachelors a3 it is. That only a lot of cold cash can make any impression on a marble heart. t That an ounce of common sense is worth a ton of medicine. That Lincoln proved that ,it was possible to bo great onja small income. . ... That if you want some refal ' pie and cake, like Mother used to bake, call at the Standard Dread Co., meet the new Man-ager and give him your rorderC EXAMPLE OF WASTED LABOR One Philadelphia Shop Employs Sixty-Eig- Girls to Pack a One-Poun- d Box of Candy. Slxty-flgh- t girls In a Philadelphia enndy factory are needed to pack a one-poun- d box of candy, writes "Gl-rard- " In the Philadelphia Inquirer. I saw the automatic stokers in an electric plant attended by two men Are the boilers under the engines of 90,000 horse power. There you behold a contrast of la-bor and result. In one case, to meet the fancies of confection eaters, ell that immense la-bor Is employed to put individual pieces of candy In a box. In the other Instance, machines, backed by a few millions, of capital Invested In other machines, can generate electric power sufficient to turn 10,000 wheels over a distance of scores of miles. At other places you may see capital pick up a freight car and dump Its con-tents Into a Rhop as you would put a spoonful of sugiir in your coffee. Lucky that somebody has money to hire such hlg machines to do our work. Otherwise you would be paying treble for what you get. Veteran Indian Dead. The dentli of Wiipatuk on the Qul-nnn- lt (Wash.) Indian reservation tit the reputed nge of one hundred and seven removes the Inst survivor of the original band which made Hie famous treaty with the government In 18T0. Wnpntuli died in abject poverty, al-though he owned a timber claim worth many thousands of dollars. While there Is no way of computing the age of the old Indians who are now passing, Wnpatuk hns long been known as the oldest of the tribe. Hum near the little town of Tahola, Wash., more than a century ago, he lived to see his father's wlgwum re-placed by a thriving town of modern homes. Built with large physique, Wnpatuk took up the burden of war-fare when quite young and was ac-knowledged one of the best shots In the tribe. With the com- - ing of the white man Wapatuk moved farther and farther up the Qulnault, ' hunting and fishing, living the lazy. Indolent life of the g tribes of Puget sound. Whence Inspiration Come. The thoughtful suburbanite wns "talking on the 7:44 out of Uuiphtonn. says the New York Sun. "Now, some folks, he snld, "think best on a rat'ldly-movln- g train. Scrib-bler, for Instance, told me that he gets most of his movie plots out of the air as be Is being rattled along the rails. Others find walking briskly and alone n great stimulus to thought. Some men tell me they get their greatest Ideas while dawdling in a warm bathtub. "Personally I find nothing more In-duces thought than shoveling a heavy fall of snow from our sidewalk and driveway. But unfortunately we don't have more than three or four heavy snowfalls n year. "So that explains It," murmured Cat-lelgl- i. across the aisle. And the first speaker Is still puzzling over what he meant. Fast French Bombing Plana. France Is to have the first plane equipped with a gun, a ' giant for night bombardment, construct- - ' ed by the Service Technique du Sous Secretariat d'Ktat de l'Aeronautlqne. It is entirely of metal, propelled by four motors of 400-hors- e power each. ' Is 0 meters high, has a wing spread of 30 meters, while the fuselage Is 20 me-ters In length. The carrying surface of the wings Is 220 square meters and the total weight of the plane, fully j equipped, Is ten metric t"ns. The plans call for a speed of lljp kilometers per Imnr. i Canada's Fisheries. Canada's fisheries are one of her greatest assets, and large sums are spent by the Dominion government In providing against the depletion of the supply. |