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Show ..-y"- : ;' , - v.." ; V THE BINGHAM NEWS, BINGHAM, UTAH ? ' ; : r " '; ' : - ;V" ; l: 1 that evening:. , Mrs. Henry Heringer and Mrs. Alma Blum were visiting in Salt Lake Thursday. Ctiips and Shavings! I From Lark ' W. J. Fahrni, Harry Rowland, and Elbert White left camp the past week to investigate leasing proposition in the several mines 'of the Tintic District. It is un-derstood Mr. Fahrni has already signed up a lease on the "Blue Rock" property. -- Edgar B. Lindsay of the Mur-ray Auto Co. was in camp this week and delivered new Ford automobiles to William Critten-den and E. W. Moore. The Sunday School classes of the L. D. S. church are preparing ,to give a program in the near future, under the supervision of Mrs. R. P. Nell. Miss Edith McMillan of West Jordan was the guest of Miss ' Mildred Christensen on Sunday last. LARK SOCIETY Mrs. William Trupin enter-tained Saturday evening at a birthday party for her little daughter, Evelyn. Games of var-ious kinds were the feature of the evening. A delightful lunch-'-'-eo- n was served to twenty-fiv- e little guests. - . Mr. and Mrs. P. Savage, Ruby and Mrs. Alma Slaughter to Midvale Friday evening. s d I Mr. and Mrs. William Page Jynd children of Riverton visited ZZZx Lark Sunday. I 4 Mr. and Mrs. Percy Penpraze, Lislr. and Mrs. Robert Meyerhof-- fer motored to Riverton :, Sun-day. Mrs. T. W. Brown and chil-dren of Salt Lake who hava been visiting in Lark returned to their home Friday. Mr,, Warren Moore who has a position in Bingham, visited with his family in Lark Sunday. Miss Clara Hatt entertained a few friends at a party Friday ev-ening. Games and, music were enjoyed by the Misses - Emma Sandstrom, Mildred Christensen, Mary Peterson, Anna Hatt and Messrs Leonard Steel, Glenn and Marvel Nell, Norman Crittenden and Lynn Arnold. Miss LaVon Magee left Fri-day for American Fork where she will visit friends. ' Miss Marguret Webb returned home from Riverton Wednesday where she has been visiting for the past three months. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Christensen, Mr. E. Arnold and Mr. Nord-ber- g motored to Saratoga Springs Friday to spend the day. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Parks and children of Riverton were visiting with relatives here on Sunday. The many friends of Mrs. A. P. Heimingsen will be glad to know that she has sufficiently recovered from her operation in Bingham to return to her home here. Mrs. Joseph Atkinson, Mrs. Jim McLaughlin and little son Jim visited with relatives in Bingham Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nell of Riverton motored to Lark Satur-day to visit with Mrs. Dave Ma-gee. Mr. and Mrs. Magee- - re-turned to Riverton with them TOWN OFFICIALS OF BING-HAM 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. : ; i Town .Marshal, , W. F. Thomp-son. . - Night Patrolmen, John Mitch-ell and Thomas Mayne. , Water Master, Wm. Robbin3. Health Officer, H. N. Stand-ish- . JVIINT RESOlfS 18 East Second South Street v - SALT LAKE CITY Where the boys from the Camps Meet , PHIL M. RALEIGH, Proprietor . V D, Pezzopane x Fancy Imported and Domestic Groceries. Foreign Money Or-de-rs and Drafts Notary Public, Steamship Agt. Banco of Naples Correspondent NEW WASATCH HOTEL SALT LAKE CITY Modern in Every Respect. Clean and Home Like. Three Blocks from D. & R. G. Depot 78 WEST BROADWAY Charlie Uren Proprietors Jack Cumow , 2 Cook With ! ELECTRICITY . hnti You will have hours of leisure instead of I j hours of cooking drudgery if you own an I , 1 electric range I j Cool, Clean, Safe i j Convenient, Economical j I An electric range is simple and easy to I use. You need only turn the switch to ,1 the correct temperature, and your cook- - I j , ing will take care of itself. H Now is the best time to select the type of electric range best suited to your needs we offer any style and size in stock on special EASY TERMS Utah Power & Light Co.. ' "Efficient Public Service" i FOR SALE Household fur-niture for ten rooms. Mrs. B. Youkum. Adv. V-.- -. . :LJ2r. SERVE BREAD Have you ever sat down to a table where no Bread was served? How flat and tasteless 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 man tumraiio AUTO TRUCK SERVICE Long or Short Haulage Service you can depend upon Thone 124 Main Street ARTHUR C. COLE Attorney-At-La- w Bingham Canyon, Utah Avvocato practicio in Corte degh Stati Uniti- - in Corte degh Stati Utah , j You Won't be Sorry If You . Give Me a Trial Grover's Garage I do my own work. Fords and Chevrolets a Spec- - ialty. Storage and Accessories. 228 Main St., Bingham O'Donnell & Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS and EMBALMERS Bingham Canyon Phone 1 7 Edward J. O'DonmH Mjt. Main O:-lic- c. Salt Lake City. Phone Wasatch 6-t- 6 1 SUMMONS ' In the City Justic's Court in and for Midvale City, Salt Lake County, State of Utah. Frank Soter, Plaintiff vs. Geo. Defendant, Summons. The State of Utah to the said defen-dant: You are hereby summoned to ap-pear before the above entitle Court within ten days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise within twenty days after the service, and defend the above entitled action, brought against you to recover six dollars for goods, wares and merchandise with costs herein. And in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered aeainst you according to the demand of the complaint. WILLIAM WATERS. Justice of the Peace Rogers & Rogers, attorneys for plaintiff, Sandy City, Utah., K EM PETE MIXING CORPORATION Principal place of business, Midvale, . Utah. There are delinquent upon the fol-lowing described stock on account of 1922, the several amounts set opposite Assesment No. 3. levied on May 10, the names of the respactive share-holders. No. No. Names : Cert, shares Amt. N. S. Smith 1 345 1.73 W. B. McGinnis .... 3 1000 A.ou Willis T. Vincent .... 4 570 2.85 Geo T. Wood 54 920 4.60 J. R. Wheeler 6 1800 9.00 J. R. Wheeler 27 1000 5.00 Mrs. G. A. K. Bittles 9 70 .35 J. Melvin Palmer....l0 285 1.43 Robert Palmer - 2000 10.00 F. R. Kemp 44 - .22 J. H. Brown 15 2800 14.00 Ross Rizzuto 2600 13.00 Olof Peterson 89700 448.50 Mrs. S. R. Kemp .... 95955 479.78 Frank Neville 22 ' 345 1.73 F. W. Kemp 1425 7.13 Geo. Peterson 55 80 .40 Albert Butcher 5833 28.16 Alice K. Beebe 49 , 345 1.73 Ernest Parduhn 1000 5.00 A. F. Parduhun .... 4300 21.50 Herman Parduhn 1000 5.00 Niels Lind 3000 15.00 i And in accordance with law and order of the Board of Directors, made On the 10th day of May, 1922, so many shares of each parcel of stock as may be necessary, will be sold at Midvale p.iatoffice, on the 31st diy of July, 1922, at 12 o'clock noon, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, to-gether with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. I NIELS LIND, Secretary, f Midvale, Utah. ; The above sale ha3 been post-poned by order of the Board of pirectors until Aug. 5. J . Niels Lind - Secretary Did It Ever Occur to You That the modern girl could have much malice in her heart, she is always willing and ready to kiss and make up. . That if they had to turn their grindstones fewer people would have axes to grind. That Jim Forbes is pretty classy these days with his new Chalmers car. That Red accuses us of getting contaminated with the Irish world. . That some of the farmers would welcome a return trip of the seagulls. That a grievance is about as inspiring as a dead cat, the soon-er it is buried the better for all concerned. That in the old days after a man saved his first thousand dollars he thought he was rich, new he buys a car and takes his folks out to the country. That if marriage was a failure we wouldn't be here. That Sweden has been the last country to advise Emma Gold-man to keep a moving. That lots of simple laws get balled up in their interpretation. That one form of desecrating the Sabbath is to try and beat a train on a crossing when you are operating an automobile. . . That without a strike once in awhile the benefit funds would never get spent. That both men and women do a lot of sensible things at the risk of being called old fash-ioned. - That Clark, the News job printer can quote prices on any printing you may need. Phone 91 and tell him your wants. The newest type, clear and distinct, issued. That as a rule the fellow who is said to be a joke acts very seriously at times. That the meek will have to inherit the earth if they get it. That a straw vote may not amount to much but it will have a tendency to show which way the straws are blowing. a that Paris is the only city in the world that provides public baths for dogs. In Bingham there are none, not even for hu-mans. That Fred Johnson, the paint-er, is still receiving orders for painting at the office of the Bingham Mercantile Co. That nothing can be gained by senseless argument and hasty conclusions. ... That people miss many good things by failing to ask for them. That according to the latest statistics savings in the banks of this country exceed $16,500,000,-000- . That "Pussy Foot" Johnson told the students in England "he liked a glass of whiskey." That II. G. Wells, a confessed unbeliever, placed Christ at the head of the list when asked to name six of the greatest men in hitsory. That ground floor investments often have deep cellars under them. That by concealing the truth one frequently advertises it. That the future is what we hoped the past might have been. That its not what the player does in a baseball game but what the umpire says that counts. That money cannot buy an "We of love, but it can pur-chase tons of sympathy. ' i I , Chief End of Brain . A well-know- n politician tells this one on himself. A burlier while trim-niln- r his locks, remiirked : "You have a lurjre head, sir (snip snip). It's a hie thing to have a large 1iead, for a large houd means a large iraln, and a large tiralu In the most useful thing a man can have, for Jt furn-th- e roots of the hair. Boston Trunscrlpt Let Miserables. The work of a chlr tllrei-to- r I hard, imt Is not wliolly without hu-mor. JUvently a nmn was telling of his experiemva with the hoy choir of nn English cathedral. "I wa teaching them," he said, "to chant the Litany and flattered myself that we were get-ting along unusually well when I no-ticed the words they were chanting for the response. Every last one of tin m was saying, 'Ixrd, have mercy upn lis, miserable singers!" Surely It was true enough of most of them." Youth's Companion. Sneezing Once Presaged Death. in the ancient world sneezing was the subject of much superstition, and was almost always endowed with sinister import. Jewish folklore has it that In the first ages of the worm snoozing was always a presage of death until the coming of Jacoh, Thai aslule patriarch, anxious i,.st he him-self should perish from such nn m-- ' significant cause, besought the to endow sneezing with more beneficent attributes anil since then il has been lucky to sneeze between noon and midnight. |