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Show 5 ' TOE BINGHAM NEWS. BINGHAM, UTAH ' jhAv . Jim's Old PlacF Bakery Restaurant Combination Building D. Pezzopane Fancy Imported and Domestic f Groceries. Foreign Money Or-ders and Drafts v Notary Public, Steamship Agt Banco of Naples Correspondent J w V SERVE BREAD Have you ever sat down to a table where no Bread f was served? How flat and tasteless the whole meal 1 seemed! , 1 Bread is the one food indispensable, and the only j food of economy to-da-y. v j GOOD BREAD ! is the Bread you eat twice as much of because it's so delicious. ' v Fresh every hour. " STANDARD BREAD CO. 536 Main St., Phone 187 I BINGHAM CANYON - ; WALNUT CAFE v UA Little Better Than Good Enough" ""P Private Tables For Ladies ond South Salt Lake City, Phone Was. 10254 .... , i ARTHUR C. CfOLE Attorney-At-La- w Bingham Canyon, Uteri Avvocato practicio in Corte degh Stati Uniti in Corte. degh Stati Utah I AMERICAN THEATRE 523 Main Street I - I The above Building will open I Saturday Dec. 2nd with the J I latest releases of Fall and Winter Motion Pictures. ! " ". ' l !. ENTIRELY RENOVATED rrom J FLOOR TO CEILING f X I Under the Management of J ! H. C. JOHNS 4 - ,. ,. t 4 $ ;. .5. 4- - - $ ? - ! ! .;, ;. When in Salt Lake City se-cure your room at the NEW WASATCH HOTEL 78 West Broadway, for ac comodations like home. Jack Curnow and Chas. Uren Proprietors Matt Contratto AUTO TRUCK SERVICE Long or Short Haulage Service you can depend upon Phone 124 . Main Stnv-- t Let MRS. NETTIE E. BERRY take your orders forall kinds of cut flowers and potted tiowers. Phone 363m - 215 LJpd Eveiii fairy Tale jyjAMW GRAHAM BONNER. EDDY ESKIMO DOQ Tre been asked to tell my story," aid Eddy Eskimo Do. "And I will do the beat I can." Soma one has asked for It, I believe, and some one else Is going to put It In-to words that people can understand. "I don't know that I have much of a story to tell; but I have had grand-fathers and grandmothers who could have told stories that were wonder ful and hair-raisin- g and all other ex-citing things that stories often can be. "Xou see, the days when my grand-fathers and grandmothers were about were a good number of days ago in fact I should say years ago. . "In the first place I am called the Eskimo dog. 1 look a little bit like a wolf, I'm told. But I'm not a wolf, oh not - "My name doesn't mean anything as far as I am concerned. I am not responsible for my name. "Now when I say that please do not think that I am ashamed of my name. "Indeed I am not. I simply do not want to receive credit where I should not receive credit It Is the work of my grandfathers and my grandmothers that has given me this name. ,,. "Far, far,, far up North there are ome people known as the Esquimaux. "Oh, they liv very, very far away from where you, who are now read-ing my story, live, "But my grandparents lived far, far, far North., They even did more than "I'm Not a Wolf." that They went as far North at ever people went. ' 'Jr "They went with a famous person known as Admiral Peary. Oh, how far up they went. "Would yon like to know what they went for? I will tell you! ! 'They went In search of the North Pole. Now my grandparents thought that they were going to find a pole at ome very northern place. . "They said when they reached tljat pole they would turn around and cove back. They Imagined that they would hav a little celebration after they finally reached the pole. j "Their Idea was that perhaps they wuld all have a special supper up there and that they would all look tip at the pole and they would bark while the people would say: "'Most noble Pole, how glad we are to see you. We almost thought tve would freoae before we saw yon. In fact a few toes and noses and such odd things hare been frozen. , " 'And even more than that. "'All sorts of troubles have been gone through with for your sake, Great Wooden Pole. f " 'We have almost starved for yon, we have shivered for you, we have longed for you, we have almost given tip hope for you. Cut now we have found yon. . ; "That was what my' grandparents Imagined would be said. "Then they thought that the pol which-th-ey fancied would be very, very enormons wtuld not say anythltif because It would be too wooden to hare any feelings. ; "But they fancied there would some-how be a look of dignity about tb Pole. "And do you know Rlat there wasn't any pole there at) the tLuie? No I Not a pole! "The people had beea speaking of a point very, Tery far north. And they had called It the North Pele. "And they had gone In search of this powit. Jnst fer that they had dragged people through the snow. :, "Oh nell, It was all a part of ad-venturing, only some of my family were a little disappointed when they found out there was bo actual, real pole. "P.nt I am a descendant of this P.ne family of dogs and ta descendant means oue of a fuml'y who follows after, such as a grandchild or even a child, or even a great, grant grand-child. "Yea, I am proud ef my family name because It does mean something In my case, at any rate, when jou consider that my dear grandparents went on these wonderful adventures about which great books hare been written and lectures given and risks run. Xut It was a shame about that pole not being there 1 You see, I suppose In all the years and years that had gone before, no one had ever gone fur enough to put a pole where Uie North Pole fchould have bei-nl- Mrs. A. J. IIatt.and children Alice and Margaret were Salt Iake visitors on Wednesday. Mrs. Dave McGee was a Salt Lake .visitor Tuesday. , Dr. L. A. Stevenson, of Salt Lake City will give one of his capable lectures at the . Lark Ward house on Sunday evening next. This lecture is entitled "Our House Wonderful and Its Care." The public are cordially invited. Bob Rudelich, an employee of the Binham Mines Co. was ser-iously injured by a fall of dirt from the back of the stope where he was working on Thursday He was removed to the Bingham Hospital where after an examin-ation bj Dr. Richards he was found to be suffering from a badly crushed thigh and other complications. Chips and Shavings '! From Lark - - The people of Lark have been paying their, taxes for many years without any consideration whatever from the County Com-missioners. Compared "with Hef-rim-an the adjoining town Lark contributes about two thirds more taxes and never has a pub-lic light been ; installed. The Redwood Road is so thoroughly lit by the county that any stray ... cows lost by any ranchers could easily be seen in that vicinity. Lark is we think entitled to a little consideration in this mat-- . ter and the community would appreciate the efforts of " the commssioners to intall a light-ing sytsem on the county road in Lark. We still do not prefer darkness rather than light, even if ( ur deeds are evil. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Haun and far lily have moved here from . . Birgham this week. V- - , Mr. and Mrs. Fred Turner, Jr. attended-th- e funeral of Mr. Turner's grandfather. J. P. Turner at Salt Lake City on Tuesday last. ' Bill Park returned from Bea ver County this week where he has been engaged in leasing. . Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Moore were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Lanros at Salt Lake City last Saturday, W. Webb came up from Eu-reka and spent the week end here with his wife and family. Virginia and Harold Nordberg visited with their 'grandparents Mr. and Mrs. K. H. Nordberg at West Jordan last week. Miles Hartman was in Lark Wednesday enroute to Butter-- . field where he is installing a heating plant at the U. S. Hotel in Butterfield Canyon, adjacent to the, Butterfield Tunnel. TOWN 19 HELPSfe-- PLAN FOR "CITY BEAUTIFUL" Indianapolis Has Society to Enoourage tht Extension of Front and Rear ' Flower Garden. A Congregationallst pastor of New England has written a book in which he claims that art and religion are es-sentially one and that for this reason ho would have religious life sur-rounded by a beautiful environment He has In mind especially church ar-chitecture and decoration, and the making of worship a beautiful thing, but he would undoubtedly be an en-thusiastic upholder of the plan of the new Indianapolis Flower society for beautifying the front and rear yards of city homes. With the beginning that has beea made Indianapolis has many beautiful districts, but It has the possibilities of being one of the most beautiful cities in the country enthusiastic residents say of, the worldIf all citizens will help to achieve It. This flower so-ciety's work Is not one that Involves large expenditures, either to Individ-uals or to the organization Itself. Its purpose Is to be advisory, to supply soeds when necessary, to give Instruc-tions as to the methods of cultivation of different plants and In general to arouse Interest In the undertaking. Its members have visions of seeing a city full of flower gardens, of vacant lots covered with a growth of petunias or nasturtiums or golden glow from seeds sown in the spring, Instead of the us-n- al crop of weeds. They are even so hopeful that they look forward to a time when the occupant of the hum-blest cottage will feel Inspired to do his part, along with his neighbors, through the improvement of. his prem-ises. Is It an impossible dreamT It should not be. Indianapolis Star. MARK TWAIN'S SENSITIVE EAR Biographer Records Fact That Certain Sounds Would Drive Humorist to Border of Distraction. Murk Twain passed middle life without nmUi meaning more to him than a pretty tune or a prodigious performance, a rather remarkable fact when one considers what an artist the man was in his own field. If Mark Twain had been stone deaf the fact might have been less remarkable, but we have nlrendy noted that he could play the piano sufficiently well by ear to provide his own accompaniments for the negro spirituals, and it is of further record that he was a man so singularly sensitive to certain sounds that they sometimes drove him to the borders of hysteria. Mr, Paine has touched slightly on this peculiarity, but It was actually a more serious con-sideration in estimating the humor-ist's life than the authorized biog-raphy would lead one to believe. He relates the Incident of the clocks In the home of Thomas Nasr, the car-toonist, when Twain and George W, Cable, In the course of a reading tour, lodged for the night with the Nast family. But that was not the only time thnt the ticking of a clock so tortured Twain's nerves that he took high-hande- d means to silence It From "Mark Twuln and Music," by Ralph Holmes, In the Century. ARE THE NATION'S BULWARK Will Never Thrive Where the Majority ef People Own Thoir Own Homes. In the midst of scTmuch restlessness there Is Inescapable the Impression of the persistent stirring of an under-current of radicalism. The feeling is almost as as is the af-fliction, but is none the less convincing for that reason. For the feeling Is by reaction to the fact In such case, spprehensiveness Is a logical sequence, were It not allayed by certain funda-mental factors In American life. From coast to coast and north to south the United States is a country populated by nearly 50 per cent of families living under their own vine and fig tree, figuratively speaking. In short there are by census showing nearly 11,000,000 persons who own their homes In the population of the states. The average, taking the coun-try as a whole, Is 45 per cent of the families as domiciled in homes owned by their heads. The owned home is an anchor of hope always. It Is an Insurance, and It Is reinforced by other millions of homes not home-owne-d that are Just as loyul to the country, the Constitu-tion and the flag. Cincinnati Commercial-Tr-ibune. ' Planting Nut Trees. One of many beautiful things that people in this purt of the country might do, but neglect for want of a lit-tle foresight, Is the planting of nut-beari-trees along the highways. Es-pecially now,' when we are. spending millions of dollars on the roadbed I wont to emphasize this Idea for the comfort and pleasure of future gener-ations. I have not got over my boyish delight in gathering and eating nuts. The walnut is native throughout this region and Is a long-live- state-ly tree, valuable for Its beautiful wood, as our government found when It came to buy the scattered few available for gunstocks. It is almost no trouble to grow, so every community Bhould have miles of walnuts on the roads where everybody could help himself Corre-spondence Chicago Dally News. NOT DUE TO CIVILIZATION Investigator Denies That Baldness Comes as a Result of Habits of Modern Man. Shedding the hair of the head is port of the present evolution of civil-ized humanity, claims Dr. Ales Hrdlleka, of the Smithsonian institu-tion, who has made an extensive an-thropological study of Americans whoso ancestors have lived at least three generations on this continent. It would be wrong e the re-- duced vitality shown by the hair on any particular habits of civilized man or on disease conditions. These may play a part, he says, but the real causers hereditary. The hair tends toward an earlier senility and loss beeuuse It has become of less use tt: man living under modern condi-tions than It was In the past. Nature does not tolerate for long what has become useless or weakened. It Is the men who ore he finds. getting bald, Women lose hair, too, h8 says, but not nearly so rapidly as the males. He iH Hure the women, do not mislead him, as all of them were with their hair undone and freely hanging down. Although Doctor Hrdlh-k- explains the predisposition to baldness among males to Inherit-ance, he adds Words of woe to the flapper by explaining that the reason women have longerclinglng lmlr Is that "possibly the weight of the fe-male hair acts as a tonic."-Sde- nee Srvi-e- . Cfvlw Without Textbooks. Our larger cities have lately Insti-tuted a departure In the tachlng of civics In elementary schools. Text-books are discarded and the outcome of several months' test Is most en-couraging. New York has Instructed the children In 21 subjects, from the food of the city and the dispensation of public charities to the part of the cltiiwn In government and thetnnnnge-men- t of the schools. First-han- d dem-onstrations have beon given of the work of the Are department, and the "project method" sets the children to cleaning up and beautifying the school grounds. The benGts have already ex-tended to entire communities. Scien-tific American. Spoiling It All. "Do you know that next Tuesday Is our wedding anniversary?" "Now, why do you want to go am bring that up, Just when there seemed every prospect of a nlco, pleasant, peaceful evening for once?" I Use for Army Gas Mask. The army gas mask has been found good for use on locomotives moving through railroad tunnels, hut It does not protect against carbon monoxll gas found in mlws or gumm tmml la burning bulldlr.g |