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Show i :'.',' - . ... , i , , ...',.,.,.. i !;- - , . - ' "v v . - ; ' -- : ... SCIENTIFIC BATE . MAKING ESSENTIAL The old "He, rate" for gas, worked well when gas was used only for light in?, but now that it has entered upon euch diversified ue, the "flat ruts" Is determined to the development of gag service on economic lines. "The 'flat rati' should bo eliminat-ed," says George B. Cortelyou, Pres-ident f the Consolidated Gar Com-pany, of New York, "and ga.i com-panies proper supervision of public authority that is,, the public ser-vice commissions of the various states should be permitted to adopt rale schedules that are sufficiently flex-ible to allow an equitable allocation of charges amonj the several class-es of customers. Then one cluiS will not be penalized or favored as com-pared wita another, and each' will have a rate that encourages the max-imum use of gas sei'vice." ' "RoyalL ';. . " 175 Main. Street U- '. The Only Laundry in Bingham that v Maintains a Home Pay Roll Worthy Bingham families are getting their subsistence by reason of this pay, roll and', the . institution is playing its part in civic matters. - In addition to getting the best of service at a Y Erice as low as the lowest your patronage will to build a local pay roll and boost home "enterprise. ,.' ' , . ' If you are not already a Royal patron, try us once. Our service is getting better every " ; PHONE 90 Buy Canned Tomatoes I .There was no pack in Utah this year II You know what that means! , ' " f -- 24 2 1-- 2 lb cans, per case ; -- ' $275 M 24 2 lb cans, per case - $2.50 M 48 1 lb cans, per case - $3.50 HJ We never lead you estray! g I Wells Groteterik I '" THE . California Rooms . ., 590 Main Street : Now under new management, ' thoroughly renovated and modern throughout. Steam heat. $15 per month for single rooms, $20 I for two people. . .:the.;cl FINEST CIGARS and TOBACCOS I in town "' ! : v-.- Purest Candies on the Market I Drop in and see Jack, Tommy or Ed. 451 Main Y j ; A I Bingham and Garfield ' I Railway Company II ' y Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield railway. I n ' Fast daily merchandise cars from Salt Lake City in connec- - I , tion with the Union Pacific System I m, : V USE COPPER t ' Brass piping for $4300 cottage only costs $48.87 more than galvanized iron - fv " ' piping and it will - LAST FOREVER . ' .V 1 . .r .T. II. PERLEYWITS H. L DAVIDSON A't. Gn. Frt & Pass. Agent. , ' , Agent Salt Lake City, Utah. . Bingham, Utah. Fresh Meats and Fish : FANCY IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC ItgSJIV GROCERIES pjm, Foreign Money Orders 7 and Drafts STEAMSHIP AGENT & NOTARY PUBLIC, Banco of Naples Cor. 541 Main Street ' Bingham Canyon ' ' ' " ' "INSPECTED BY STATE BOARD OF HEALTH AND ADMIT- - . w TED FREE FROM ANY GERMS." SHADY NOOK DAIRY V We mpply Milk to our Bingham Patrons direct from our farm. j I ; v Where the Business Men I l ; 521 Main Street 521 ' ; I A Y. V Vi - 5fv.T6s. itiffff.iiii-'r- - st .J fWB1iirf x .': IF YOU WANT TO SEE ONE OF THE CUTEST LITTLE CARS ON THE MARKET, ASK : R. Jay Mitchell about the CHEVROLET COUPE I PHONE 43 ' M:MBI': '';: I ' '.; i .' ; ; -. ; . : v-l Princess Theatre " ft (FIRST RUN PICTURES ONLY) ' i (j . PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK . ; ' 'SATURDAY . 0 Jack Dougherty in "RUN AWAY EXPRESS" 0 : ' : SUNDAY (j . . - ' nm a , A VAUDEVILLE G wen Workman and France? Zwickey in 7 - y ..Novelty Dances. Gwen Beck, soprano; Helen Latimer, y f - pianist. Feature Picture , "WHISPERING WIRES" with x I) y . ; , ,, t Anita Stewart. Our Gang Comedy (1 7j . ' MONDAY l I A f Betty Compson and James Kirkwood in "THE WISE GUY" jf ' ' '.. '; , .'TUESDAY' t' ? ' ' Tom Tyler in "OUT OF THE WEST" , V A WEDNESDAY Q I' Adelph Menjou and Florence Vidor in ' A ; "GRAND DUCHESS AND THE WAITER" THURSDAY AND FRIDAY Q Reginald Denny in "TAKE IT FROM ME" A J ' . , . , ' ' " '" 1 ' f ;" i UTAH WELKLY INDUSTRIAL y A ; i REVIEW Wiethor we know it or not, every citken is vitally interested in. the rate of taxation. Some of us may not have a great deal of property, and our tax notiee may seem comparative-ly insignificant, but even in a case where this is true, the tax burden reaches evedybody jtither directly or indirectly. Gunnison Levan highway is to be graveled, and new bridge built at Flat Canyon. From January, 1925 to July 1920, Utah canned 2,000,600 cases of toma-toes. Tomato crop averaged 10 tons per acre. Truck pack was worth 0. Roosevelt Two carloads of holi-day turkeys will be shipped from Uintah Basin. Magna ".Safety Firslj" skating pool, 10 acres ,only two feet deep, built by Lions Club and Utah Cop-per Company. Heber City President of Utah Woolgrowers- - imports 100 head Rom-neiet- te he?p from Canada. Utah's alfalfa crop estimated at 1,634,000 tons, averaging 3.3 tons per acre. : Salino Highway to Aurora being rushed to rnuiptetion before winter. Ogden Livestock coliseum addi-tions will cost $8,500. ; Ogden Fire insurance rates are lowered following city's plan, r Ogden Salt Lake highway made arterial road, with entrance stops for all who enter the highway. Utah egg sales to New York gain almost 50 per cetit over 1925, and two carloads a day will be shipped from Utah by 1927. During September, Bingham Mines Company arned $22,000, total of $G2,500 for the quarter. Eureka Development .work al Iron King Mine, 12,000-fo- ot level, shows fine ore prospect. Eureka North Standard has done 5,000 feet of work on 900 level, with fine ore prospect. Eureka-Nor- th Beck will drift from 1100 level in new Sacramento shaft. Price Prospect well finds flow oil at 1583 feet, but goes deeper. Black Rock Oil well, drilling here at depth of l.fiOO feet. During September, Utah's state road expenses were $214,264. Syracuse Milk cooling station will be made into large cheese factory . State mine inspector reports Utah mines prosperous, with good wages and little labor turnover, and fine co-operation in safely and better-pro-- I :it!c!.i';n methods. '. Utah estimated to have shala de-posits for t orouueion 23,000,000,00!) barrels oil. ' ; Ironton Pacific Coast Pipe com-pany plant will cost $500,000. Price Work under way on $80,-00- O Massnj temnl, Virgin, oil field in ' Washington County promises big development, Coalville North Summit school-hous- e is reroofed. - ' Junction Utah Cpunty ' shipping 25,000 lambs, worth above $250,000. Morgan $150,000 street and sub-way improvements near completion. ' Eureka Millard County will spend $4,000 in Delta section of Grand Cen-tral Highway. . Ephraim Plan3 under , way, for constructing new canyon resivoir oast of town. . ' ' ' Tintic Standard Company builds six employs:;' residences- at Dividend Mont'cdlo Vanadium mill in Dry Valley, will run continuously, two h'TU '. - 'Monticollo State Bank of San Juan will soon move into new head-quarters. ' ; , :?lor.ticello Bolder Knoll oil well strikes heavy water at 1200 feet. EurokaLossees ship $7,000 car of ore from Iron Blossom mine. " Eureka 'Plutus. mine pays $150,-00- 0 and C' hief Consolidated $115,000 dividend. ' -- , Millard County has 9,000,000 and Uintah Basin 3,000,000 pounds al-falfa seed, thi? year. Clarion Lester Williams of Gun-nison Valley, raises 114 bushels Trebi barley per acre. ; St. George County will begin work on. Hurricane road. Grass. Valley iCheese company forced to build much larger factory. STRICKEN ARMENIA ' Responding with material aid to the Armenians left homLss and starving by a devastating earthquake, the world gives its sympathy as well. Ir ever a people had reason to give up the ghost and say the world is against it, that nation is Armenia. It is not entitled to this last stroke of ill for-tune, the extent of which appears to ba far worse than estimated on the original surveys. It is not a nation-wide calamity, but strikes sickness and terror to all, and is only another of the many, discouraging happen ings to that forlorn and wasted country. Hundreds of person's are duad, buried alive, crushed or burned in their homes. Famine stalks in the wake of the temblor, as, wherever a home or a town was destroyed when the earth took a new measure of ce on that hapless people, the tood supply was wiped out or lies buried beneath the debris, where it will rot before it can be dug out. This new disaster; dealt by nature, follows upon a lon series of calam-ities and oppression. Hounded and decimated by the ruthless hand of the Turk, its territory reduced from time to time, its people scattered until only a remnant of both remain to mark the nationality of a once power-ful and diligent people, it Seems that What is left might as well take up a march and end it in the sea. From the Turks to the insufferable domina-tion of the Russian bolshevists was no change for the better. But, per-sistently sticking to their lives, these Armenians gathered what they could from the remnants, planted their crops and tried to think that the sil-ver lining soon would show. From far across the seas had come help. America, through the Near East Re-lief organization, has furnished seed and equipmant for the sowing of the crops. Then came the last hard blow. It is significant and typical of the Armenian that he saw his home ed by the quake without hope gone entirely, without murmur, but he rejoiced and gave thanks that Mt. Ararat still stood. And herein is the secret of the Armenian's ability to stand for one disaster after another. It is the homing instinct. He will cling to the land of his nativity as long as breath lasts. Exiled, he will return. In slavery 'he will stay.' As long, as the prophetic mountain stands ho will stay. There rested Noah's ark. History has recorded a sorry tale for the dwellers thereabouts ever since. - ' At least, the Armenian must e credited with a purpose and the ten-acity of mind and soul to hold on to it. Surely the reward will come some time, but it will be beyond the desert hill; on the other side of the moun-tain. Adversity will not leave a single one of the race to receive it on this , earth,.. it seems. . THE "FIREPROOF" MYTH , ' .v . "An important truth is constantly being emphasized by the experience of fires' occurring in 'fire-proof buildings, which are not what their name implies. In other words, while they will not burn 'down', they wiil burn 'out.' 'This fact has been demonstrated in several more or less recent occur-rences, in somei instances in fires arising from outside exposure, and again from the contents, inflammable in their nature, becoming ignited and the fire spreading through ventilat-ing shafts and other openings to other floors, where more burnable material i3 stored,'' says the magazine, Fire Engineering. , " . "No-matt- er how fire, resistant the yie structure itself may be, it i only as fireproof as its contents. If the contents "are inflammable, there is just as likely to be a hot "and se-vere fire in the 'fireproof building as in that of less resistent. construc-tion. , ."The term 'fireproof, as applied to buildings, is very deceiving, and its use should be discouraged, as it nat-urally gives to 'those not well in-formed in the matter, a false sense of security which is dangerous in the extreme... "A much more sensible and certain-ly truer term is. that of 'fire resist-ant,' which tells the story of the mod-ern building, and emphasizes its ad-vantages, without exaggeration." " Legal Fratermttet The oldest legal fraternity . la ex-istence Is Phi Delta Phi, which was founded In the University of Michigan In 1800. Other legal fraternities are: Delta Theta Phi, Gamma Eta Gamma. Phi Alpha Delta, Phi Delta Delta (le-gal women), Sigma Delta Kappa, Sig-ma Nu Phi. I ' ! Only Recognized Metal Gold Is the only metal which Is made Into coins by the United States government for anyone who deposits bullion, at the mints or assay offices. All other coins are made from metal purchased from time to time for that purpose as congress may direct AntbitiouM Dobbin v Peaps the horse that crashed Into the restauraht only wanted to demon-strate that he could do whatever an automobile can do. Worcester Even-- , tag Gazette. .'"'' . Hero's Potitlon ' There is never any real danger In allowing a pedestal for a hero. He never has time to sit on It One sees him always over and over again, kicking his pedestal oat from under him, and using it to batter world with. Lee. J , J Embarrassing Moment 'We . are Inclined , to believe ; thf cynic who declared that' no woman Is beautiful when feeding most have teen one when a cream puff exploded as the bit It New Orleans States |