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Show ' r AGE TWO TUB BINGHAM BULLETIN. BlXflTlAM CANYON, UTAH day of November, 1926, and laid auto-mobile is being told for rent from the 11th day of November, 1920, to the present time, at the rate of six dollars per month. CANYON GARAGE, C. A. Morley. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE OF LIEN Notice is hereby given that a BuicV automobile, California license No. 954-03- eng'ne No. 474,387, will be sold al pnbl:c auction on the 17th day of Oc-tober, 1927, at the Canyon Garage, Bingham Canyon, Utah. Said automobile having been stored by F. E. Clark, its owner on the 11th SUMMONS IN THE JUSTICE'S COURT - TENTH PRECINCT County of Salt Lake, State of Utah " Before Ray H. Kenner, , Justice of the Peace Annie M. Roper, Plaintiff, vs.. Sid-ney Smith, Defendant. THE STATE OF UTAH TO SAID DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned to ap-pear within ten (10) days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise within twenty (20) days after such service and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure to do so, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint, which has been filed with said court and will take judgment against you for the sum of Twenty-tw- o and No-10- 0 Do-llars ($22.00) with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum since the first day of May, 1927, together with plaintiff's costs and disburse-ments herein. RAY H. KENNER, Justice of the Peace. EP535 THE Ep; KITCHEN CABINETS iA HIT WMm Nri I'nioa.) . H drtwa circle lbl shut mt out-H- erri Ic. rbel, a thins to flout, But love and I had (ha wit to win: W drew a circle that took him In. Edwin Mnrkham. SEASONABLE SAUCES All sauces are In moot seasons pen onahle, yet there are some esitcclally good with f no d serted only to I spring or full. The foundation sure for all creamed to ops, sauces, au gratln dishes and those esralloped. at well as sou files, (to-- quettes and such combinations, only varies as to the amount of tnlckening and fat for each dish to bt served. The e proportion, using one cupful of liquid, one tablespoonful each of butter and Hour, Is the type of sauce used for thin sauces snd soups These sauces are varied by different flavors and seasonings and may be used for pudding sauces as well as for vegetables where a thin sauce Is liked. A tabh spoonful always means a full spoon leveled oT a knife; a cupful is a bull pint. Measuring spoons and cups are now made of the tandurd site and one should have several to nse In rookery. Be lure that your cup Is really a half pint cup when you make your purchase, as fall-are- s In cookery are too frequent with careless measures.., ' The kind of liquid nxed determines the sauce. Veloute sauce Is prepared with white stock for the liquid Alle-inan- Is made like Veloute, adding the yolk of an egg and a teaspoonful of lemon Juice. Sonblse Is prepared with a cupful of Veloute, two cupful of onion puree and one-hal- f cupful of cream. The o sauce Is the one most renerully used for almost all dishes. It Is thicker than the e and is better liked for creamed vegetable. When preparing satires for esealloped dishes, use the same quantity of sauce as food, adding In alternate lay ers. Cover with buttered crumbs which have been evenly buttered by stirring them Into melted butter. When the crumbs are browned the dish Is ready to serve." With the knowledge of the founda-tion sauce, one with little skill may prepare the most delightful dishes with appropriate sauces. Things That Help. For those who cannot enf meat or very little, or few kinds, there are mdishes which will substitute It nice-ly. Potatoes served with a cream sauce and made rich with good grated cheese. A rich cream soup served with fingers of nicely but-tered toost Desserts when served with a meat-less meal may be of richer quality. Ice cream with chocolate sauce, steamed puddings with rich sauces, and pastry of various kinds may be served If desirable. ' A salad of crisp lettuce with pea-nuts and French dressing or any kind of nuts with mayonnaise. Loaf of nuts may be most appetls Ing, using the chopped outs In the preparation Instead of meat. Serve with a sauce such as tcninto or brown sauce with mushrooms. Mock Saisags. Soak one-hal- f cup-ful of lima beans over night In water to cover. Oook until tender, season with salt and pepper; after puttma them through a coarse sieve add one cupful of bread crumbs, three of butter, a pinch of sage, one beaten egg, with seasoning needed Shape Into small sausage forms, dip Into egg and crumbs and fry In deep fat. Serve with apple rings of fried apple overlapping, around the sau-sages. Stuffed Eflgs. Cook In three quarts of boiling water six eggs. Drop the eggs Into the water, cover closely and set back where they will keep warm but not cook. Let stand 30 minutes, then they will be well cocked and the yolks mealy. When cold, cut each egg Into halves lengthwise and take out the yolk. Mash the yolks with one teaspoonful of finely minced pars-ley and six teospoonfuls of anchovy paste. Fill the whites with this mix- - E ture and arrange them In a buttered J baking dish, stuffed sides up. Cover with a white sauce made by cooking together one tablespoonful each of butter and flour, and add one cupful of milk. Bake covered with grated cheese and bread crumbs, until well heated. When preparing brown sauce re-member that browning destroys some of Its thickening qualities, so more flour should be added to make It of the required thickness A roll of adhesive tape Is one ot the Indispensable In the household. It will, with a wad of absorbent cot-ton, keep a wousd covered nicely. It softens a corn or bunion and may be used to mend a leaky water bottle tn an emergency. The Bingham Bulletin Entered as second-clas- s matter at the pustoffice .at Bingham Canyon, Utah, under the Act of Congress of March ,, 1879. Subscription Trice, per year, in advance ...&JO' Published at 446 Main St., Bingham Canyon, Utah . WALTER C. ADAMS, Publisher beginning:. Known as Lot SI, of Pitt's Subdivision of Block 34, Plat "C, aforesaid, an unrecorded Plat Situa-t- e in Salt Lake County, Utah. Purchase price payable in lawful money of the United States. Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, this 14th day of September, 1927. CLIFFORD PATTEN, Sheriff of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. By Ci L. SCHE.TTLER, Deputy. Powers, Riter and Cowan, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Date of first publication Sept. IS, 1927 SHERIFF'S SALE In the District Court of the Third Judicial District in and for the Coun-ty of Salt Lake, State of Utah, Cen-tral Trust Company, a corporation, Plaintiff, against, Leonard J. Bowers, unmarried, Defendant to be sold at Sheriff's Sale at the west front door of the County Courthouse in the City rnd County, State of Utah, on the 10th day. of October, A. D. 1927, at 12 o'clock noon of said day, that certain piece of parcel of land situate in Salt Lake County, Utah, described as fol-lows, t: Commencing at the Northwest corner of Lot 2, Block 34, Plat "C", Salt Lake City Survey, and running thence South 5 rods; thence East 9 rods; thence North 5 rods; thence West 9 rods, to the place of 3800 ft. where it will be used from April 1st to Nov. 15th of each year for the irrigation of 80 acres of land em-braced in the NW Sec. 6, T. 3 S., R. 2 W., and the-SE- tt SWtt Sec. 31, T. 2 S., R. 2 W., S. L. B. 4 M. As much water as necessary will be used during: the entire year for domestic purposes. This application is designated in the State Engineer's Office as File No. 10162. All protests against the granting of said application, stating the reasons therefor, must be by affidavit in dupli-cate, accompanied with a fee of $1.00, and filed in this office within thirty (30) days after the completion of the publication of this notice. GEO. M. BACON, State Engineer Date of first publication, Sept. 23, 1927 Date of completion of publication, Oc-tober 21, 1927. State Engineer's Office, Salt Lake City, Utah, Sept. 15, 1927. Notice is hereby given that the Western Land Association, whose principal place of business is Salt Lake City, Utah, has made application in accordance with the requirements of the Compiled Laws of Utah, 1917, as amended by the Session Laws of Utah, 1919 and 1925 to appropriate .5 c. f. s. of water from Lohman Spring Area in Salt Lake County, Utah. Said water is to be diverted as follows: From the Upper Spring at a point which bears N. 3S E. 1280 ft. From Middle Spring at point which bears N. 6830' E. 1630 ft and from Lower Spring at a point which beara N. 71 E. 1920 ft all points be-ing described from the SSV cor. of Sec. 31, T. 2 S., R. 2 W., S. L. B. M. The water from these three sprngs will be conveyed by means of three ditches aggregating a distance of "Adventure" Only for Man Physically Fit I And Unit most people think of "ad-venture" when the word "exploration" Is used. To the explorer, however, ad-venture Is merely tin unwelcome Inter-ruptlo- n of his serious Inborn. He is looking, not for tlftills, but for facts about tbc unknown. Often Ms search Is a race with time against starva-tion. To lilui, an adventure Is merely a bit of bad plunnlng, brought to light by the test of trial. Or it Is exemplification of the fact Hint no man ran grasp all the possibil-ities of the future, Serious work Id exploration calls for as definite and as rigorous pro-fessional preparation as does success In any other serious work In life. The first quullflrutioo of an explorer Is a sound and trained body. Exploring Involves the hardest kind of physical exertion, and the capacity to endure such exertion under stress both for long periods of sustained endeavor and In the trying moments of emergency. How preposterous, then. It Is for men who have lived at desks to maturity suddenly to attempt these arduous en-terprises! Roald Amundsen In World's Work. Redly SssrzsJ Tirta for "Dszu" to Depart Rome ruey stories of llcnii Hruiu-ini'l- l, "Kltiu of, the Iiundles," ut the height at his glory a century u, ar told by Lewis Melville lu "George , llrymi liruiiniiell ; Ills Life and Let-ters," recalled a writer In Hie Kan-,sa- s Oily Tlines. It was tnld of this bean that "women admired Mm, but men almost reverenced him." He never married, but that be was not In-different to the charm and companion--' ship of the ladlea, there is plenty of evidence.- - ; , "I muit leave here this morning," ha aid unexpectedly to bis host wlivn staying at a country house. - . k "But," the other expostulated,, "you were not going until the end of the ,t week." "True, quite true," the- beau con-curred, "but I really must be off." His host, however, was not satis-fle-and plied blm with questions un-til at last Drummed, In desperation, blurted out : "Well, the fact Is, I am In love with your wife." v "Why, , my dear fellow, so was I twenty years ago," remarked the lady's husband, hoping to put bis guest at his ease. Then a thought struck blm and he inquired: "Is ahe In love with youT "I I believe she Is." "That alters the case," the host said with decision. "I will tend for your " post horse Immediately.1? ' ;;Get ' lYour jj :: From i: i: Granite I: Furniture Co. i: ; : Isis Theatre Building ! ; ; Bingham Canyon ', Deluxe Confectionery - anc--I Pocket Billiards Ice Cream Candy Soft Drinks-Tobac- co We have installed the i Latest Pool Tables HIGHLAND BOY ' It's Pure and It's Rich ., fif,. Our milk is daily subject T to careful tests for pureness (f,?T,YK':' T and chness. And it must tisp, yj'tv. jf pass these tests, otherwise Sfit" ' it can never reach the table. L "1?.vk J . i v. A x -- I Sr Ty I Njr. Hj ...v i Dfy f BINGHAM DAIRY 1 !t4 J Phone 232 I we w'" 8ar delivery J"-- --" a IJ aj once fTr YOU VMNT meat OF HIGHEST ccAS vfTV THIS BurcHBit. 'JyvSN SHOP YWO MUST . WOT PX66? , S ak3 Yoy win. czc Vc7 A roco SHOP CP ("sO THIs' IS THE QUALITY FOOD SHOP of the town. We are the butch-ers of renown. We are now ser-ving the most fastidious folks with the best meats they have ever eaten and the foods they purchase are delivered at their homes with a speed that's never been beaten. Bingham Meat Co. Phone 5 or 2 O'DONNEL & CO. Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon Utah Phone 17 Wasatch 6461 Salt Lake Phone f I TrmntffUHtm that defies comparison Just thj'nk what Chevrolet offert The COACH you today! $CQC A type of performance that is ' amazing-perf- ect comfort at every Tj,.TtHn te-y- e peed flashing acceleration and dM" remarkable handling ease all Cop. . .625 the marvelous beauty of bodies JLt00? ,695 by Fisher finished in smart col- - SbriS"" 715 ors of genuine lustrous Duco a TheloiSirij" .i motor world-famou- s for power $1 and economy in short, ad- - (cW vanced modern design in every 495 : unit that results in the extreme of AiipSVnio,. satisfactory economical transpor- - Michig.ii fnf inn ! " Chth OmM Because these cars are sold at eThrd.'i0n,3 amazing low prices, they embody n.ncingchgM the most outstanding motor, car uw value in the world today a value that defies comparison! ADDERLEY 8 NICHOLS Bingham Canyon, Utah ' , - i When in Salt Lake Stop at HOTEL HERON 138 E. 2nd So. Attractive Family Hotel Free Auto Parking John D. Sagris PHOTO STUDIO and ART SHOP Prompt Developing and Printing Service Special Price on Christ-mas Portrait Work. ' KODAK FINISHING Copying and Enlarging Picture Framing 421 Main St., Phone 421 ' When in SALT LAKE Stop at the : REX HOTEL 253 So. State Phone Was. 6781 j i 4 Ice Cold Milk - at Wella Groceteria ' - Leave orders for your daily supply which will be de-livered before breakfast. It's safe and clean HOGAN'S DAIRY "Always the Best" MMM4.i.At tTt, , ))tMMMmMMM : WHEN IN SALT LAKE i! ; Visit the j ; STATE CAFE j! J Where you will always get the BEST :: ; to eat at reasonable prices o ; 46 West 3rd South Salt Lake City I: Had Business Reason for Making Inquiry Times were hard, and those who bad bad work clung to It tenaciously. A small steam roller chuff-chuffe- nois-ily up and down a road, which was under repair, and oue of the watched It for a time, studying the engineer Intently. "How do you feel today!" he asked suddenly. "Fine. How's yourself?" came the prompt response Each succeeding day the lounger appeared, always with the same greet-ing. The engineer became curious, al-most annoyed at the persistent in-quiry, and finally demanded : "Say, whnt d'you mean by coming and asking 'how do you feel' every dnyT "Well, you see," drawled the loung-er, "you don't look any too well, and I have a hunch that one of these days you'll have to quit your Job and I want to get It" Vancouver Province. , ; , Solving One Problem of the Crowded City 1 shall be glad to see Hector, your big Saint Bernard, again," said the visitor to the suburbs as the flivver rolled along "Had to get rid of that dog," said the modern suburbanite crisply. "Bite somebodyr "No, but be took op too much space. Saint Bernard's almost as big aa a calf. Belongs to past age, when peo-ple had barnyards and real estate wasn't so valuable. A one fuiutly dog house is economic waste nowadays." ( "One-famil- y dog house? You don't mean to ssy " "Surely do,- - Had dog house re-modeled wlien I got rid of Hcetor. Found, aa 1 expected, that If 1 got a - compact terrier there'd be a nice apartment for a still smaller dog on tlie top floor. Got food top-flo- ten-ant for my own bouse; rent out half of garage:; why not make dog house pay its own wayT" ' "And "does itr ' "Yu bet it does. Let top floor to-ft Pekingese.- Belongs to man down street who hasn't room even for a ' bird Cage." Ladles' Home JouruuL , How to Get Lo$t A pompous elderly man, visiting a certuln rural district, wished tn some ruins In the neighborhood. He Inquired for the oldest Inhabitant, and assailed hlra with such a host of needless Interrogations that the an-cient personage . presently lost bis temper, and said: "111 tell thee better way yet Go straight down yonder, take fust turn-ing through a tater field, past the ISlue Boar, up Mlleston bill, and over the common till you come to the Windy wood; go down till you get Into the middle of that 'ere wood, and then " "Well, and what then?" demunded the old gentleman. f "Then," said the oldest inhabitant, "I'm Mowed If you won't be properly lost !" London Tlt-Blt- Bingham Stage Line Bingham Depot Main and Carr Fork Phone 41 - SCHEDULE Cars leave Bingham at 8. 9 and 1 1 a.m. 1. 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m. Salt Lake City Office Semloh Hotel 107 K. 2nd Soutr. Phone Was. 1069 SCHEDULE Cars leave Salt Lake City at 7. 9 and 11 a.m. 1. 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 p.m. FARES One wav $1.50 Round Trip $2.50 At Small Boy Saw It It is well to be sure that your child knows wherein be Ilea, otherwise your punishment or your admonition Is likely to go astray. Kill Purker Ilut-le- r told a charming story Illustrating this In the Delineator. A child was being asked where a piece of n kf hail gone. To the amazement of his questioner he replied with a tale about a "nocernoss" that bad flown la ttfthe window and eaten the cake. His father, coming home that night, took matters Into his own bands ; he lectured the child on the sin of tell-ing stories that were not true, and accompanied this lecture with a on the habits and limitat-ions- of rhinoceroses. The child was then spanked and put bed. ' Presently the father climbed the stairs to see wLeiher his little boy was repentant "Why Tere you spanked r he asked. "'Cauce noeerosses can't fly." eame the answer. Ground for Suspicion "Look there I" said the washing ma-chine agent who visited the bamlet sufficiently often to be fairly well ac-quainted there. "See those men and boys-- yes, and women, too pointing at Uncle Skinner and grinning after be has passed by. What Is tickling theraT" . "Old Skinner is a widower," re-sponded the landlord of the taven at Squam. "He Is also aa stingy as stone soup, but they've found out that while he was up to the city last week he went to a beautle shoppe and paid a whole dollar to get manicured. And they are kinder putting two nod two together and making twenty-tw- o of if Kansas City Star. ' ' Humane Jchn came running into his father's Study with nose bleeding . copiously, end, while first aid was being ren-- . dered, explained that he had. received a blow' from another boy. "Well, did you hit him back?" In quired father.' "Xo, father, you see, he was smaller than me." Father's heart warmed at such ehlv-ali-- "And, besides, he was a poor boy" ' Father's face beamed at such mag-nanimity." ! "And you can wver tell what those poor boys can do." Sincerity in Reading "Road to see, as fur as you enn," says Sir Henry Hadow, "the differ-ence between good work and had, and you will come to like things which you first of all thought dull, austere and Iraccesslble."-.Tha- t is the secret Whole ver one reads should be read with a critical eye, not merely raced through for the sake of Its passing Interest, but more or less studied for the qualities it possesses. Every book, however poor, contains some-thing new and instructive. IY one reads for improvement as well as In-terest, an appreciation of the best will come as a matter of course." Song "Booster" The term "song plugger" was sp-- . piled to a man with a strong, appeal- - tr Ing voice, who could go from dance hall to cabaret, to open-ai- r moving pictures In fact, any place and sing ' the songs the publishing Arm was try-ing to put over. It was a much more ' direct form of advertising than nny other. Since the war the song plug-ger is not so prevalent owing to ' changes of conditions In the trade. Duttin, the Resourceful Harrison GIbbs tells of a night when the stage manager neglected to place a mattress outside the castle walls as a landing place for Dustin Farnum when be made a spectacular leap In some melodrama. Farnum landed with a thud audible all over the theater. To stave off the laugh he thought fust with the result thin almost Immediately he peeked over the parapet and remarked, "The lake is frozen !" Qualities That Count Wherever you find patience, fidelity, honor, klndnpss, truth, there you will find respectubllity, however obscure and lowly men may be. |