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Show ' JPACfiFCHJB THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH McMahon Returns from Denver Trip --s . D. J. Hahon returned during the week from Denver, where be went more than ten dayi tgo to vlilt hl parent!. Attend Banquet at Salt Lake Hotel Mrs. Vernon Colyer and daughter, Koyla. attended a banquet In the Newhouse hotel. Salt Lake, Tuesday In honor of A. Buzard of 8eattle, Wash. The banquet guests spent the afternoon and evening at Saltalr, swimming and dancing. VsfVT TD CT7T XT 0f Wilfred : v I J J IvOJuJLJr T. CRENFELL and YOUR BODY THE FRAMEWORK The Arm. Jo o o A Hinge Joint (top) and the Joint of ths Hip. The Joint of th Hip I a all and Socket This Is the Strongest Kind of Joint to Carry th Wslgnt f the Body. Th Sam Kind of Fram, Fitted for a Dog, a Monkey, and a Man will make It. It must be full of Joints or It would be broken up In a few minutes. The Joints make It elastic, and so save shocks from breaking It, and also help to make it possible, for us to move our arms In every direc-tion. This picture shows It a little more clearly. Where the ribs of the box are fixed to the chest hone they all have elustic ends like rubber. You can call It gristle.' You cannot break It by hitting It. It Just bends and then conies back to the same shape. Th Motors. The world thinks a lot of Itself ' nowadays because of the way we can travel about so nicely and so quickly. Hut you remember the trapeze men, the bareback riders, and the 'bronco-busters- ' at the circus, don't youT You will soon see that our bodies are at 111 by far the most wonderful 'moving mrchines on earth so marvelous are ; they that many of the motors In them work day and night, from the day of our birth to the day of our death, and never stop ; and yet. we do not know that they are working, and we cannot stop them, and we cannot order them about. They repair them- - selves while they go on working, and though the force which works them Is probably very much the same as the J force that we call electricity, there Is never any spark-plu- trouble, or any J g that stops the gears from working one single moment ! . t HY EGS again today, Isn't It?" I "No,, arms, father." j "Same thing. Just front legs." "Oh, father I" "Man must stand erect He can see better that way, and turn quicker. 80 he had better have arms on the top Instead of four legs, hadn't he? Can you guess why?" "To eat wlthr "No, he could eat without hands, Ike a pig or a dog. It la In order to enable him to use weapons so as to give hlin greater strength against other animals, and to use tools o as to ' become the real master of the world. Otherwise he could never have killed a lion or an elephant. They would have killed him every tlm they saw him. If you lose your arms It 1 far worse than losing your legs. "Just as the body alts In the basin on the top of the leg with the spine sip the back, so the arms hang from a cap on the top of the body. "Now we will take the same number of bones as we took for the foot, and lay them out as they ought to be to hold Instead of to walk. Now you see we have got the hand laid out. Isn't It like the foot? Only we do not want a heel In the hand to stand on, so those bones have grown small. "Now for the arm. Get two bones like the leg, and we will lash them to- - "The old Romans culled these mo J tors 'muscles.' There Is one kind , which we cannot control, and fortu- - j nate for us It U, for we get tired, and they never do. They arrange to rest J while they work. They are called In- - 4 voluntary muscles; but we have to control the largest, the quickest, and 4 the most powerful, and so, like slaves, J they soon get tired. For example, you want that Is, It Is your wish to ' pick up a spoon and scoop up some porridge from your plate and carry It to your month. Framework alone cannot do that It muNt have a motor J to move the Joints, such as the fingers, 4 or elhow, and move them as they are J llrected. If you didn't command those 4 notors, as you do, they might put the 1 wrrldjw In your pocket, or your nose. 4 Those motors are therefore called vol-- j intnry muscles, plnce you can order I hem to do your wishes. 1 "Rut the most Important of all the muscles, those that drive the great pump, or heart, have all the advant- - j ages of both kinds. "Each muscle consists of thousands j of motors, nil milted together, and all working together. There are GOOXX) j in one muscle of the arm. 4 "These motors work and muscles j suddenly liecome short, either when i you yourself tell them, or when any thing tells the nearest office that t( 4 save accident or to prevent damage tht motor must act Instantly. There ar i special cells always on duty In local J offices which tell them to shorten up 4 at once, without waiting for you to be j consulted, lest you should be too tat 4 We call this reflex action. gether In the same way as before, ex-cept that we will let them turn round on one another, and not strap them so that they cannot move, like the bonea of our leg. Ton fetch them, and I will carry the big bone of the upper arm. Isu't It exactly like the thigh-bone? Ouly as it ha to twist about so much more than the thigh and leg we will not make the socket of the Joint so deep. "Now conies the arch or arm girdle. A you see, It Is made up of the top hone of the chest, the collar-bone-end the shoulder-blades- . But where will you hang the girdle up? It Is ab-solutely necessary for our body to have a pump to keep driving the blood all over the body day and night, be-cause In the blood are all the workers swimming to their work, In every cor-ner of the body. If that pump breaks down once (as our motor sometimes does), for more than even a minute or two at the outside, the whole body dies and goes to pieces. So It has to be ever so carefully protected, and the box to hold It must be strong, as well a elastic, In case anything hits it. H'e will Joint the ribs of this box onto the spine, and hang .the arm girdle around the top. Here Is the box. Tou know It quite well." "Why, It ( the chest. ''Certainly ; a box Is a chest, and a chest I a box. People call It the chest. Everybody should try to make hi chest as big as ever he can." -- What else Is In the chest r "That Is a secret for later on. All we want the chest for now Is to kaaf the arms on. This I how we Bingham Pebple '... , Visit Shady Rest Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Gust, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Doyle and family, John Miss Maurlne Abraham-so- n, Mrs. Lllls Lohr. Mrs. Rose Gust, V. E. Collins and Martin McKienea-v- y, spent the Fourth at Shady Rest on the I'rovo river. This has become a very popular resort of Blnghamlte during the va-cation period. Others recently visiting the place from Bingham are Mrs. Maud Jones, and Mrs. Fav McColeman. FOR SALE CHEAP Party dress, size 36 or 38. Has been worn only once. Inquire at 3!9 Main street. The BINGHAM BULLETIN ... The Only Printing Plant in Bingham Canyon Let us do your PRINTING Phone 91 ... ,iiiiiiim.iiiiyMiiiiMuiimiiM MO Canyon Garage jj t PHONE 333 I! I STAR CARS I Low Cost Transportation ! r ii r Sedan $1140.00 ij Revised Prices of Low Priced Cars ; ; r MODEL M or 4 CYL. CARS MODEL R or 6 CYL. CARS f Tourirtff $726.00 Journ 0.00 j; X Roadster $1049.00 t. Roadster $725.00" Coupe .: ..$980.00 " t Coupe ...$831.00 SPrt Coupe $1147.00 .;; t Cna $850-0- Coach $1046.00 0 Sedan..., $1140.00 !! X Sedan ...$947.00 Landau ..$1173.00 t Comm. Chassis 596.00 Fleet Truck Chass. $1109.00 X ' BINGHAM PRICES X All Cars Fully Equipped with Full Balloon Tires, ', t Motor Meter and Bumpers. We Gladly Talk and V z Demonstrate These Cars at Your Convenience. When in SALT LAKE Stop at the REX HOTEL 253 So. State Phone Was. 6781 JNHN D. Hair and Scalp Specialist 408 Cliff Bldg PHONE Was. 2327 'F-a- 1 Acheap tube can cost you 10 times its priceY. YEARS of THIRTY-NIN- E experience has proved to Dunlop that "cheap tubes" do not pay. That is why Dunlop tubes are made casing shaped. It costs a little more than to build them on a straight pole, as cheap tubes are built. But a casing-shape- d Dunlop tube ' 'is strong everywhere. The outside edge is not weakened by excess stretch. The side next to the rim ha3 no wrinkles to crack with age and blow out. A Dunlop tube protects your casing, because it fits. And your casing is worth ten times the I cost of the tube. B We strongly recommend a Dunlop H tube for every cusing I BINGHAM GARAGE B Adderley & Nichols Bingho.n Canyon. Utah every . j 254 seconds Mttff I L ! someone, htys - f Jf FOUNDERS OF THE PNEUMATIC TIRE INDUSTRY " 1., .;(. I "Tender as Butter" j The delicious flavor of our meats call for a second helping. We take pride t in offering the very highest quality obtainable, and you'll be surprised at I our low prices. j I ED JOHNSON'S j I MARKET j ' : Phone 93 j : Free Delivery i eeeeeeeeeee iri m sscar I rHATO-MfKAT- rv W Tlki we roucHfje. VL C 0ALI.Trte PV'Sfl TUB SF.OSKT ' of keeping and selling the best of meats Is merely the matter of an experifneed butcher's dealing fairly with his patrons. We al- - ways buy the bust in the market and politely sell it to our satisfied customers at a small margin of profit. Bingham Meat Co. j Phone 5 or 205 Postmaster Barnard Gives Kiwanis Club Sme Good Pointers Post master. Boyd Barnard was the speaker at the regular weekly lun-che- oi of the Kiwanis club Thursday 'hf-- .. - v Boyd has just returned from a va-cation trip of three' weeks or more Into the northwest, California, and other points, and Bpyd came home chuck full of Ideas gathered enroute. Postmaster Barnard told of visit-ing a number of Kiwanis clubs, and gave the local organisation soma good pointers on the way the other fellow Is doing business. -- NOr did Boyd confine his observa-tions; to .the doings of Kiwanis clubs. He paid special attention to civic ac-tivities and laid before the local Ki-wanis club a' numb r Of plana for the Improvement, of Bingham, and th bettering of the local Kiwanis club. to the address of Post-master Barnard, the club considered busiijess matters of the. organization. Are Guests 8. H. Abrahamson and wife, were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Davis Sunday afternoon. Animait and Insects Prepare for Winter Ants," Wees, wasps, flies and many other Insects protect themselves dur leg the winter by securing food sup-pile- s and constructing retreats. The wonderful work done ay ants bees, wasps, spiders, butterflies and worm has been studied by many nat-uralists and researches hsve been charmingly deathbed by Lubbock, Fabre, Maeterlinck and other able writers. The underground apartments and terraced homes of the ants, their domestic life, social organization and thought fulness, are among the great wonder of nature. These extraordinarily Intelligent In-sects not only store away an abun-dance of food for winter, but also they provide aphides to he milked and they cultivate fungi gardens and manufac-ture many food substances while pass-ing the winter months underground. Genius, Individuality and temper-ament In animals enable them to solve all the problems of winter which they may at any time encounter, These vary In Individuals of the same spe-cie. Among any group of young ani-mal s or birds or Insects you may no-lic- e Individuals varying In fear, timid-ity, curiosity, suspicion, sociability, aggressiveness and Initiative. Hardly two will be found with slmlar charac-ters and temperaments. They differ as widely a the members of a single hitman fsmlly. The strong snd fear-lea- s members of any species give the leadership and develop the customf which enable them to meet the condi-tion of winter. Countryman Visiting Dr. Clyde Countryman and wife of Spokane, Wash., are visiting for a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Countryman,, Chines Philanthropy Odd Quaint forme of philanthropy are evident in almost every part of China. Funds are maintained for transporting to his native province any man who dies awny from home, another or-ganization provides colllns for poor children, and another sm-let- sets np "drinking fouiiliiliis" of tea or water for the thirsty who are lowest In the scale of Chinese labor. ,t ... . r . , Force$ That Control Th(s tone of tocluty.la the result, Dot o much, of Ui deliberate attempt of the members ,of It, to Influence each other, as of the unconscious action and reaction of tholr. characters. Nor can nyope easily measure how great Ms own 'contribution lias beeu to the good er evil spirit that prevails around him, er how, by casual deeds or action, or even.! looks, he may have Influenced the live of other. We do not carry on our warfare at our own charges, bat the whole weight of the evil that la In our society I dragging u down, and (he whole force of the good that I In It 'Is helping us up. Kdward Calrd. .( i'. Her Choice The modern girl alien culled upon to choose between an average, man and an excellent Job ponders car-efullyand takes the man. Harris-bur-g Telegrtiph. Hoaxed French ScientUtt A French adventurer, Jean Bap-tlst- e Douvllle, received the gold medal of the Paris Ocographlcul society for the most Important discovery In IKK). The award wus tinned on hla book on the Congo a fabrication. ; Quality and Service The customer whom you hold by the sender thread of low price Is here today and gone tomorrow. The cus-tomer you hold hy ties of quality and aervlce Is bound lo you a permanent asset of your business. Weekly Un- - derwHIer. . Named for Nikolai Lenin Lenin mountains will lie the nam of a range niore than l.tHKJ tulles I on J and INK) miles wide with some peaks 11.0(H) feet high, discovered In the Ya-kutsk region by a scientific expedition. |