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Show r " THE BINGHAM PRESS BULLETIN PAGE THREE p' Reese, Mabel Neprud, and Bessie Call attended the Nul club meeting nesday evening of this week. COPPflELO Mrs. George P. Johnson and both-er, W. F. ' Adams, are in American Fork for a few days visiting their sick mother. Mr. and Mrs. C C. Colyar and children and Mrs. J .H. Colyar were Salt Lake visitors Monday o( this week. , Miss Adaline Anderson returned to her home in Copperfield after a short visit with friends in Salt Lake City. . Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Knudsen, and Miss Ruby Knudsen were Salt Lake visitors Wednesday of this week. Miss Bessie Kappelle was the guest of Virginia Colyar Wednesday 6f this week. ' Mrs. Robert Burns is ill at her home here. Misses Edith Borg, Gertrude Col-yar, Ruby Knudsen, Alta Acord, June We Solicit Your . Savings and Checking Accounts The First National Banf; Bingham Canyon ,f I-- For Your Health s Sake 1 Finch & Rogers Cafe HEADQUARTERS FOR THE BEST - , THE MARKET AFFORDS FINCH & ROGERS CAFE 20 East 2nd South Salt Lak CUj Open day aid nlfbt Private dining room for ladies You Are Always Welcome at j Burgerys 'Jbt Home of the- .J ' ONLY BILLIARD TABLE IN BINGHAM CANYON MAH JONGG HEADQUARTERS 6 POCKET BILLIARD TABLES Where the Live Ones Meet llllillililillllllllM .r..:- PATCHES TIRE 1 THAT WEAR 1 1 When you have your in-n- er tubes patched see g that they are repaired in 1 a lasting manner. We I see to this if you allow us I to take care of your tire troubles. Bingham Garage & I Storage Temporarily located at H Inglesby's Garage 1 Phone 88 1 Day and Night Service 1 Lincoln FORD Fordson J ; j I Hunting Season Is at Hand t I YOUR HUNTING NEEDS TAKEN CARE t . OF AT . I I Bogan Hardware Company i i maiiim HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL BINGHAM PEOPLE I Shafer's Wilson Gaffe SHELLFISH AND OYSTERS OUR SPECIALTY WE CATER TO BANQUETS AND LARGE PARTIES PRIVATE DURING BOOTHS I 124South Salt Lake City, Utah I Royal Candy Company I Store No. 1 Store No. 2 f Phone 13 Phone 189 jj Home Made Candy ! I CHILI TAMALES ! LIGHT LUNCHES I HOT AND COLD DRINKS ! j Taylor Garage GENERAL REPAIR WORK Sales and Service 228 Main Street .....i.iiiMnHmMMlMluiMmiMIIIHimm fr ' ir I Everybody expects to pay some taxes, but why impose unnecessary taxes oa - , yoursell? f ' Do you realize that every time you 1 drive your car on an unpaved highway f you are actually taxing yourself one to f four cents a mile? h This is the cost of increased repair, tire and gasoline bills. j 1 Highway research has definitely f established these facts. I ' Each year you tax yourself in this way I ; m a good many dollars. ' li t Instead of spending this money for i increased transportation costs, why not invest it in Concrete Highways and il pay yourself some dividends? a ; I Concrete Roads and Streets pay for S ;) themselves in the saving they effect on ! the cost of motoring. 9 Their maintenance cost is so low that il this saving alone returns good dividends S the investment, year after year. si You are imposing an unnecessary tax f !onyourself from which you get no return, . failing to work for more Concrete ? f J Not in a long time have general con-- lf - ditions been so favorable for carrying on 6uch public works as permanent high- - ) j way building. i ' Your highway authorities are ready j, to carry on their share of this great 3 public work. But they must have your I 3 support. I ',' Tell them you are ready to invest in A more Concrete Highways, now. ; I n PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION j J McCornick Buiklinf; ' . ; SALT LAKH CITY, UTAH A National Organization to Improve and I ' Extend the Viet of Concrete ! t ' OFFICES IN 29 CITIES J 1 ' ,, ."- - " - ' - Unless you ask for your brad by name ydu cannot blame your grocer if ho lend you a baf that doesn't suit you. . There are many grades of bread in every store. The grocer hu to carry several kind because he U a public errant, supplying various grade and variede of all food. Butter-Kru- st Is high food value bread, containing all tne element of nutrition. It 1 wt8pleome, pure and satisfying. Get it today. Order it every day. Don't say "bread" say 'BUTTER-KRUS- T for there' a diffrtc in bread! laiWIW" mmmmm...,.,u' , Httt'rM1 i l i I Bemtohanlcvour money ! vhileyouare young. j 1 2 4 When you are young, the whole world is before you and just now - much of it you conquer, rests with you. J The. best start young man can make is to work hard and REGULARLY bank a part of his earnings. It won't be long before j he is. "noticed" and soon the older men are relying upon him and he J rapidly comes to the front. '. 1 Young Man, come in, start that bank account today $1.00 will ' do it and it is up to you to keep up your deposits regularly and sue- - ; ceed. ' We will welcome you ! CENTRAL BAMK OF BINGHAM ! 1 We Seek More Business on Our Record Th Uglift There are curious bird In Africa and the most beautiful birds In tha world ara to be found there. Te have seen them preserved In museum cases, and alive In soologtcal gardens. But Africa has also what Is probably the very ugliest bird there Is In the shoe-bil- l, a large wadiam bird. - IJnmUam Polith Aa excellent polish and preservative for linoleum can se made as follows: Dissolve one ounce of shellac In one pint of methylated spirits and apply with a soft cloth. The shellac must be thoroughly dissolved by allowing the mixture to stand covered op for a tew hours. Linoleum thus treated will preserve Its color for many years. ii MARY 5 1 1 SUCCEEDS 1 .MAIN STREET if 5 j j; By LAURA MILLER j8 8 y . n lfcc:::tc::::;:::cL..j 'by Laura Millar THE YOUNG OLD WOMAN ' "Old Man Coolldge and Old Womaa Coolldge" would be the respectful way In which a delegation of Indians would describe the first two cltlxena of oar land. Long since they discovered that honor and responsibility and wisdom fit mighty well on heads that have learned by experience how to make a borne, rear a family, get along with the neighbors, and otherwise 'make a success of life. . , But the editor of Farm and Ranch la a solitary, dra-matic figure in our civilisation, where we love to put a cap on "grandma" and set her In the chimney corner, a pensioner on our bounty, without In-terests or hopes sometimes without even friends. Mrs. S. E. Buchanan of Dallas might have been Just such a grandma, only she chose not to. At fifty, Bhe bad reared a large family of her own children and started man grandchildren off In the world. But Bhe had no Job that was especially her own. So she made one. She be-came "Aunt Sully," who for thirty-thre- e years has been writing, out of her overflowing experience, on the problems of living. The friends and followers of "Aunt Sally's" column have come to con-sider themselves members of an In-formal league; they number now probably 60,000. They offer her "handshakes," as she calls her friend-ly letters, "from Maine to Mexico, even Alaska; occasionally there Is a for-eign visitor from Brazil, Central America or Japan. "Business Is a new and sometimes difficult life for a girl to find herself In," this adviser of many girls has found. "It's best to begin at home where the Influences of home and for-mer associations can assist her." She sent me the facts for this story with permission to "dress 'em up," and then wrote me post-hast- "Now that It's entirely out of my reach, Tm stricken with stage fright I'm shocked at having said so much about myself. I never did It before. Do please sup-press the ego In the story I" Anybody would feel like confiding In and depending on "Aunt Sally." Sue's wholesome, and quite unspoiled by her power. Her wildest recreation Is an occasional piece of funcywork. She's so comfortably that she'd rather answer from 500 to 600 letters a month by band than have them go through the artificiality of a stenographer's assistance. Tons of Food Served at Feasts in Olden Timet Menus of olden times, when king and robber knights served tons of food and wine to their castle party guests luring feasts which sometimes went "on for weeks, have been appearing re-cently In German newspapers, which aiarvel at the capacities to eat and drink of Individuals living 300 or 400 years ago. An example of a feast at the court ot Hunover In the Sixteenth century, when thirteen different meat dishes were served, has been published re-cently. The menu, compiled from old court records, follows: First section Two kinds of wine loups, baked singing birds, meat pie, venison, mutton breast, wild pork, veal, roast chicken, boiled beef, two kinds of fish, vegetables and wine. Second section Lobster, trout, carp, pickled meuts, lamb chops, roust deer, young roast pig, ox feet, urtlchoke, fig cake, "dessert, wine and brandies. In those days It Is claimed that even In the homes of persons of the, middle class the dinner usually consisted of tlx courses, each course constituting jeven to nine different dishes. De-troit News. A COAL MINING CAREER Did ou ever think of coil-mluln- g your wsy to wealth and happiness? I did once. I was taken whizzing Into a long West Virginia mine "head" on aa electric car. I saw little sticks of dy-namite loosen a whole wall of black diamonds, watched a great undercut-ting sew rip the wall loose at the bot-tom and send It tumbling down al-most Into the shovel of the miner. Somehow It was the power thus re-leased with so tittle effort, not tha fearsomeness of being a mile under ground, that I carried away with me. ' But our state laws have definite Ideas against women as mine workers. ' So the only chance la to make good as an owner. And Leila B. Gunn of Mid-- ' dlesboro, Ky, has done just that Not because she wanted a spectacular ca-reer. Far from It It is because her husband needed help to acquire full ' ownership of a good mine that Mrs. Ounn Is now president of the Lower ; Lignite Mining company. He had msr-'- , rled without capital or expectation of ) the Inheritance that so often deter- - mines ownership of the great under-- ; ground wealth. So the two of them I buckled down to long systematic ' struggle that lasted more than twelve . years. J Meanwhile there were children. The three of thera have all graduated at ; high school, each with the highest . standing In the class, thus setting a ' record for the Ounn family. r And there's the home Itself. Mrs. Gunn planned the Inside of the resl-- dence, and won a newspaper prize for Its arrangement. Then there's the world about them. y Physically, It's wonderful. "We sit on out porch," reports Mrs. Gunn, "and loot out on a million-dolla- r sunset r every evening. We gaze at mountain t scenery such as city people travel hun-- r Jretls of miles to se& We have one I ol the purest water supplies that can be had anywhere." ! But mentally nod emotionally J Well, r I asked Mrs. Gunn about that "I've t won a college' education for my chll- - dren," she answered first Then sh L went on, "I do not come In contact e with an unasBlmilated foreign popu-- lation, and my children's friends are r pure-bre- d Americans. I've many de-- i slrahle friends. I have a good deal of I Influence over the Mlddlesboro schools. t I'm a member of the Democratic slate J committee. And I've bew naked to do X a good donl of r writing oo home economics and politics. rSi'tililea, . the liutnnn nnlnml has bpn used to out-doo- r life and to family life through hundreds of generations. I'lty life U antiiKonlstlc to the entire history ot the rare." |