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Show To Clean Runty Steel Rusty steel ornaments, Are lroni and the like may be cleaned by being rubbed well with sweet oil, enough of tbe oil being allowed to remain on the article to aoak In for some time. Famoue Genre Painter Malsaonler, the celebrated French genre painter, was noted for ' the microscopic perfection of detail and finish of his pictures. He painted be-tween 450 and 000 of these. About 75 pf them are owned In America. Va The Press-BiiUeti-n --fj ,v.: - ' Entered as second-clas- s matter at the postoffice at Bingham Canyon, Utah, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Subscription Price, per year, in advance .. $2.00 Address all communications to the Press-Bulleti- n at Bingham Canyon, Utah. PHIL M. GOLDWATER, Publisher Ro$e Water at Flavoring Hose water was at one time widely used In flavoring food, and the Chinese still have rose fritters, while the Hin-dus delight In rose candy. Cannot Survive Squalls The honeymoon ends when a couple on the sea of matrimony run Into squalls. . V ODR LABEL is yoar guarantee f I JL ' That ROYAL BREAD is absolutely J J B pure and clean; f I That it is made by expert bakers in a Q modern shop; X H That it is made and handled in a san- - I I itary way; ? VHy That it is the best food obtainable any- - X where in the world. J ltwITho bread thai madclkl I fnS I motlter quit baking ggS tiII BREAD is your best food . J eat more of it Charter No. 11.631 Reserve District No. 12 REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE First National Bank At Bingham Canyon, in the State of Utah, at the close of Business on October 10, 1924 RESOURCES Loans and discounts, including rediscounts, acceptances of other banks and foreign bills of exchange or drafts sold with indorsement of this bank (except those shown in b and c) . ,. $ 8,220.43 Total Loans '. . . $ 8,220.43 Other bonds, stocks, securities, etc. 76,883.50 Banking House, $70,200.00; furniture and fixtures, $3,534.75 ., a 73,734.75 Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Dank 4,959.43 Cash in vault and amount due from national banks 8,769.82 Amount due from State banks, bankers, and trust com-panies in the United States (other than included in Items 8, 9 and 10) 74,525.27 Checks on other banks in the same city or town as re-porting bank (other than Item 12) ... 5,856.05 Total of Items above 89,151.14 Miscellaneous cash item9 .. 48.50 48.50 TOTAL $252,997.75 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in , .. , $100,000.00 Surplus fund 25,000.00 Undivided profits. $3,665.51 Reserved for interest and taxes accrued 1,500.00 5,165.51 Less current expenses, interest, and taxes paid 2,664.88 2,500.63 Cashier's checks outstanding .. . ..... 1,431.35 Total of above items .. 1,451.35 Demand deposits (other than bank deposits) subject to Reserve (deposits payable within 30 days): Individual deposits subject to check 54,378.07 . Total of demand deposits .. . 54,378.07 Time deposits subject to Reserve (payable after 30 days, or subject to 30 days or more notice, and postal savings: Other time deposits 69,667.70 Total of time deposits subject to Reserve 69,667.70 TOTAL :. $252,997.75 State of Utah, County of Salt Lake, ss: I, E. Chandler, Cashier of the above-name- d bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. E. CHANDLER, Cashier. Correct Attest: " GEO. E. CHANDLER, ' v , . J. W. ROOKLEDCE, . : ' TV GEO. W. CREATHOUSE, Directors. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 20th day of October, 1924. , F. W. QU1NN, Notary Public. Energetic Gasoline and Good Oil, Too 1 You'll get both of these at the Bingham Garage Filling Station 1 and lots of extra service. Then, too, the charge is right and M that makes it more reasonable. i Our men are expert in the matter of lubrication and choosing i the proper mixture for your car. They'll be pleased to help I you. ; I BINGHAM GARAGE 8 STORAGE J Temporarily Located at Inglesby's Garage . Phone 88 I DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE i LINCOLN FORD FORDSON j Bill Jime Says Meet Me at the Copper King j "BECCO" ON DRAUGHT ) Bingham Canyon, Utah j I .illliJWiiWli, HiLJUl IIHI UH J uu'i.r iHmmmmrwmtsMmmiMMf 'm' mil'. Let file Cure YearNSS PILES That Quick! T can cure your Piles (Fistula, Fissure and other Diseases of B 1 the Rectum except Cancer a short time longer) without Chloro- - H S form, Ether, Knife or Hospital. Do not doubt this amazing truth! Send the coupon below for Free Information and Convincing Proof H that my method of curing Rectal trouble is reasonable and should 1 B appeal to everyone wishing to avoid a severe surgical operation D jtj with its attendant discomforts and fearful dread that causes to R many sufferers to delay seeking relief and cure. R I . Piles Cannot be Cured with Salves, i I ' Tablets and Ointments j P Ilome remedies at best enn only relieve, thus delaying proper H trentment and a permanent cure. Symptoms of Cancer and other u serious Rectal diseases are thus smeared over and not discovered I 3 until t'K late! If you are a sufferer with Rectal trouble, your I (i condition justifies an intelligent opinion and proper treatment which ; you cannot receive from any patent medicine or from any friend's advice. My experience of more than twenty years In Grand Inland j will be of real value to you if you will only accept it FAY WHF.N I CURCD! I give a life-tim- e guarantee in every case I accept for I treatment, or make no charge for my services, I CAUSE MANY DISEASES! Ji?X'"Z"m UHon tvn mild cM t B Wi L tlitic nroui tytltm, m A "1 2 .VA JL fmt mtnr trMklek r- - V?' VV .) J i tSffVjL --"ST" Mlt which c.n U . J li .I-T- TA br MlUrrf br rpr IUc Z . i g .""u-- p Ultef.hn.nt. ...jf J I Isl. tP" fl" Writ to tWar and J? I 1 n W, th. Mt.r. .f ,r fh j I I n traW. and wbt yon 1 ri.M4.tof.crL LZy I 1 BR. niCIlA,GRAND ISLAND, HEBR. j I Free Information Coupon 444 1 Eg Please send free information in regard to your H I cure for Rectal Troubles to I (I'rint Nm nd Afldrtu and Rut. Whathr Mr., hfr. or Miaa) H r I 1 Town State 1 : j ;jj ! YES! SPECIALS, AS OUR j Meats j ARE ALWAYS OF THE VERY BEST ! CORN-FE- D STOCK X Good Meat Is J ECONOMICAL MEAT X That is what you get when you order Meat X from the BINGHAM CANYON MEAT CO. j PHONE 5 I I Highland Boy Branch X X PHONE 205 1 X 1 You are cordially invited to inspect our new Market at I 460 MAIN STREET i Utah's Finest Meat Market J I Second Hand Cars l At Bargain Prices I 1 Ford Coupe, 1922 model j 1 Ford Touring, 1922 model j 1 Star Touring, 1923 model. I ( The right terms to the right people 1 BINGHAM LIVERY AND GARAGE I I Miles Hartman, Prop. I! El K n i Carr Fork, Just Around the Corner from Main p J ' "WIMMEN" IN POLITICS Of all the arguments against woman suffrage there is only one real sound objection, and that is on account of the passing of the old-tim- e pre-cinct voting place. What formerly was a great American masculine insti-tutio- n is now refined, effeminate, and we 'might say downright uninterest-ing. The great game of "getting-the-votcs-in-t- box" is quite blase a mere legal routine. Woman whose fine hand has shaped the nations now has invaded the last stronghold of man, and driven him like a stag at bay to seek shelter and protection only in the memory of the days that used to be. For wo-man, lovely woman, is "in" politics, and has taken mere man from the only place he had his last say. When it comes to serving on the election board, a woman can wield a wicked pencil, cast a cautious eye, and use a stubborn judgment. It used to be you could spit tobacco juice on the floor when you went in to vote, but now the women will try to' find some law to put you out if your nails are not properly manicured. It used to be you could cuss out the election officials for kidding you about being a Democrat or vice versa; but now since women are guiding the destinies of the ballot emporiums you can't even get into the place if one of the women suspects you're not on her side of the offense. And as for smoking in the booths, that's taboo. The last election there were enough burning cigar stubs outside the door to keep the sheriff and card passers warm without splitting up and burning any empty boxes from the grocery store. It's awful. No more fights at the end of the ropes. While standing around the polls we used to argue so loud over points in the election law they would call for the riot squad for the "bloody 7th," and here would come the sheriff to arrest us, and his posse to fix things up, depending on our political complexion. But it's all different now! I guess! When a point of law comes up some woman says it's so and so, and believe us, it's so and so! And an-other reason it's so and so is because a woman who has got nerve and brass enough to push herself into the sacred precincts of precinct politics that we still believe (although very timidly admit) was designed by the Almighty for men only as we were saying a woman who has reached that point already has reached several other points of supremacy in her own house hold, and it's a foregone conclusion that what she says is law. But read on, for we eulogize woman before we quit. A woman plays politics like she washes dishes without gloves. She can be the sweetest wife and the meanest partisan that you ever saw. But she has positive qualities'. She can elect her string of candidates almost without votes, for her intuition and enthusiasm make up the deficiency. All the energy and which had been pent up since Adam's time was let loose when the 19th Amendment became a reality, so what else can you expect. How long we must suffer the inconvenience of femininity in our once riotous and profane precincts only the political theorist can theor-ize, but in the language of the common observer, it will be a dickens-of-a-whil- e. Like the visit of a mother-in-la- the woman in politics has come to stay. We've got to let her make the best of it. Woman has cleaned up politics, but she will never quite be able to clean out the politicians. She has almost dmibled the expense of elections, but she has saved many a doubt as to whether she has the political sagacity to help run the country, She has gone politically wrong many times, but she has also proved that men don't always go politically right. She has intruded on our fine tastes of masculinity, but she has shown that the female of the species does have some concern in life besides lipsticks, cigarettes, and writing letters to movie stars. Women arc getting so they vote like they shoot. They can now not only kill their husbands, but can kill their husbands' votes. Truly, it is not good for man to be alone not even in politics. that commission, which' have the ap-proval of practically everybody who has studied the question, but the bill was blocked during the last hour of the recent session of Congress, by the filibuster of a Democrat, Senator Pittman, of Nevada. During those closing hours of Congress, the house refused to con-cur in the recominedations as to the Spanish Springs project, in Nevada. When the bill returned to the senate, Senator Pittman served notice that, unless the Spanish , Springs project were put into the bill, there would be no legislation on the subject. He proceeded to hold the floor, and even refused to permit the bill to go back again to conference. Senator Pittman had his way, and the bill was not passed. It carried an appropriation which would have assured a beginning on the Great Salt Lake Basin project in Utah, among others. There is no doubt that, when congress reconvenes in December, the bill will be passed, and the present expectations one might almost sa yassurance is that the sums available for the initiation of this project will be increased from $375,000 carried in the urgent defi-ciency bill, to $1,875,000. As to the general reclamation pol-icy, as proposed by the fact-findi-commission above referred to, Mr. Goodwin points out that it has the approval, in the Denver speech, of John W. Davis, Democratic candidate for vice president. In thus approv-ing the policy that a Republican ad-ministration has evolved, Mr. Davis is condemning the action of the Dem-ocratic administration, in refusing to act on the findings of its own investi-gators. "No fear need be felt," said Mr. Goodwin, as to the future of reclama-tion, so far as congress is concerned, so long as the Republican party, which inaugurated the whole recla-mation plan under President Roose-velt, remains in power at Washing-ton. The chief products of irriga-tion agriculture, such as sugar beets, apples, alfalfa, citrus fruits and the like, are not in competition with the cereals of the eastern farmer, in any event. "For example, there are 558,000 acres in sugar beets this year, with a yield estimated at $4,750,000 tons, in the five tsatcs of Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Nebraska and California, at $8 a ton, average price this year will bring to the farmer close to $40,000,-00- 0. This amount is a cltar saving to the people of the United States, who would otherwise have to send that money abroad for their sugar. In addition there are the factories and other allied industries which help to supply a market for the other farm-ers. "Similarly, last year more than 800,-00- 0 boxes of Washington apples were shipped to Europe, principally to London, finding a market there that never existed before. These apples, therefore, do not compete with the product of the farms of other sec-tions of the country. And to the list might be carried on to show that there is in reality little competition between the irrigation farmer and the wheat growing farmer of the prairie states, from which the suggestion has largely come that agriculture should be curtailed. "It must further be remembered that the reclamation fund, from which now something like $130,000,-00- 0 has been spent on reclamation in the west, is made up from the sale of western lands and the royalties from western minerals. It is a west-ern fund, that may be spent for west-ern reclamation purposes, and none other. It was from the present bal-ance of $7,000,000 in this fund, which could not be spent for "any other pur-pose, that the appropriations were to come that were proposed for recla-mation in the urgent deficiency bill. The action of the Democratic Sen-ator served simply to keep this money lying idle in the United States treas-ury." GOODWIN TALKS ON RECLAMATION The United States Government's reclamation policy, it was pointed out by Francis M. Goodwin, assistant sec-retary of the department of the inter-ior, on his visit to Utah county, Tues-day and Wednesday, is a product of Republican administration. Difficul-ties that threaten to overwhelm the entire reclamation plan, he added, were investigated by the Democratic secretary of the interior, Franklin K. Lare, 1915. But the report of that investigation committee was pigeon-holed. The present administration again made an investigation, through a commission of which Dr. John A. Widsoe of Utah was member and secretary. A republican congress was ready to accept the suggestion of Saturday evening, the Royal Sex-tette, a new orchestra from Salt Lake City, will entertain the trippers of the light fantastic at Canyon Hall. in one of the real ouUtanding dances of the year. The hall, which has been newly decorated, is one of the most elegant in the state, and with such music as that offered by the Royals, who have been the leading entertainers for the broadcasting stations of Salt" Lake City and vicinity, nothing short of a "wonderful time" is assured all at-tending. Dancing will start slurp al 9 o'clock. Used and endorsed by millions, the old reliable Lucky Tiger Hair Rem-cdy, Stops falling hair, corrects scal troubles and promotes growth drug gists and barbers sell it under munrj back guarantee. |