OCR Text |
Show Building Materials LUMBER - ROOFING , ., I Replace That Leaky Roof LET US GIVE YOU AN ESTIMATE ON REMODELING YOUR HOME PREPARE FOR WINTER FILL UP THE COAL BIN NOW WITH OUR GOOD COAL Anderson & Sons Company Phone 80 227 Main i V- , - ' Vyr V ' - 1 SEASONS GREETINGS I I & : . , ; r'. ' & 5? ,.- - f . . - p & r 'id I May You Have - ' ' w I A HAPPY J S :::.'-.v V.-'- - ' I V and I g "x. ; v v 1 ' prosperous new year I 5 - - W 53 ...... - :5 g ' g.. .' - . ' v 2? ' gr , - ... & I Anderson & Sons Company I - ... 2$ g 2?. . ; -s IWMIIIIIMM sMMMSjmmmmmsjsjmsjm CHRISTMAS SPECIAL De Luxe Dollar Cleaners. Suits, Overcoats, Ladies Coats and Plain Dresses dry cleaned and pressed, enly $1.00. FREE delivery, One day Service, All work GUARANTEED. It pays to SAVE! Bingham's Only Dollar Cleaners. Open evenings, No. 16 Carr Fork, Phone 70 ' De Luxe Dollar Cleaners " & GREETINGS J - - S ? From the g , 5 Princess Theatre 1 ' ' ' p I THE MOST GENERALLY 1 OBSERVED HOLIDAY I I IN THE WORLD I fl . ., 1 aaaa " ' ; & at-- Finds us in accord with the spirit of the season. 2 Christmas may it bring many new joys to g you and yours. ' ' " V I AND AS THE NEW YEAR - . DAWNS -- ; W 2A . g May it reveal to you a field of opportunity in which you will find happiness and contentment. ' a) ; & In deep appreciation of favors, large and small, . we send this holiday wish. 55 i s : 1 ; I " & ' : ..fc-,r- , - , & ) I BinghamGamgetorageCo. ; 1 - . - . . a , ;&...: ;. 2 "' & i - . ? I ? WE. JUST SIMPLV j ri GOULD NOT BE g II y HAPPY J 5J ; Without wishing happiness for .our patrons, too. We are proud 25 . i of our big "family" of loyal customers. You have been good to 2$ ( "'fa? ' " us an )ve want yu to knw we appreciate it. .. v. V We w ish you the very choicest enjoyments Ovrtmas affords g , . and hope that 1931 will bring you more blesings than you have ever 5 5? ! t received before. " , 2$ . d'l'X , t: . ..' . m : ... ,.V . 2? 5 i; i remember ' LLL1 we are anxious to continue to serve you and 2? s will do our very best to "please you during the' new year. - jj 1$ t : ' iff p 2? iUNioN Drug Go. J $, d)PPERFIELD " UTAH 5? ' v. . . g I.J 11 " .. Wednsedy evening the Martjha chapter of the 0? E. S. held a spee-i- al meeting for the Installation of officers. Mrs. Susie Caulflled was Installed as Grand Matron. Other officer of the Grand Chapter of Utah conducted the installation. Supper followed the business activ-ities, and It wat held at the Ma-- , sonic Hall. (Monday evening the Ruth Rebek-a-h Lodge entertained at a birth-day party for "Grandma" Ileastoa An enjoyable time was had by all who attended. Mr. and Mts. John Larson enter-tained at dinner Tuesday evening. Mrs. Tage Johnson of Matlonal City, California, is vllstlng over the holidays with her sou Mr. George P. Johnson. Mrs. Lolo Spencer entertained the club last Friday aternoon. "600" was played, Mrs. Chlck Mitchell winning first prize, and Mrs. Dan Thomas the second prize. Other guests were , Miss Grow, Mrs. M. A. Stewart, Mrs. Andy Reld, Mrs. Joe Warning, Mlrs. Tom Sadler, Mrs. Viv Boren, Mrs. R. K. Madsen and Mrs. Jay Trow-bridge. (Mrs. Willis Terkens is here to spend the Christmas holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Horac niggs. The L. D. S. Sunday School in combination with the Community Church Sunday School will give a joint program Christmas evening at the school huoee In Copperton. Dr. J. Ronald Jensen, who has been practicing dentistry In Bing-ham for the last year, Is occupy-ing new offices in the Utah Copper Hospital. This Week I by ARTHUR BRISBANE , What U Health? New Ideas, New Wealth Ladjr Astor't Party Lo, the Poor Railroad A girl from Iowa and a boy from Missouri ara selected as the "health- - test boy and girl In the nation." The girl scored 99.7 out of a possible 100 points. The boy scored 98.7. Such scoring, of course, means little. Life and health depend primarily on heart, kidneys, lungs and nerve force. The lungs can be developed, heart ud kidneys can be protected. Nerv-- sus energy can be built up somewhat, but you get most of It at birth. ' Voltaire, as a baby, had fits, and If It hadn't been for a kind hearted Catholic priest, who showed his mother how to take care of him, put- - ' ting him In hot water when the fits came on, he would have died as a , baby. Instead, having Wonderful nervous force, he died in Paris long past 80 after a tremendous triumph, in which one of his plays was pro- - duced. The populace took the horses from his carriage and dragged him home. He had worked furiously all his life. Health goes deeper than . pink cheeks and sparkling eyes. Dr. Miller Reese Hutchison has a new Invention, and Hawks, our great- - est air pilot at the moment, Is expert- - mentlng with it The Importance of this invention, If Dr. Hutchison's hopes are realised, cannot be exaggerated. It will take from the fumes of gaso-line the deadly quality that poisons the air In great cities, causing ocoa- - slonal deaths In closed garages. . , Even more Important Is the fact that this new gasoline Is expected to Increase the cruising range of an air-- plane almost 100 per cent. What men can Imagine, they can do, and what they require, their brains can produce. I Lady Astor gives a party and in-rit- es only women thirty-si- x of them who, she says, are the thirty-si- x I most Important women In England.' And they are all workers In some , field scientists, doctors, government ' workers. No one would be called by our American reporters "a society ( woman," or anything approaching it It would be Interesting to print the pictures of those thirty-si- x , women ( selected by Lady Astor and contrast with their faces the thirty-si-x most" Important womenr If they could be ' Identified, in the New York City's ( 'Tour Hundred," selected by Ward McAllister long ago . ; ' Which set of thlrty-sl- x faces do you ' think would show the most intelli- - gence? Morrill Ooddard should pub- - Ush this comparison In his scientific weekly. Railroads demand "sweeping relief from competition." ' They would like to "curb" pipe lines now pumping oil once carried In railroad tank ears by railroads. They would make the oil companies i get rid of their $400,000,000 invest-ment ' and would check coastwise ship-- ping and canal freights. These things I and others they demand. i What they need Is to bring their own methods up to' date, stop hauling ( heavy trains weighing upwards of i 1,000,000 pounds, to carry 10,000 ' pounds of passengers to the last two or three stations. j Railroads have suffered, their pas- - senger traffic has been cut almost in ' half, and whatever hurts railroads hurts the country. ( The railroads will not find a remedy i for their troubles In forbidding other business enterprises to employ mod- - v em methods. There Is a limit to ( paternalism, even where Important j public utilities are concerned. . Cardinal Hayes ln New York, de-- ( ploring the unemployment situation, i urging those In his diocese to do ;' everything possible, points out wisely that "unemployment is a potential ( social menace of a very radical type." When men stop eating they cease 1 respecting the rights of others. In Baltimore, Mayor Broening and i Police Commission Oalpher permit , ' moving pictures on Sunday for charity, In spite of protest ( Why should there be a protest against moving pictures, or any other i reasonable entertainment on Sunday T The Bible says the Sabbath was made ( for man, not man for the Sabbath. The two greatest moving pictures in i the world are a fine sunset and the rushing waters of Niagara. The Lord Q does not close them on Sunday. Why not let those , who want pio-- i tures on Sunday see them, and those that want to stay home, stay home? Why the itch In one man's mind to Q control the life of another? A Dr. Dew art, who owns the New e York Sun, thinks this country should . not be pitchforked into the League of C Nationa, through the, back door of the League Court, and wisely decides to e let the people know about it . ? He will put his views into a page advertisement to be printed In 100 C newspapers, at his expense. The next best thing to owning news-- fi papers all over the country Is to ad-- vertlse In newspapers all over the V country. j , 1J0. W gat fmntm Sfmiiam, ImJ g Mangaaesa Booa te Stsel The steel Industry takes approxi-mately 95 per cent of all the man-ganese consumed In this country. The percentage of the metal which goes Into the steel varies from around 1 per cent to as high as 12 per cent In steels In which particu-lar hardness is desired. Manga nese has long been used In removing oxygen from molten steel, but It Is only of lute years that Its value as a hardening agent has been real Issed. Washington Star. . Matter of Packing Packers of sardines and lead pen-cils could learn something by giv-ing attention to the way a sheik 'can crowd a flock of girls In the front seat of coupe. Florida Times-Unio- . Lucerne Popular Situated on placid Lake Lucerne, In full view of the Rig!, Mount Pilatas and many snow-cla- d Alpine peaks, Lucerne Is one of Switzer-land's most picturesque towns and a famous tourist center. 5 Difficult Feats The three things most difficult are to keep a secret, to forget an Injury and to make good use of leisure, Chllo. Think' It Ovav diameter la not melded from without : It Ik ii growth from within |