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Show , , THE BINGHAM BULLETIN , "LeWrate Marriage" When a rain marries the widow of brother who died without Is-sue It Is culled levlrnle marriage motig the Jews. The same custom or law prevails In some parts of India. Tha "Plumed Koifbt" Robert 0. Ingersotl gHve James O. Bio Ins the plumedknlght title In the speech In which be said: "Like an armed warrior, tike a plumed knight, James G. Blaine marched down the hall of the Amer-ican congress and threw bis shin-ing lance full and fair against the brazen foreheads of the defamers of his country and mallgnen of his honor." (OF DISEASE GERMS in nose l r mouth and throat J f Let Zonlta daana away the 1 V accumulated eecratiena, kill M W tha germa, prevent diasaaa. V Highly germicidal. Sooth-- J W ing to membranes. C sMSSSBey WSaSBMJBWaMsBMSia If J frashloned-Newes- T Shades urn mmfmmMm LTMa TIIHhCI MY MAM 10 YUU, fVMLtrrr ' ,:WF PAY vuxmttl 1 TJorransiLH ffasn-.H-Y mills: sSSssS TTFrJNFTT BlJCCTIEKER-HAHWL.A- . mmmm lTrMaiaaMaaMaiaMaaaBaBaBaMawwaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaMaWMj SILK SALE 10,000 dress-lengt- h" rem-nants of finest silk to be clear-ed by mail, regardless. Everyj desired yardage and color. All 39 inches wide. Let us send1 you a piece of genuine $6i Crepe Paris, very heavy flatt crepe on approval for your in-spection. If you then wish to keep it mail us your check at only $1.90 a yard. OriginalI price $6 a yard. Or choose printed Crepe Paris. Every wanted combination of colors. We will gladly send you a piece to look at. What colorsi and yardage, please? If youI keep it you can mail us check: at $1.25 a yard. Final reduc-tion. Originally $6 a yard. All $2 silks, $2 satins and $2 printed crepes are 90c a yard in this sale. Every color. Do not ask for or buy from sam-ples. See the whole piece youi are getting before deciding. We want to be your New York reference to tell us allj you wish to about yourself and describe the fj piece you want to see on approval. Write NOW, send no money. To ad-vertise our silk thread we send you a spool to match CRANE'S Silk., 54S Fifth Ave, N. Y. City. BINGHAM STAGE LINE Bingham Depot Main and Carr Fork Phone 41 Schedule Cars leave Bingham at 8:30 and H:00 a. m. 1:30, 5:00,7:00, & 9:15 p. m. Salt Lake City Office Semloh Hotel 107 E. 2nd South Phone Was. 1069 Schedule Cars leave Salt Lake City at 8:00 and 10:30 a. m. 1:30, 5:00, 7:30 & 11:00 p. m. Fare One way $1.50 Round Trip $2,50 DIRECTORS G. W. Page, D. D. S. Woodrlng BUf. 485 Main St. Phone 258 J. Ronald Jensen D. D. S. Office In: UTAH COPPER Co. HOSPITAL Office hours from 9:00 to 6:00 PHONE 49 . 1931 AUTO LICENSE See VORD BOOTHE At BINGHAM GARAGE MARCELLING PLATES MRSRNEAN Apt. 5, Over Granite Furni-ture Company WW DOUBLE-EDG- E r RAZOR (old or new model) a BETTER RAZOR m mOr your money back Ouoranfeed by ;M PROSAK CORPORATION AaMMMMy'MrC.bcN.V.C WANTED Maid to care for 1 5 Rooms $40.00 per Month Copperneld Hotel Avoid Head Colds and Sore Throat this Winter WUBBBi:' 0ps Us Stuffed No.trlli In t Mlnutei Opex keepa nostrils and throat free from muciu Bulling In Mrs when caused by Catarrh Is lessened no mors mucus in throat to hawk up In the morning Get It at WALGREEN or any drug stors that keeps up with modern medical discoTerles use for SO days If not Joyfully satisfied money back. People who are subject to sore throat and speakers and singers who suffer from hoarseness should spray with Opez night and morning Its delightful to use be-- cause of Its whole j some fragrance : aspa. jjfJW. Keep your nostrils f 1 vV Kti tm c'e your 7 ' The Opei Co. 1 "il&b. 11 W. 30th 8U, New JFV ffijrl York. OPEX if II The Famous ECTRIC WASH $1 Down, $5 a Month DURING FEBRUARY ONLY I You know the outstanding record for popularity in this territory that has been established by the famous AutoMatic Washer, j II Here is the latest model, with new features, new beauty, even II greater efficiency, offered to you at a special price, and oh I especially easy terms. ,T - I Here is your opportunity to have in your home that washer you've always wanted-th- e best that money can buy. SEE IT IN ANY OF OUR STORES THE TIME IS LIMITED! ACT NOW! I EFFICIENT PUBLIC SERVICE II ' Established 1889 J. K. JARVIS, Editor MEMpfir4930 UTAH STATE PRESS ASSN Entered an second class matter at i lie J'ostofflce at Bingham Canyon, Utah, under net of Congress of March 3, 1870 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Per Year (in advance) - $2.00 ADVERTISING RATES Furnished on Application Modern Job Printing Department in connection AH business correspondence should le addressed to The BULLETIN Bingham Canyon, Utah THE PROOF OF THE ITDDIXG The best evidence that enn be presented In support of stringent laws requiring licensing examina-tions for motorists is provided by National Safety Council statistics. Last year automobile accidents claimed 32,500 lives, an increase of four per cent over 1929, though mo-tor registrations Increased less than one per cent. The ten states with strong dlrvers' UeeiiRe laws showed decreases In the death rate averag-ing 1.5 per cent and one of them, Rhode Island, enjoyed a reduction of 20.1 per cent. In contrast to this, 24 states with out examination laws had an aver-age Increase of 8.3 per cent, and in one state the increase totaled 48.1 per cent. The fact that automobile deaths increased from 21,920 In 1925 to more than 32,000 in 1930, conclus-ively demonstrates that Immediate action Is necessary It is estimated that if every state had a drivers ex-amination law, 1700 lives would have been saved last year alone. Every state legislature should adopt the law as the starting point of a campaign for highway safety. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR MINERAL PATENT Serial No. 049659 United States Land Office, Salt Lake City, Utah, Jan., 6, 1931. Notice is hereby given that the I'ark Bingham Mining Company, a corporation, by its duly authorized agent and attorney-in-fac- t, J. A Foley, whose post-offic- e address is Keurns Bldg., Salt Lake City, Ut-ah, has made application for patent for the Ray, Kelvin, Tolusa, Chero-kee, Mikado and Oyama lodes, Min-eral Survey No. 6937, situate in the West Mountain Mining Dis-trict, Salt Lake County, State of Utah, described, with magnetic va-riations at 1045' East, as follows, viz: Beginning at Cor. iNo. 1 of the Bay lode from which the Cor. com-mon to Sees. 2, 3, 10, and 11, T. 4 S., R. 3 XV., S. L. Mer., bears S. 1550' E. 484.5 ft) and running thence S. 6230' E. 000 ft to Cor. No. lode (from which the aforesaid Sec. Cor. bears S. 0442 W. 442.4 ft) thence S. 6230' E. COO ft. to Cor. No. 2 ; thence N. 3710' E. 348.0 ft. to Cor. No. lode ("from which aforesaid Sec. Cor. bears S. 8035' W. 1158.9 ft.) ; thence S. 0220' E. 600 ft. to Cor. No. 2; thence S. 3718' W. 350 ft. to Cor. No. lode (from which the aforesaid Sec. Cor. bears N. 7550' W. 1,508.7 ft.) thence S. 6226' E. 600 ft. to Cor. No. lode (from which the aforesaid Sec. Cor. bears No. 7200' ,W. 2096.9 ft.) ; thence S. 6220' E. 600 ft. to Cor. No. lode (from which the afore-said Sec. Cor. Bears N. 6957' W. 2090.2 ft.) ; thence S. 6226' E. 600 ft. to Cor. No. 2; thence S. 3710' W. 1278.1 ft. to Ccr. No. 3 ; thence N. 6220' W. 1800 ft. to Cor. No. lode ; thence N. 3710' E. 128.1 ft. to Cor. No. lode; thence N. 62'20' V. 600 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence S. 37 !6' W. 128.1 ft. ot Cor. No. lode; thence W. 6230' W. 504.0 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence N. 3300' E. 300 ft . to Cor. No. lode; thence N. C230' W. 600 ft. to Cor. No. 4 ; thence N. 3300' E. 965.4 ft. to Cor. No. lode, the place of beginning. Said lode mining claims are lo-cated In the SWV4 Sec. 2; SEVi Sec. 3; NE Sec. 10 and NEVi and NW4 Sec. 11, T. 4 S., R. 3 W., S. L. Mer., and contain a net area of 93.100 acres, the areas In conflict with Sur. 4305 Forepaugh and White Star lodes, and Sur. 5938-Kimur-o lode, having been exclud-ed. Said claims are of record In the office of the County Recorder of Salt Lake County at Salt Lake City, Utah. The nearest known locations as shown by the official plat of sur-vey are the aforesaid excluded claims, and Sur. Bell and Lelly lodes; Spr. 5938 Jap lode, "and Sur. b lode. I direct that the foregoing notice be published In the Bulletin, a weekly newspaper published at Bingham Canyon, Utah, and which Is nearest said claims for nine (9) consecutive issues. ELI F. TAYIXIR, Register. First pub. Jan. 15, !031. Last pub. Mar. 12, 1931. Edw. D. Dunn, Att'y. Salt Lake City, Utah. 9 FROM SHEEP TO . WOLF It is reported that higher gas tax-es are being sought in about half of the 44 states whose legislatures meet this year. This is one problem that should find the oil Industry and the motor-ist in perfect accord. The gas tax has unquestionably been a good thing in that It has helped build highways but a good thing can be done to death. And that Is exactly what Is happening to the gas tax. Government expenses are con-stantly on the rise. Property owners, security owners, businesses, buil-dersall are staggering beneath a weight of taxes. As a result, many legislators get the bright idea that another cent on the gas tax will raise revenue without, at the same time, causing public revolt. This may have been true In the past, but the revolt has come. A tax which amounts to twenty or thirty per cent, of the price of a product Is almost confiscatory, and In ad-dition an increasing numler of states have used the gas tax for purposes, other than roads. The mo-torist, once a sheep, is rapidly turn-ing into a wolf, with his eye on the legislators who are advocating higher gas taxes. Drastic action is necessary, as one writer says, "You will hear some gaoot of an office holder telling how he has 'reduced taxes,' meaning that he has stolen so much from the gasoline tax fund that the general property taxes were not needed that year." FOREST FUNDS BENEFIT UT-AH: STATE TO RECEIVE $57,000 Utah will receive as Its portion of the revenue from the National Forests of the State $57,806.17, re-presenting 25 per cent of the gross receipts for grazing, sales of timber and for other uses according to re-port of the Forest Service. "This amount is redistributed by the states to the counties in which the National Forests lie, 50 per cent for schools and 50 per cent for road purposes. In addition to the above 25 per cent of the receipts reverting to the counties an additional 10 per cent amounting to approximately $23,130. must, according to the law, be ex-pended within the National For-ests of the counties of the State for road and trail development. This Is separate however from 3 the direct appropriations made by Congress from time to time for road and trail development In the Nation-al Forests under the Forest develop-ment and Forest Highway acts. FARM BOARD' RESULTS The Federal Farm Board was created July 15, 1929. It has constantly ndvlsed reduc-tion of acreage to farmers. It was supplied wlh $500t000,-OiiO- , and has spent most of it. It holds today millions of bush-els of wheat acquired at higher than present prices. Attempted price fixing by govern merit has proven economically un-sound and socially unwise. Legisla-tion ami government subsidies can not cure economic maladies. Arkansas National Park Hot Springs National park, In 1921, Is located In the middle part of Arkansas. It Is one and one-ha-lf miles In area. There are 40 hot springs said to possess healing properties, and 19 bath houses under government su-pervision. The laud was reserved by congress in 1832 as the Hot Springs reservation to prevent ex-ploitation of the hot waters. Expurjalioa Cromwell's "Handbook for Rend era and Writers" says that to Bowdlerize" means to expurgate a book. Thonins Bowdler In 1813 pub-lished an edition of Shakespeare' work In which nothing is added ti-the original text; but those word and expressions arp omitted which cannot with propriety be read aloud In the family. This was In ten volumes. Bowdler subsequently treated Gibbon's "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" In the same way. Prince of Walee' Motto In the buttle of Orecy. 1316, Kiiic John or liolitfiiilii iil'led his French ally. I'lillip of Val.ils. K'l!8 J"1'" was tfflnd and he ordered smiie id his knights to lead him Into (lie buttle. The little group ns slain hy men ut arms of the prince ot Wales. The motto of the vulorous lloheml.-i- ruler MIch dien" meaning "I serve" was adopted by the prince of Wales. Monster Crabs The glunt crab of Japan Is a spider crab. About the larg-est known specimen has a spread or span between the tips of the out-stretched claws of 11 feet 8 inches. The body proper la about 18 Inches across. |