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Show 4 Mrs. Mary Moody and Mr. Al- -' len Jones of Butter are guests of Mrs. George Bolman. Old European Race The origin of the Basques Is W settled. The name Is applied to a pe-culiar race, dwelling on the slopes tt the Pyrenees. They occupy the pro Inces of Biscay, Aleve, Gutpuxcoa sad Navarre In Spain, and two French de-partments, Bayonne and Haul eon. Members of the II. II. Club en-tertained Friday night at the home of Mrs. Art Cook honoring Mrs. Harry Black who, with Mr. Black, leaves soon to make their home in California. Five hun-dred was the diversion. Prizes were won by Mrs. Ouy Murray, and Mrs. Joe Looney. Luncheon was served to Mrs. Black, Mrs. Irvin Stillman, Mrs. Lawrence .Stillman, Mrs. E. E. Langfellow, Mrs. Joe Marriot, Mrs. 11. C. Mc-ihaii- e, Mrs. Ernest I'rigmore, Mrs. James Nerdin, Mrs. Joe Looney, Mrs. George Streadbeck, Mrs. Ouy Murray, and Mrs. Jess Prigmore. Silver Coat tot Ivory Ivory U given a sliverlike finish ll u actually Is composed nf tiny silver grain, by pluclng It In a dilute silver nitrate solution, and then In a tolii Hon of common salt until It turns deep yellow. Next the ivory Is dipped In water, and exposed In the sun until It blackens. On rubbing, the block surface changes to brilliant silver Popular 8ctenc Monthly Bingham Stage Line Bingham Depot Main and Carr Fork Phone 41 SCHEDULE Cars leave Bingham at 8, 9 and 11 a. m. 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p. m. Salt Lake City Office Sentloh Hotel 107 E. 2nd South Phone Was. 1069 SCHEDULE Cars leave Salt Lake City at 7, 9, and 11 a. m. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 p. m. FARES One way $150 Round Trip $2.50 O'Dofinell & Co1 Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon, Utah Phone 17 " Salt Lake Phone Wasatch 6461 . Flowers on Spring Hats or a Little Feather At. Y.-C- - 's y$J y ? r.w A flowery out- - ? .'', look for millinery A I'a rig modistes V v- y are using them In artful ways. In- - laya of flat flowers are worked on felts and straws. The all flower toque Is a Paris favorite. Modernistic flow-ers of gingham or leather are Inter-esting. The "little feather", trim Is latest message. Pasted novelties and beads and tiny feather pads (see toque In oval) give dash of color. And Again Dots Pattern the Mode 1JHF jp Fashion again decides to "sign on the dotted line." Oue would have thought that the supply of big dots, pin dots, flock dots and polka dots had been exhausted In fashion's flair for dots last summer. Not so! Ev-erything Is being dotted this season, from shoes to hats. A Jacket dress of print silk like the one In the pic-ture Is the idol of the hour. Multicolored Stripes, Plaids, Checks for Spring Tv , V UjIj j ' t y . V'hjs 1T E.LM - Vft jjuA 1 A riot of strips, plaids and checks give celor a'plenty to the new modes. The simplicity of the dress In the pic-ture emphasizes the smartness of the novelty striped crepe of which It Is made. Its flowing scarf neckline marks a favored silhouette. There's no end to stripes this season, which includes blazer-stripe- d jackets, ombre-shade- d stripes and so on. CITIZENS COAL & SUPPLY CO. Coal, Ice, Hay and Grain DELIVERED to all Parts of Bingham Canyon PHONE 39 Fashions for the Smart Woman SPRING SPOHT8 Here Is the classic costume for the woman who Is a spectator at smart porting events, as well as being de-cidedly chic for general Spring wear. It Is composed of a six-gor- circular skirt which gains decorative finish by the use of outside seam stitching, and a Jumper blouse. The tailored simplicity of this model makes It suitable to the new bordered materials. Both the ikirt and lumper may be made of silk crepe, while an effective costume consists of the silk skirt, with the jumper In fine wool Jersey. Pictorial Printed Pattern No. 4782. Sire's 14 to 46. JO cents. Skirt Na. 4777. Sixes 14 to 36, 33 cents. Bingham & Garfield j RAILWAY COMPANY S 5 5 Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast s J da-'l- merchandise cars from Salt Lake City in connection 2 I with the Union Pacific System. j SUSE COPPER cottage only costs $48.87 S J more than galvanized iron piping and will LAST FOREVER 3 S L j 9 T. II. PERLEYWITS. H. L. DAVIDSON S g Ass'. Gen. Freight & Pass. Agt. Agent S Salt Lake City, Utah Bingham, Utah jj ...off the 'springboard it's '. . , 1 I N '. - - mf i ..v i ? ; m ' . - . , t.:t. SSs ' : i. ,ss .5 1 SS: V'-- 5S V A'xiW tj I ...in a ciga rette it's TASTE-- ' Miud ye, TASTE above everything y There's a naturdlflavor to cus-- y&ffifir terfield, a spicy, delicate aroma, that no ordi- - jyJ nary cigarette can offer. TS Jjfy It's a taste just due to the proper blending and CROSS-BLENDIN- ofpure, aromatic tobac- - w cos. But because we put taste abort everything, . and because the Chesterfield blend cannot be copied, you'll find their mild richness no-- where else. Chesterf ield FINE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDE-D O 1W9. liGcirr ft Myim Tocco Co. Old Expreteion "Once In s blue moon" was flrsi used b.y Hoy ami Hurlow In "Rede Me and be not Uoihe" In England In 152& II was formerly used to deals nnte something that will never hap oen R. O. Brewer In his book, "I'hrasr and Fable," says: "On December 10 188.1, we had h blue moon. The win ter was unusually mild." The expres slon Is now fd ii miomii very seldom Volcanic Location Volcanoes generally are to be fount, along coasts and on Islands, nniuy ol them forming Islands themselves, such as Stromholl. off Hie rousl uf Italy No active volcanoes are found In the lu terlor of .oniliients. those In Call ftmilu aud Alaska, ultliough some what reim, eU from the coast, belli); considered as part of the const n I clwili of mountains. a America in Lead as User ' of Labor-Savin- g Devices Hani-Tack- s Still Popular in Europe; Continent Has Yet to See Its First Suc-tion Cleaner for Heating Plants end Chimneys. Americans traveling In Europe, and residents of this country whose early lives were spent abroad, think of the Old World as more thun the site of superb museums and art galleries, his-torical and religious shrines and mag-nificent pleasure places. They also dwell upon its quulnt and picturesque ways of doing things, and the prev-alence In everyday affairs of survivals of medieval manners. Ancient cottages and manors such as Haddon Hull where Dorothy Mun-ner- s lived her high romnnce, and the delightful farmhouses of France, from the crevices of whose thatched roofs. (1) The typical English chimney-sweep- , and (2) here'a one not ao typl-Ic- Mrs. Hannah Poole of Hollywood, Worcestershire, (not Californlal) the only woman who ever took up this ancient craft; she does It to support her-se- lf and her aged father. (3) Swiss sweeps wear silk hats Just because they always have. (4) This Is the giant vacuum cleaner, modern America's Improvement upon the d sweep. (5) And this Is how a crew of Ger. man chimney-cleaner- s appear as they set out for a day's gambol over the housetoDa. States. Suction cleaning: removes ob-structions, brings to light defects In the furnace, smoke pipe or chimney and discloses any fire danger there. A thorough cleaning of the furnace puts the finishing touch on the spring housecleanlng. A dirty and sooty heating plant makes a house dldlcult to keep clean and raises the cost of cleaning It. In the ordinary house three-fourth- s of the dirt comes In from the outside atmosphere through cracks around windows and doors, and one- - quarter from the heating system. Lightens Housekeeping Load. . When the heating system Is defec- - f tlve, however, the amount of dirt from working through a "snake" formed of several sections of pipe attached to first one and then nnother of the heut-ln- g plant openings, draws the accumu-lated dirt and soot out "of the heater Into the htifte hag, which la then taken to the city dump and emptied. The suc-tion method Is the best yet devised for cleaning both chimneys and heating plants, because It reaches the many nooks and crannies In the modern beating system that are beyond the reach of human hands. But one of the larger types of cleaners should be used for best results, since a small, Improvised nlTair may lack both motor power and suction to do a spick-and-spa- Job. moss and wild flowers grow present a delightful contrast with the mechnn-Icnl-Iookln- "slick brand-new- " dwell-ing house In this country. Wood and stone still are carved by hand, and the smith still beats out graceful shapes in Iron, for the embel-lishment of the home; and, despite the encroachment of the machine age, many things which modern America accomplishes mechanically still are arts of handicraft In Europe. Old "Sweeps" Picturesque. But, while all this has the great ad-vantage of age-ol- d plcturesqueness, It has disadvantages, too. For Instance, there Is the matter of chimney clean-ing. In America the giant vacuum-cleauln- g machine has all but supplant-ed the old-tim- e chimney sweep, where-as In Europe this dirty but extremely necessary job still Is done entirely by manual labor. the lieu ti tig plant increases until it equals the amount that comes In through the windows. Cleaning of the heating plant saves labor in dusting, lowers laundry costs, preserves hang-ings and furnishings and reduces the necessary frequency of changing wall and ceiling decorations. Spring rains seeping down the chim-ney onto the soot-lade- smoke pipes will corrode and ruin them. Remov-ing the soot by the suction method minimizes this damage. An erroneous, though popular, Im-pression Is that a heating plant In which some other fuel than coal Is used does not get dirty and dusty. Oil leaves a greasy and grimy deposit on the Inner parts of the heating plant, and so does gns. The vacuum proc-ess Is effective In removing these drawbacks to heating-plan- t efficiency. Thus, on the score of economy in fuel and labor, and as a tightener of the housewife's labor, the modern me-chanical heating-syste- cleaner repre-sents the march of progress away from the hand methods of the old country chimney sweep. That Is why countless American women have the suction cleaner spend an hour or so on their premises and then dismiss all worry about the heater until the ne.M...,,,,, fall f Motor-create- suction not only cleans the entire heating plant more completely and thoroughly than Is pos-sible by hand, and does It tn a frac-tion of the time required by the man-ual method, but also does It without fuss, muss, dust or dirt even while the decorator or laundress Is working. If that Is desired. , Soot Proves Costly. Dirty and sooty heating plnnts are fuel wasters. With hot water and steam boilers, soot covering the boiler heating surfaces means loss of fuel. d surfaces keep the heat awuy from the heut pipes so that It Is wasted out of the chimney. Tests by the United States Hureau of Stand-ards have shown that of an Inch of soot on the heating surfaces of a central heating plant will reduce the plant's efficiency 28 per cent, while of pn Inch will cut It down fully 4S per cent. So a thor-ough cleaning of the heater can easily snve ono or two tons of coal In the course of a winter. Soot and obstructions In the heater and chimney Interfere with efficient heating r.nd are a source of fire haz-ard. Defective flues and heating plants comprise one of the chief onuses of fire loss In the. United Any morning the American traveler In Kurope, be he in England, Germany, Switzerland or anywhere else, may see one or more of these strange fig-ures In black hood, silk hat or d cap, with brooms and brushes, ropes and rods over their shoulders, ladder and soot bag under arm, saun-tering down" the street, calling their trade to the housewives. Elsewhere on this page are shown pictures of chimney sweeps of several European countries. By way of con-trast, also. Is printed a photograph of one of the thousands of mechanlcally-pperate- d giant "chimney-cleanin- g blimps" used throughout America, which does everything that any chim-ney sweep can do and a great deal more quickly and efficiently. The Holland Institute of Thermol-og- y describes the suction cleaner for heating plants as an enlarged edition of the household vacuum cleaner adapted to the heating field. I'sunlly It consists of a power motor, mounted on a truck, a huge canvas bag, and what appears to be many sec-tions of flexible stovepipe. The motor operates a fan which. Move The kucK'ty for the Saving of Tin t s newly fomdpd elticlenry organlm lion In Franc i. has decided In favM of the shortening of names. II want to limit fiiaill) names to Ave lettert-an-other nauu s to two. In this wo " It Is declared the business worK would save mneii money In correspond ence yesrly Henptcktd A British educator suys lienpeckcii husbands live loiwer thun other Iiiim hmidt Tbey live iue sheltered lite I'rohably they do hut life lliaulu too sheltered Is not worth living ni ill. Att(i most men who ire henpecki d would rather have more reul mom and less shelto' T Sky Losing lt$ Hue J The sky Is losing Its blue color n some parti of tie world, according to Sir Napier Shaw. Kncllsh meteorol-ogist, who explains that It Is due to the presence of chemical or ii 'ilnture particles prorturod h volcanic erup-tions. |