OCR Text |
Show . THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH Thxmity. Mrjlim The Bingham Bulletin 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 Published at 446 Main St., Bingham Canyon, Utah HOWARD A. JARVIS, Editor o., "A4, r ewt-- ni in ii 1 r" ill. l steamer Oaxaca which ran on rocks off Wrangeli ifciand, imperllitih. lives oi Cuptuin (j. Alkn Hancock, owner, and other prominent southern Californlana. 2 Body of Cupt Emlllo Carranza, Mexican good will flyer, lying In state In New Tort. 8 World's largest X ray tube, developed at California Institute of Technology, Pasadena. 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 Semloh 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 wav ....................$1.50 Round trip $2.50 II Get jj Your From j; j; i: Granite I: i: Furniture Co. ; ; Isis Theatre Building 1 ; ; Bingham Canyon ; O'DONNELL & CO. Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon Utah Phone 17 Wasatch 6461 Salt Lake Phone 11 IHI I! II I1 11 H11l lll: Tdvertisers mm will find this paper an excellent P medium in which to display their bargains and make theirwants known hniTFrFiTirim;, CITIZENS COAL & SUPPLY CO. COAL, ICE, HAY and GRAIN AGENTS FOR BECCO Phone : : : : : 39 mmmmmmmmmmmmmmM-mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmum- -m' I BINGHAM a GARFIELD I RAILWAY COMPANY I Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast 1 daily merchandise cars from Salt Lake City in connection I with the Union Pacific System. I USE COPPER I Brass piping for $4500 cottage only costs $48.87 1 more than galvanized iron piping and will 1 LAST FOREVER I T. H. PERLEYWITS, H. L. DAVIDSON S Asst. Gen. Freight & Pas. Agt., Agent Salt Lak City, Utah Bingham, Utah 4 Patronize Home People For the Best in Laundry Work Call Murray Laundry ROUGH DRY WORK ONE DAY SERVICE FRIDAY Tax payers of Bingham Canyon George Streadbeck Manager Phone 98 84 Main Street 1 J : IsTHIRTY the Love) j Deadline Rupert HufkM wm bora Miuouri ti U72 ui slace that time ku gtna pleat? el evidence thai he conn ham Ilia state whan the ban to bo showa. For Beany jroara ba bao bM (aatouo lor bia fcrflUant ami 4 abort stories. Beside, a Hterary caraar bo aaco establishes1 a repuUMoa lor abums' aa aa amy offiwr and u o aiuaia eritk sad authority aaj Musical affairs. Ha ba recent! ban ruaabaf a wioVly atieted aarioa of article bt aewspa-po- rt throughout Ibo country deellrur wflh bmoV ara woaua and thobr probbaM. Ha la worried. By RUPERT HUGHES The wise and witty Will Durant Is probably so sorry now for robbing men past thirty of the capnclty for love tliut It la almost cruel to speak of It The greatest practitioner of bis day, Doctor Osier, became famous for wliat he never sold, and people still blandly misquote the Osier theory though he has been dead for years and denied the statement that Is glued to his name. Gelett Burgess wrote a quatrain stating that he would rather see than be a purple cow. It grew so popular that he dashed off another: Tea. 1 wrott the. Purple Cow. I'm lorry now I wrote it: But 1 can tall you anyhow. I'll kill rou If yon quota It ' Doctor Durant may be equally dungeroua by this time, but be has not yet denied the appalling words be signed. "A man past thirty Is incapable of love. A man above thirty may go wild over a blonde 'chorine.' That Is not love. Love Is absolute devotion the desire to give full service to an-other." It would be bard to cram more er-ror and false Implication Into equal space. Why Is It Impossible to love a blonde "chorine!" Is a brunette deaconess necessarily more lovable? As for "absolute devotion" and "full service," numberless court records would seem to show that blonde chor-ines are able to extract from aged millionaires more devotion, fuller service and e than any other class from any other class. I have not space nor time to go deep Into history but a few dazzling contradictions of Doctor Durant oc-cur to me almost at once. In the first place, the first man was past thirty when he loved the first woman, for I read In an Oxford catechism written about the year 1400 that Adam, when be was created, was "a man of XXX winters of age." It was after this time that Eve was created for bis express company and be certainly loved her at first sight Furthermore, as Saint Ber-nardino of the same period stales, women are cleaner than men, "for woman was made of a fine clean rib while man was made of a lump of clay." Take a few of the most famous love stories: Antony and Cleopatra, for Instance. Surely Antony loved Cleopatra ; be gave up victory and all to follow her. Yet he was forty-tw- o when he first met her, and she was about twenty-eigh- t Where Is there a more pitiful, pas-sionate love story than that of Abel-ar- d and OelolseT Yet when Abelard met Delolse be was thirty-eigh- t. She was much younger but her love con-tinued on through life nntil her death when she was more than sixty, and they were burled side by side. Is Murray's words: "There has never been a passion more famous. It was great love." Coutrast with it the almost equally famous romance of Robert and Eliza-beth Barrett Browning. He was thirty-tw- o when he met her; she was thirty-eigh- t. Her father opposed the marriage so bitterly that two years later they eloped. Ills poetic refer-ences to her, "half angel and half bird," and her "Sonnets the Portuguese," written when she was forty, are as glowing with love, as anything In literature, if Browning did not love his wife, and If she did not love him. then nobody ever loved anybody. Among musicians the devotion of Gluck to his wife was famous. They met when be was thirty-five- . Beethoven never married, but he could love; and his burning letters to his "Immortal beloved," his Geliebte, were written aft-er he was thirty-four- . Hawthorne's ninrrlage Is among tbe perfect romances. He was thirty-fiv- e when he fell In love. One might go on and on mid prove by Innumerable further Instances, famous and humble, that men and women con and do know true love when they Hre past thirty. Doctor Durant to the contrary, notwith-standing. . ) 1921. by tha Cell Syndicate. Inc.) and that of Japan was considered cer tain, If the various reservations of some of the governments, whlcb are not radlcul, can be accepted, the final success of the great plan to outlaw war seems virtually assured. Tho treaty Is to be signed during the com-ing fall by the principal powers and will go Into effect with the deposit of the ratifications. It will remain open for signature by other nations. PEACE between Poland and Is still an unaccomplished fact, and It is reported that Premier Waldemaras of Lithuania, relying on the support of Russia, Is preparing to defy the League of Nations at the Sep-tember meeting of the assembly or council of the League. The Poles have notified Sir Austen Chamberlain that they hold the League responsible for the existing state of affairs and de-mand full support In whatever meas-ures they may deem necessary. American members of the world court of arbitration at Geneva nom-inated Charier Evans Hughes for the vacancy created by the resignation of John Bassett Moore. Dr. Walter Simons Is second choice for the place. Observers In Geneva were quite sure Mr. Hughes would be elected. REPRESENTATIVES of Franco, Italy last week signed a new accord on Tangier whlcb gives Spain full command of the gendarmerie In the International sone of that country. A special com-mission was created to watch for and suppress Intrigues against the Spanish protectorate. Italy was given In-creased representation on the legisla-tive body of the International zone and was also given representation on the courts and similar tribunals. crowds, and at many cities the major general's ralute of 13 guns was fired. WHOLESALE bolting from either or the Democratic national ticket does not seem to be getting much encouragement In the country. The most ambitious at-tempts to bring this about are being made In Texas. There the anti-Smit- h Democrats have organized with the avowed Intention of getting all the Democrats they can to vote for Hoover, and they are led by several men who have been rather prominent in the party in that state. They are making no attempt to defeat the state Democratic ticket which .disappoints some of the smaller fry who are dis-affected. On the other hand there Is also In Texas a group of anti-Hoov- Republicans who are throwing what Influence they have to the Smith ticket In Ashevllle Bishop Cannon of the Methodist church, South, gathered about 181 men and women to plan for the defeat of Smith in the Southern states. Nearly all the delegates were preachers of the Methodist church. South, or paid workers of church or prohibition agencies. . Sixty-si- x were from Buncombe county, North Caro-lina, of which Ashevllle Is the county seat No Democratic party leaders were present and It was noticeable that the Baptists held aloof, except for Dr. Arthur J. Barton, who was made chairman of the meeting. The press was excluded from the real sessions. Leaders of farmers' organizations in the corn belt still hope they can In-duce the agriculturists to oppose Hoover, and their meeting In Des Moines adopted a series of resolutions condemning the farm relief plank in the Republican platform and commend-ing the plank Inserted In the Demo-cratic platform. Most of those at-tending this meeting declared their In-tention of supporting Smith, but there Is still little rearon to believe that NEWS REVIEW OF j CURRENT EVENTS , JVfurder of Obregon a Great Misfortune for Mexico ' Gossip of Politics. p By EDWARD W. PICKARD PERHAPS the greatest misfortune happen to Mexico at this time was the murder of Gen. AJ-Ta-ro Obregon. Quits aside from the helnousness of the crime, the assas-sination of the president-elec- t removed from the scene the strongest and most progressive of the republic's leaders, and not only threatened the country with renewal of the chaotic conditions that have held it back for many years, but also Imperiled the recently re v stored friendly relations with the gov irnment of the United States. The zcellent work done by our ambas-sador, Dwight Morrow, in the latter regard was given powerful aid by Obregon and his administration, whlcb was to have been installed on Decem-ber 1, would have carried It on to the utmost Obregon was shot to death a't a ban-quet In tbe fashionable resort of San Angel, 12 miles south of Mexico City, by a young man who has been Identi-fied as Jose da Leon Teral, an art student Tbe assassin was arrested but refused to name his accomplices or the instigators of tbe crime. A score of suspects were taken In cus-tody. Alberto Cms was Immediately supplanted as minister of police by General Zertuche, one of Obregon'a closest friends, and both he and Pres-ident Calles promised that the murder would be cleared up and those guilty punished. In a signed statement Calles said the assassin had admitted that the motive of his crime was religious ALL doubt concerning the death of Alfred Loewenstein, Bel-gian financier, who disappeared from his airplane while crossing the Eng-lish channel, was dispelled by tho finding of his body near Cape Gria-Ne- s. THE Jacksonville scale as a basis wage negotiations In the bituminous fields has been abandoned by tbe United Mlno Workers of Amer-ica, according to the action of tha policy committee of the union, and hereafter each of the districts has the right to effect settlement with operators "upon a basis mutually sat-isfactory." Action taken by district officers must be submitted to the min-ers of the district for ratification. The policy committee also author-ized all district organizations to per-mit any coal company or any mine to employ all the men It may require for maintenance, repairs, development, construction or production of coal, providing the existing wage scale is paid temporarily uutll a district agree-ment la reached. The new. policy ia Interpreted as a gesture by. the union toward bettering the depressed condi-tions in the bituminous coal Industry. AMONG those claimed by death the week were Giovanni Glolittl, Italian statesman and foe of Mussolini; D. C. Davies, director of the Field museum In Chicago; Henry R, Rathbone, congressman at large from Illinois, and William E. Harmon of New Tork, who as ".Tededlah Tin-gle." had given large sums to unrec-ognized heroes, good children and de-serving authors. RECKLESSNESS in prohibition again humiliated tire American government According to announcement by Secretary Kel-- ' logg, we have sent a note to the Brit-ish government expressing regret and apology for the violation of the sov-ereignty of the Bahama islands last Spntfiiilier when Larrv Christiansen, i their stand will Induce very many farmers to change their political af-filiations next November. The Iowa Republicans, large numbers of whom are corn belt farmers, held their state convention last week and unanimously Indorsed the Hoover and Curtis ticket and the Kansas City platform, includ-ing its farm relief plank. The state platform condemned Al Smith for "his attitude on nullification'' of prohibition and alluded to "Tammany's effort to fasten lteelf upon the nation." Earlier in the day Governor Hammill of Iowa bad bad a talk with Herbert Hoover on the letter's train, and he told the convention something of what the farmers might expect from Hoover if he were elected President Governor McMulIen of Nebraska also had a chat with Mr. Hoover and after-ward said the candidate had a com-prehensive understanding of the farm problem, but the governor did not seem to have been won over to Hoover's support President Coolidge was Hoover's host for a couple of days at the sum-mer White House and they firhed and talked politics together, after - which Hoover resumed his trip to California. It was saddened by the news of the death of Mrs. Hoover's father, Charles D. Henry, in Placer, Calif. SMITH was busy as a GOVERNOR with political con-ferences and picture makers.; Among his callers Byrns of Tennessee, who assured him ha would carry not only the solid South but also the border states. Al could see nothing to worry about In the stories of Democratic revolt In Texas or elsewhere. The report that Smith bad selected Owen D Young, chair-man of the General Electric company and colleague of Dawes In the repara-tions work, to be the Democratic can-didate to succeed him as governor was flatly denied on behalf of both the ' ' gentlemen. SECRETARY KELLOGG'S antiwar marching on toward complete victory Last week it was accepted in principle by Great Brit-ain and the dominions of Canada, Australia. New Zealand, Union of South Africa and by the Irish Free State and India. Acceptances also were received at Washington from Belgium. Poland and Czechoslovakia. All the answers. It was believed, would be found satisfactory by the American government Approval had already been given the pact by Ger-many, France. Italy and other nations, fervor, and the president added that the authorities had obtained much In-formation "Implicating directly cler-ical action." In conclusion, Calles said: "Finally I want to announce that the government will continue as heretofore within constitutional paths and with the requisite calmness and energy." This was taken to mean that he would not attempt to continue In office after November, as the Mex-ican constitution forbids direct suc-cession of the president In two terms In office. However, that constitution has been altered before to fit circum-stances and may be changed again. Despite tbe words of Calles, It is acarccly conceivable thut the Catholic church In Mexico as an organization or any of its responsible members can have instigated the murder of Gen-eral Obregon. The relations between the church and the government had been steadily improving, and Obregon, though pledged to carry on the poli-cies of Calles, was looked to as the . man to settle the trouble finally. The best guess at this time Is that the as-sassination was prompted by political enemies of the preeident-elec- t who utilized a weak-minde- d religious fa-- , natic. Telegrams deploring the crime were sent by President Coolidge, Vice Pres--. ldent Dawes and Secretary" of State Kellogg. In Washington Anibassadd Tellei, though terribly shocked, said he was certain - the tragedy --would ' bring about the unification of all men in hia country, sweeping away the dis-turbing and reactionary elements. He expected the old congress would b called in session to prepare for a spe-cial election. The permanent commis-sion of congress already bad been summoned to meet to consider the po-litical sltnntion. WHILE mourning Mexicans were the body of General Obre-gon to his native state of Sonora for burial. Americans were sending home, with all possible honors, the remains of Cart Emilio Carranza, the Mexican "good will" flyer who was killed when hie plane crashed In New Jersey dur-lu- g a storm. After It had Iain In state In New York the body was con-veyed to Mexico on a special funeral train that carried also the aviator's father, an American army guard of honor and Mexican officials. The smashed plane also was taken back. All along the route tbe passing of the train was watched by sorrowing commanding a coast guard g boat seized two boats off the Bahamn coast, towed them into a Ba-hama port and then removed the liquor and prisoners to Miami. Mr. Kellogg promised that the coast guard would not agnln offend in that way, hat the boats and liquor would be re-stored to their owners and that Chris-tiansen would be transferred to an-other part of the country. Prohibition administrators held their annut.1 conference with Commissioner Doran and other Treasury department officials in Washington. Among other topics considered was the Increased use of airplanes In enforcing dry lawa 1 Help! A family in Central avenue was having some cleaning done and a very high stepladder was left In one room. Mrs. X was surprised to hear a shrill cry coming from this particular room : "For heaven's sake ! Some one come here quick and get this child down before he breaks his neck!" She rushed Into the room and found her small son perched on top of the ladder. "What Is the matter, sonr she Inquired. "Oh, nothing." he answered. " was just saying what grandma would say if she found me up bee." In-dianapolis News. |