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Show i THE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH Thursday, July 5. 1928 Handled Gov. Smith's Campaign - sV V V ' ' w f" 'i M I i U ' A if ": w ! t. v JV; " P f f jum $ ' it 1 Group of Smith boosters snapped at Houston. Left to right, seated. Norman E. Mack of CufTalo, N. Y former Ambnssndor James Cefnrd and A. & Gray of Delaware. Left to right, standing, Howard Cullnwn and George C. Js'orton. mi 1 1 mum 1 1 1 ii iiinni Has Heart Marked, Then Shoots Self Ionia, Mich. After persuading an Ionia doctor to mark Its exact location, Miss Anna Moon-- ; ; !! ey, fifty-fiv- e years old, of Hub-- bardston, fired a bullet from a ;; revolver Into her .. " heart here recently. Death was Instantaneous. " Miss Mooney, who had been a " visitor at the home of Mrs. Em- - j j ma Luseher six weeks, called on Dr. Raymond R. Whltten, then told him she always hod a curiosity to know where her ; !! heart was, and asked him to y mark the 'spot on her side, lie did so with a piece of colored ; ; chalk. ; ; '. The woman lived for years on a farm near Hubbardston. She )) had been In III health for some ; ) time. She leaves a brother, j John, and a sister, Mary, of i; Crystal. I 1 1 H I I I 1 1 1 III I I I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - SOUTH DAKOTA OFFERS REWARD IN PUMP MURDER Mysterious Slaying of High' way Engineer in 1926 Still Remains Unsolved. Sioux Falls, S. D. The mystery sur-rounding the slaying on the morning of Labor day, September 0, 1020, of Frank S. Peck, rixty-flve- , highway en-gineer of Lawrence county, raoyt pop-ulous of the counties In the Black Hills, may be solved at this late date through action taken by the county commissioners of Lawrence county. They have offered a reward of $1,-00- 0 for evidence that will lead to the arrest and conviction of the slayer of I'eck, who so far as known had no enemies. County officers have been working on the case ever since the murder, which shocked the people of the Dlack Hills and of the state. May Lead to Tip. It Is thought the offering of a re ward may result tn the officers re celvlng a "tip" which may lead to dis covering the Identity of the murderer. On the morning of Labor duy Mr. Teck went to his garage and found a small hand tire pump lying on the floor. Ticking It up to examine It, he could find no Identification mark, and There Was a Terrific Explosion. he put It down on the floor to try It out. When the plunger struck the bottom of the pump there was a ter-rific explosion, which shattered the flesh and. bones of his legs. Mrs. Peck and several neighbors, hearing the ex-plosion, went to the scene at once. Mr. Peck was removed to a hoepital, where his lower legs were amputated In an effort to save his life. This proved futile, however, and he died several days later. Several Suspects Taken. Mr. Peck, during lucid Intervals be-fore his death, several times expressed complete mystification as to the Iden-tity of the man who had planted the bomb. The officers ascertained that either dynamite or nitroglycerin had been placed In the tire pump. The officers detained several men on suspicion, but could obtain no con-clusive evidence against any of them, so they were released. The reward of $1,000 now Is offered In the hope that light will be cast on the mystery sur-rounding the death of the aged man O DONNELL & CO. Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon Utah Phone 17 Wasatch 6461 . Salt Lake Phone I What You Want j How You Want It When You Want It j-)- RiH iiaiiiiiiiiisillllliaiiliiBllllllliBllliislllllllBisiiiiiVBilBB iTTT For anything io th ; Sljl line of pfinnnf coma M to ut aid w'B (Mrr antes you Mbsfaatory work at prices that art right I 'in! Msbpp wwayaiaaMMsJ ' 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 Y One way $1.50 Round Trip $2.50 V i Get ' Your Jjy ; From Granite ij Furniture Co. !: Isis Theatre Building ; ! I Bingham Canyon ; llllllHlllllilSiiliijHillllinilHl ! yclvertisers I will find this I paper an excellent j medium in which 111 to display their I bargains and make theirwants known 11 II llllliillilllJj;!! Jfaall "t ' fl- Don't Overlook AH MdwcrtptJoa. If roa an la rrsan rvamober that wa ea always find fto4 m for the MONEY SLASHER GIVEN SWIFT JUSTICE Cet$ 180 Day$ for Cutting Women's Drew. New York. Given an example of swift Justice in the local courts, Seve-rlan-o Rodriguez, butcher, flfty-rw- o years of age, whose mania for slash-ing dresses of .omen In congested pluces has baffled police for three months, wus sentenced to ISO days In the city'jull by Munclpal Judge Wil-son on two counts of malicious de-struction of property. Within 30 minutes from the time Deputy City Prosecutor Llndsey ls sued seven complaints against Rod-riguez at behest of Policeman Luquet and Mrs. Myrtle Roberts, 423 West Second street, who led to his capture during the city hall parade, the de-fend in t was being led to a Jail cell. He later was booked on 13 addi-tional charges of malicious mischief by Detective Lieutenant Chltwood. Rodriguez pleaded not guilty to six of the chnrges, but admitted the ac- - cusatlon of Mrs. Roberts. Because of the s.rlousness of the offense, more than 40 persons are believed to have fallen victims of Rodriguez' peculiar mnnla, Deputy City Prosecutor Mar-gl- d requested the maximum sentence. After Imposing the maximum sen-tence for a misdemeanor Judge Wil-son fixed ball at $6,000 and a date for trial of the other counts. Mrs. Roberts stated she was wit-nessing the dedication parade when she felt a knife rip through her silk dress valued at $75. She followed the defendant for several blocks and sum-moned Office) Prulti. Others whose dresses were torn Id front of the new city hall were Marie Frashear, Mrs. Theodora Webster, Mrs. Frances Vanevery, and Mrs. Marie Johnson, while Miss Millie Mi-ller's clothing was torn on a crowded street car. Tame Deer on Mr. Coolidge's Vacation Island fifi fiY) i ' ..... ... ,, ... -- wHHRpaaMMMIIMiHBMMMI " Some of the tame deer on Cedar Island, President Coolldge's vacation home, getting their add to the altractlMiess dally meal. They of the place. I AIR SCHOOL GRADUATE J1' lv sf Uurajjtrcr Alexis Felix Dupont, son of the vice president of the E. I. Dupont de Nemours compuny of Wilmington, Del., who graduated from the air corps primary fljlng school at Sa Antonio, Texns. I1 Houston in Gay Attire wJiiii- sgSgii ;, Fgg I View of Texas avenue, Houston, showing the d buildings. The building was beautifully decorated In honor of the Democratic National convention. Kicking Blonde, Terror of Gotham Police, Free New lork. Mrs. Loretta earlier, twenty-nin- e years old, whose toes were dreaded by the policemen of Brcok- - lyn, to whom she Is known as the "Kicking Blonde," received a suspend-ed sentence recently from County Judge Algeron Nova In Brooklyn. She was put on strict probation for three years. Last September Mrs. earlier was arrested while leaving a wedding an 1 charged with driving while Intoxlcat ed, a charge later dismissed. In the course of the arrest she kicked two policemen painfully, It was alleged. Indicted for assault by the Kings coun-ty grand Jury, she pleaded guilty to kicking one of the policemen. Fol-lowing the suspension of her sentence on that count she asked permission of the court to go to California for her health. Goes to Jail for Horse, but Changes His Mind New York. History records the story of a fellow who, before the days of automobiles, offered his kingdom for a horse, but It remained for the present age to provide the man will-ing to go to Jail for a horse for half an hour. The man Is George F. Bryce, Brook-lyn junk man, and the horse was Bill. George got old Bill two years ago, not in exchange for a kingdom, nor even Brooklyn, but for $12.50, and he de-clared In court that he had become very much attached to Bill. It all developed this way. Bill was pulling George's Junk wagon, but de-cided after a time to make no further progress; in fact, Bill lay right down tn the street A passing school teach-er, feeing sores on the horse's back and legs, telephoned the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. It sent Special Officer Thomas Mid winter to the scene of the lying down. When he prepared to shoot Bill to end his suffering, George objected so much that be was arrested and Bill went on living. In court Magistrate Folwell, after hearing both sides of this animal story, gave George the option of spending $50 on a fine or 20 days in jail. George chose the 20 days, but after completing half an hour of his sentence he was ready to grant per-mission to shoot old Bill. But he still protested his love for his one-tim- e $12.50 horse. HEADS KIWANIS O. Samuel Cummlngs of Kansas City, who was elected president of Klwanls International at the. close of the twelfth annual convention of the organization In Seattle. He is an off-icial of the Kansas. City Life Insur-ance company and several other ex-tensive business enterprises. Rogue Elephant in Strait-Jack- et i Mil 'V KOj Tuske, the world's largest tiephanf, photographed at Portland. Ore., in Hie heavy chains put on him to prevent nny future fatal rampages, lie has already killed two keepers and injured ninny, but they do not want to kill liim because of his record size. Appeals to Court to Lengthen His Sentence Colberg, Pomerania. An exception-al prisoner was Paul Horn, aged twenty-th-ree, who objected to the court's sentence for his assaulting and rob-bing a woman on the seushore as. In-adequate and appealed to a higher court for a more befitting punishment. When the public prosecutor de-manded a sentence of five years In the penitentiary, the prisoner cried : "That Is all rot; my crime calls for at least ten years." Nor would the court's ul-timate decision of six years and three months In the penitentiary apt ease him. He Insisted upon filing an ap-peal with the words: "Ten years Is my limit that settles It." Robber Admits Killing Two-Gu- n Detective Oklahoma City. Clyde Short, con-fined in the Minnesota state peniten-tiary on a forty-yea- r sentence for rob-bery, has confessed that he and a com-panion murdered Luther Bishop, Okla-homa detective, at bis home here tn December, 192a A letter telling of the confession was received by J. Berry King, assistant attorney general, from J. J. Sullivan, warden of the prison at Stillwater, Minn. Bishop, a two-gu- n man and one of the most fearless officers In the state, was shot to death In bed at his home. Evidence was developed that he was killed with his own pistols. His widow was charged with having Rluln him oui of Jealousy but whs freed by a Jury Her attorneys contended Bishop wni killed by hunk robbers or :ihvr orhn luals whom he had been trMli-i- Discoverer of Brazil Pedro Alvares Cabral, a Portu-guese navigator. Is credited with hav-ing discovered Brazil on April 22, 1500. With the revision of the cal-endar, the date became May 3. 1.100, and this has been adopted as the ofll chil dute.nf discovery. Blind Hero Gyulavar, Hungary. For diving Into a river and saving the life of a small girl, Illes Kish, blind, of this place, tv: s awarded a inula! for hrivery. |