OCR Text |
Show Thursday, March 1, 1923 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH 0' f f ; ; Chicago Girls Join in a Health Campaign yrXC iFin! fVf A I A "Ann i. Lfei k -- y M41 J Thousands of Chicago girls, ranging from fourteen to twenty years of age, are now adhering to the rules set Iforth In a health campaign launched by the Chicago Council of Social Agencies for the double purpose of bettering the health of the city's young girls and converting Chicago Into a city known for Its beautiful women. Miss Hilda Burrowes Is seen showing the new health poster to two Ctrl Scouts. 1 NEW COAL PRICES I Effective at Once I Lump - Nut - Stove Coal To All Parts of Bingham Canyon Ij $8.50 PER TON $4.50 HALF TON 1 Lump - Nut - Stove Coal 1 1 To All Parts of Highland Boy and Copper field g $9.50 PER TON $5.00 HALF TON All Sacked Coal $ 1 .00 Per Ton Extra 1 CITIZENS COAL and I SUPPLY I .t Phone 39 Deluxe Confectionery and Pocket Billiards Ice Cream Candy Soft Drinks-Tobac- co We have installed the Latest Pool Tables HIGHLAND BOY O'DONNELL & CO. Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon Utah Phone 17 Wasatch 6461 Salt Lake Phone r It's Pure and It's Rich - .... ; Our milk is daily subject yXl to careful tests for pureneas "Sfv. 'j'. and richness. And it must pass these tests, otherwise . ' f ? ;rt'j it can never reach the table. BINGHAM DAIRY Cr4. I Phone 232 and we will start delivery 1 i,- - r'iA:i'ii.ii4 at once ii WHEN IN SALT LAKE i :; Visit the ?. STATE CAFE ; ; Where you will always get the BEST i n to eat at reasonable prices j ;! 46 West 3rd South Salt Lake City ijj The BINGHAM BULLETIN The Only Printing Plant in 3 Bingham Canyon 3 I Let us do your PRINTING J Phone 91 I City Cash Market j D. Pezzopane, Mgr. GROCERIES, MEATS, FISH 1 AND POULTRY I 2 Imported and Domestic Products l I 381 MAIN STREET PHONE 148 j Bingham Canyon, Utah J ffTa TaTaaVatTi,TiATAt?i,AATAVATilAAiTA?TATATATAVATATA ?ATATAfA A AW iAWAWAAWAW4AwAw4AmA.wI wAAAAj SORDID TALE OF TROPICAL SEAS RIVALS FICTION Swaggering Bally Charged With Tossing Shipmate to Sharks. New York. Frank Pollack, prize fighter, sailor, liully and accused mur-derer, has come home In Irons from the tropical sens to answer to the I charge of tossing a crippled shipmate to tint sharks that he might drain a bottle alone. "Patrick Hunter, maimed but nonetheless genial, went to nil death olT wicked Port Said, "some-where etwt of Suez, where the best In like the worst." lie died because he ootiRht friendship where there was none. Tlie prim story of murder on the high seas, of a swaggering bully who terrorized the crew with whom h worked, dcticd his officers, and mad life a torment for one lame seaman who, It Is charted, whs his victim In an uneven fight when the two were alone on the deck of their ship, was revealed by Assistant district Attor-ney (ieorge II. Mint.er. Rivait Storie of Fiction. The motor ship Tampa brought the story when she docked In Brooklyn, but I'ellack arrived several dnyt later on the steamship Canada. The crime took place on the Tampa, but Pollack was held for a while in the Azores for questioning by the American con-sul. The story In Its starktiess and ss Is reminiscent of the sea yarns of fiction, except that no glam-our attaches to this man, who was so easily the physical superior of any of .is f Hunter Never Came Back. his mntes that he was absolute ruler of the forecastle, and who chose at his opponent a cripple. But Pollack was sly. His officers, he knew, had the means of overpow-ering him, strong as he was. So with them he was merely surly. But from the time he signed aboard the ship the crew lived In fear. He bullied them mercilessly, but he never came to an open break with his superiors. Ills fellow shipmates declare they bated him for he "soldiered" would not do his work and was a trouble-maker. They could escape him. They were strong. But Hunter was a dif-ferent proposition. The little seaman was crippled and could not resist the bully. His only hope was to seek friendship and act In the role of a toady. It didn't help, as the pugilist bullied him continually. It was" off Port Said, Egypt, 'hut things came to. a head. The two men went to the poop deck to drink from Hunter's bottle. It was said. Hunter never came back. What happened on that lonely deck under cover of the starlit tropical night Is not definitely known. Whether Pollack deliberately lured Hunter to his death, the crew of the ship do not know. On a Hunger Strike. Pollack says he does not know what became of Hunter. The men on the Tampa Insist Hunter was thrown Into the sea. All of the circumstances of Hunt-er's disappearance are obscured by lack of facts, but one thing is certain and that Is that Pollack swaggered back from the poop deck alone and that Patrick Hunter was never again. Pollack soon found himself In Irons and he stayed in Irons until the Tampa put In at St. Michaels, In the Azores. There Pollack was turned over to Willinm L. Doty, American consul, and tfle Tampa went on to America. Pollack went on a hunger strike and Doty, fearing he might starve himself to death, had him put aboard the Canada In Irons. Huge Steel Gates of Locks Installed at Lockport Welglilng TOO tuns, the great st.vl gates of the locks at Lockport. III., n part of the $20,(KX),0(K) Illinois water-way project, have Just been installed. They are C.-- ! feet in height and provide for a lift of water of 11 feet. The locks cost ?lMMMI.(Mm and are operated by electric motors. The dimensions and general construction are about the same us the locks of the Panama canal. FAR EASTERN CHIEF r - , - ?A X IL mr i& - r wit 1 tiiSr "'"r J lln - Stanley K. Hornbeck, who assumed the office of chief of the far eastern division of the Department of State i in Washington. Mr. Hornbeck hai charge of relations with China, Japan, Slam, portions of Siberia and terri-tory held by European nations in the Orient. Loi:s3 Sher and His Unsinkable Boat Louis Slier of 1'1'iladelphia with the model of a CO foot boat which lie plans to build to cross the Atlantic ocean. The craft will be equipped with Slier's "spring-powe- r marine propulsion de-vice," which lie asserts will drive i) ship at ion miles an hour. He also s l lie hunt will be unsinkable. , m J VNJl' - wrLjPm?- 1 &'j&J 'Myrtyx , . , AC ,4c"ij ' .Mil " ;: afci&l TO HONOR HEROES thdj ir-'- li ?M Kit 1. II wf ll; km : :1 P" Model of the beautiful monument designed by the toted French archi-tect, Louis Key, which France will erect on the cliff at Etretat in honor of the heroic aviators, Nungesser and Coll, who perished In their attempted flight to America, Monument to Spanish Dictator mr mil linn 1 1 Em- - - Km vh. PI erected In Madrid In honor of M.-de- l of the monument that Is to be Hen. Primo de liivtra, dictator of Spain. It was designed by Mariano Lculllure Man's ani s Nailed to Floor by Robber Jersey City, N. J. A robber, big and brutal, nailed John O'Donnell, a young grocery clerk, to the store floor with an Ice pick when he refused to disclose the cache where $35.77 of his employer's money was hidden. The pick was driven through the young man's right band as he lay on the floor, arms outstretched, and held down under the weight of a box of canned goods. A blow across the teeth with the butt end of the hold-n-man's revolver hnd knocked him out. but his assailant took no chances on mal ing a si'fe getaway, end so nailed ti m. d w n |