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Show Thursday, August 30, 1928 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH Seven "Affairs" for Each Mate ages at which humnn beings are most Jikely to fall In love," says the article. "The men begun to show amatory euthuslasin sooner than the women. Up to fifteen their average was some-what abend. The women reach the peak of their love affairs earlier thun Hie men. The Hold of greatest activity runs from sixteen to twenty. The men reach the penk between twenty-on- e and twenty-two- . After the peak the men go down more slowly than the women. There Is a slight rebirth of love mtiklng at about thirty, then an other sag. "With the forties comes another peak In the love affairs of the wom-en. Through the thirties the women show a little more activity than the men, and In the next decade they defi-nitely outdlstunce them. The women show no Interest in younger men until the thirties. One man ran up a total of 27 love affairs, against one unhappy marriage. "The women had more affairs that ended because they fell In love with somebody else, because of family In terference, because of the death of the loved one, or because one or both of the lovers were already married. The love affairs of the men terminated because of separation, dissatisfaction with the women, and a feeling of in-feriority." The directors of the bureau of social hygiene Include John D. Rockefeller, Jr., chairman; Charles O. Ileydt, sec-retary and treasurer; Dr. Katherlne B. Davis and Raymond R. Kosdlck with Dr. Abraham Kleiner as asso elate. j -- Survey Shows That Males Are Less Fickle Than Other Sex. New York. The average married person, whether or not happily mated, has seven love affairs, according to returns gathered from 200 men and women. Other conclusions from the survey follow: Women are slightly more tickle tl an men. Most of the attachments precede that which dually leads them to the altar, although being wed does not de-ter a lurge mluorlty from romancing outside the home. These facts are presented In a re port of an Investigation Into human relationship hy the bureau of social byglene of New York City. The work, pursued lu scientific spirit covered four years. The re-port of the findings has been revealed for the first time. Wives Seek Solace. One hundred men accounted for 031 love affairs and 100 wuniea for 077. tut three of the latter said they bud never loved any man. Tweutyoilne of the 100 husbands let their affections stray from the family circle and 41 of the wives found solace In the arms of other men. "Two hundred men and women chosen for the research were almost all college bred or of college grade," the report says. "They came from .New York city and Its environs. A third of the men were in professional life, a tenth were engineers, a little jnore than a quarter were In business. Half of the men bud incomes uuder 55,000 a year." Their ages ranged from twenty-thre- e to fifty-nin- The majority were between thirty and forty and lmd been married from five to fifteen .years. The subjects were consid-ered representative of their claws In uny large city. "They are a widow's 4ii i te of facts got uuder curefully ar-ranged scientific conditions, but a mite is worth dropping In an empty tx," the authors explain. Kuch of the 200 men and women received cards on which were type-written question.. There were more than forty cards with nearly 400 juistiiiis The examiners asked that the questions be talked out lu u very free. Inforinul Maimer. Oue of the cards invuriahly wore out sooner than tlm others. It was known as the "Line Affairs Card." The one for the women asked them to give a list ot nil the buys with whom they hud been in love, either before or after their own marriage, and to give In forma tinn aliout their own age, at the time ot the love affair; whether the boy was older or younger;, the color ot Ills eye? and hair; whether be was short or tall, thin, plump or fat ; tl lie resembled the girl's fattier or brother in disposition and appear-ance, aud the extent of their "spoon ng." Gives Fair Index. The 200 men und women provide os with a pretty good index of Hie 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. JARVI3, Editor , a Camp Life Too Tame 1 1 for N. Y. Parson's Son $ New York. Richard Mlltou i'otter, son of the Unlversallst pastor. Churlee Francis I'otter, if $ returned of his own accord to & '?) the I'otter home, after an ab-- $ sence of four daya. Young Tot- - fl g tor seemed quite surprised that S his futher bIhmiIc have been bo $ j alarmed over his absence. S The young man related a ae-- jj j rles of adventures of hitch hlk- - 3 Ing and working his wuy home from the Adirondack vamp of & his fitinlly to the winter real- - donee, lie said he worked on 0 j farms and hnd outlasted two g fj men pitching huy. With pride j he told of leaving the camp with 8 ji) only a small amount of change and had arrived borne with over g 10 and his board and lodging. ft Richard explained that the j effeminacy of cajup life was too g much for him, besides "the worn-- j j en would talk their heads off." I RITZ HOTEL BINGHAM'S CLEANEST, BEST AND MOST MO-- ; DERN BOARDING HOUSE. WATCH YOUR ;j I CHANCE FOR A ROOM. $ 560 MAIN PHONE 3 4 4 Si Jj : Coolest Place in Town jj THE OXFORD i' !i j: Full line of cigars, tobacco and soft drinks. :j j: American Beauty right off the ice. . 1. SOFT DRINKS I Delicious Budweiser, Cigars and ;j 1 Tobacco at the o &. I Opposite the Safeway j : j CITIZENS COAL & SUPPLY CO. COAL, ICE, HAY and GRAIN AGENTS FOR BECCO j Phone : : : : : 39 BINGHAM 5 GARFIELD RAILWAY COMPANY i Ship your freight via Bingham and Garfield Railway. Fast I daily merchandise cars from Salt Lake City in connection B with the Union Pacific System. ' 1 I USE COPPER I I Brass piping for $4500 cottage only costs $48.87 1 I more than galvanized iron piping and will I I LAST FOREVER I T. H. PERLEYWITS. H. L. DAVIDSON 1 Asst. Gen. Freight & Pas. A.gt., Agent I Salt Lake City, Utah Bingham, Utah "' 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 V '.. , Dedicate Home in Sea to Fishermen's Pastor Star Island, Maine. Ten miles out to sea there was an Impressive scene when the Tuck parsonage was formally dedicated. Prominent Uni-tarian clergymen were among those In attendance. The Tuck house Is constructed of Island stone In style harmonious with the old stone meeting house of Cos-por-t, which is 128 years old. The building Is In memory of John Tuck, who years ago ministered to the fisher folk. (Ie dwelt In one of the former buildings on the site, and bis remains rest only a few feet away, surrounded by an Impressive granite obelisk. furiously enough, In this spot fine suinl Is washed up by the tides from no one knows where, for the Isles of Shoals belle their name and are a mass of rocks pushed up out of the sea. When the sand supply Is cleaned out of this pocket, the tide In a few days renews It again. French Students Drop German for English Paris. German Is steadily losing Its place In the schools of France. More than half the pupils In the lycees, or high schools, took Germuti before the war. Now only three In ten choose It as the one modern lan-guage that Is obligatory In the lycees and colleges. English has grown In favor because It is reputed to be easier than German and because It has acquired greater prestige. Nearly four In ten choose It. The diminishing interest In German is regretted by leuders of many sorts. Military men strongly favor German because It Is the language of France's formidable neighbor. Sparrows, Songbirds, Increase in Midwest Washington. The feeling that Eng-lish sparrows are disappearing In this country Is without Justification, according to the United States bureau of biological survey. While there has been a decrease of these birds In the last few years, so that they are no longer the pest they were forty or fifty yeurs after their first Importa-tion, nature seems to be setting a bal-ance In regard to them, la the West and Middle West they are still appar-ently on the Increase. American songbirds are In no dan-ger of extinction, like their relatives among the game birds. For the most part they are not Jn a precarious po-sition, officials of the bureau report News Notes;; It't m PrioiUg toJLie in ! j Utah DUCHESNE A cuarter of a nv'l-H- o:i dollars worth of honey came out of the Uintah bssin during- - 1927. SALT LAKE The total valuation of all Utah crops In 1927, at prices paid to growers, has been estimated conservatively at $3i,000,000. The estimated total of acres planted to all crops was 1,120,000. PLEASANT GROVE More than 6000 barrels of Utah strawberries wore "cold packed" in 1927 and distributed throughout the country for u.e In soda fountains and by candy manufacturers. The crop last year totaled 2,544,000 quarts, valued at $305,000. TREMONTON The bulk of the wheat gTown in this section has been harvested, there Laving been shipped from this point in the first month since the first car was loaded, July 11, 101 ears. From Garland during the anme period there was shipped 133 cars, each car averaging1 about 1200 bushels. The Garland shipments represent the crop from Portage. EUREKA Tintio mines shipped a total of 149 carloads as compared with 115 carloads for the week preceding. The Tintic Standard shipped 42 car loads; North Lily, 24; American Smelt-ing & Refining, dump ore, 15; Empire Mines, 10; Bingham Mines, 10; Colo-rado, 9; Mammoth, 4; Dragon, 2; Mountain View, 2; and Gold Chain, 1. Chief Consolidated units: Chief Con-solidated, 7 carloads of ore and 5 of dump ore; Eureka Lily, 10; Plutus, 3. SALT LAKE A total of 3180 acres of land in Utah and Idaho will be open for settlement soon, according to word received by the Associated Press from Washington D. C. The land is scat-tered throughout Custer and Blaine counties in Idaho and in Utah county in Utah. Veterans of the World war will have the first opportunity to file on the land. The land in Utah will be opened August SI, while the tracts in Idaho can be filed on beginning Sep-tember 14. HEBER Vocational agriculture students of the Wasatch county high school at Heber will be represented at the national ram sale in Salt Iake with two pens of registered Hamp-shire rams, including some twenty head of lambs and fifteen yearlings. The boys have set for themselves a minimum standard of 130 pounds for lambs and 200 pounds for the year-lings. From a quality standpoint, it will be the best shipment yet made from the students of the school to the national sale. MT.TLEASANT Mt. Pleasant city will soon be protected from the men-acing floods of past years1, as a flood control project is under way two miles east of the city. A. F. Reynolds of Mt Pleasant, who Is in charge of the construction work, has 20 men and teams on the Job. The excavation for the 30-fo- cobble spillway is now completely ready for the masonry work, which will begin at once. The north wing of the dike is completed and the south wing will be finished within 10 days. MYTON The road that Is being Im-proved through the Pleasant Valley district will be completed in a couple of days, so W, E. Broome, overseer of construction, reports. The purpose of this activity is to put it in shape for the handling of supplies, material and machinery for the test well for oil, to be started Immediately. R. W. Gibson, a representative cf the Utah Southern Oil company, is superintendent of the work in this part of Utah, recently workmen bepan making excavations in preparation for the setting up of the derick. RICHFIELD The' Sevier County Fair association reports that extensive training is going on at the fair grounds every day among owners of the race horses. About ten head of race horses are already on the ground from southern Utah, reckoned among the fastest in the state. They also have booked six head from Utah coun-ty, to arrive next week, promising the most interesting racing program to be held here in years. The dairy ex-h'- is also more promising that ever before, owing to the fact th.it a num-ber of animals from important herds in Wisconsin and the northwest, have been entered. VERNAL Prospects for the 1928 alfalfa 'seed crop in Utah are 47 per cent of normal compared with 60 per cent a year ago, Frank Andrews, ag-ricultural statistician for the United States department of agriculture, ann nounced Wednesday. Increases or de-creases from this estimate may result pending arrival of ki;ling frosts, Mr. Andrews reported. Early frosts will bring production lower than estimated and higher production will probably result if frosts are late, the report said. Lack of sufficient moisture has caused the crop to lower from last year's harvest and reports of stripping of blooms1 also have been made, Mr. Andrews stated. MYTON The Upako Flour Mill in Myton, which is operated by C. P. Watterson, has opened for the fall and winter and recently began receiving new wheat About 400 bushels were received in one day, some of which was of a superior quality, weighing sixty-fo- ur pounds to the bushel. Mr. Wat-terson estimates the crop for this sea-son in the vicinity of Myton at 20 000 bushels, which is a marked increase over that of previous years. In ad-dition, he expects te purchase consider-able tonnage from other portions of the basin. All Melons in Hawaii Wear Fancy Nightcaps Honolulu. Even Huckleberry Finn wouldn't have recognized a water melon patch In Hawaii. The melons, enjoyed nearly the year around here, are raised chiefly by Japanese. To protect them from the Mediterranean fruit fly, which, having laid its eggs, becomes a grandmother many times over In almost a single night, the farmers keep the melons tied In paper sacks. Marked with the fantastic charac-ters that give the date aud directions for picking, the melons resemble a Held of Japanese lanterns. The Weaker Sex? Towunda, Pa. Mrs. Elmer Benja-min, seventy-seve- n years old, was res-cued after five days and four nlghta In the mountains, and despite being forced to go barefoot most of the time through loss of her shoes, com-plains only of being a little tired. She subsisted on berries. Design for American Legation in Panama m&wMM: LJ JIM ' - - - j. - f . , Is, - fr& w,r. r . ia- - 5 ot the. foreign service buildings commission, Secretary ot State Kellogg and Keith Merrill, executive secretary inspecting the recently approved design for the American legation in I'anama. This design with some modifloat.ona , will be followed for all future legations In tropical countries. . FIND UNKNOWN LETTER OF WASHINGTON'S IN LONDON tluence In a constitutional way exten l they shall he employed to the utmost of my ability to effect It. Should there be an.v occasion let me conjure you then. If you have any regard for your country, concern for yourself, or re-spect for me, to banish these thoughts from your mind, and never communl-- . cats as from yourself or any one else a sentiment of the like nature. "I have acquainted Gen. Iiraddock with the gist of your letter. Irs. In sorrow. O Washington." The letter Is going to America, where It will be placed on exhibition temporarily at various museums of history. It will probably be offered for sale later, either to the govern-ment, historical societies, or private individuals. course of this war has given me more painful sensation than your Informs tion of there being such Ideas existing In the army as you huve expresse-- l and which I may view with abhor rence and reprehend with severity For the present the communication of them will rist in my own bosom un less some further agitation of the mutter ehall make 8 disclosure. I am much at loss to conceive what part of my conduct could have given encourngemeni to an address which to me seems big with the greatest mischief thai can befall my country. If I am not deceived In the knowl edge of myself you could not have found a person to whom your schemes re more disagreeable. "At the same time in Justice to m own feelings I must add that no man pos-espe- a more. serious wish to see :uiple Justice done to the army than I tla ; and as far as my power and In j Interesting Missive Discovered In Attic of Old Boarding House Near British Museum. l.ondon.-Af- ter lying neglected for years covered with dust, In the ottic of an old London boarding house In the neighborhood of the British museum a hliherto unknown letter ot ieorge Washington has been disco era I here. Yellow with age and worn almost through Mt the creases, the strong liandu riling of the first American President and his Tamous signature ere si ill dearly decipherable. Addressed to Mnjor Ewan and d.ited Georgetown, Oct 4, l"Sl. the Mler reads: "Sir: W'th a mixture of great sur pdse and usi nMimcnt I have read x 1th attention the aenrlment? you i.ive xtihmited to m perusal. "lit; assumed hlr, no oru;-io-; in the In Real Distress Panama. The pangs of a toothache forced Jo8epi Hammn. keeper of the Castle Island light, to venture out lb the heavy sens recently and stop tire steamer Milan I.ukenhnk to get .a remedy He flew try British flag re-versed as a signal of dlstrvss. |