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Show Friday, August 20, 1920. EUREKA REPORTER d6nt WASTE YOUR MONEY Save it and the proper way to save money is to place z'' it in a savings bank where it will not only be safe but where it will earn something. Idle money soon fail wings; you don't throw it away but some how it goes. Play safe, put it away in a bank around which there is every safe guard. We pay 5 per cent on savings. MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Organized 1890 Pavson Utah :-:M- EATS:-: During the hot weather most people realise the necessity of buying only properly cured meat of the highest possible grade. You cannot take chances on poor meats and when you come to this market you can rest assured that you are getting the best that is to be had. In addition to the choicest of meats and vegetables this store also carries high grade groceries. Buying and selling for cash means lower prices than those which usually prevail Fennell s Meat and Grocery PHONE eureka 18 mini eeeoeesM seeeeeeeeeee eeseeeeeeeeeeeeeec seeeeo Extract Manufacturer Traffidng Xa Boose rummuinmmMwiwjumimrumRnnn mnnnmmnnmmn If Utah hai at lea at one competent officer efforta should be made to prevent the manufacture and sale of the "extracts," which are nothing, more than camoflouged boon. Extract companies are getting rich and the prohibition law is being evaded. In. other wdrda the manufacturers and dealers in extracts have taken the place of saloons; an inferior grade of boom is being sold and consumed and the state fa deprived of the liquor revenue. Old timers who know liquor like a ground squirrel knows his hole say that the large bottles of extract little or no flavoring, that one can scarcely tell the lemon from- the jvanila or from one of the other 'popular branda, and that the word' has been quietly passed around that! :lt is the "real stuff." Dorothy Phillips and Priscilla Dean con-Ita- Drugs n No. 10 Get Y our Fishing Tackle Here. We have an up-to-da- te stock com- YOU DON'T BUY YOUR OUTFIT HERE WE WILL LOSE AND YOU WILL -- BE SORRY. ' Drags Schramm-Johnso- n No. 10. PHONE NUMBER 11. ' An exciting runaway took place in the buaineea dlatrlct on Tueaday, one of Hyrum Klnga teams, with a wagon attached, coming down the alley west of the Star theatre and crashing into the Roaenlund blacksmith shop. The horses were going so fast that they could turn neither up or down v Main street and it Is most fortunate that there was no one in the path of the team. Both horses were injured when they struck the building, in fact they were driven partially through the frame .The story of Paid in Advance" gets into the blood. It rouses once more the fire that impelled people to rush headlong into the Klon dike seeking for gold and to find as most of them did misery, wickedness and heartbreaks that were a part of a mans world. cast of players, including With an all-stsuch notable artists as Dorothy Phillips, Priscilla Dean, William Stowell and Lon Chaney, there has been produced a photodrama of the Canadian wilds and the bleak, wastes of the Yukon that will live long in your memory. From the story by James Oliver Curwood, Americas foremost writer of Klondike and Canadian tales, has been created an epic of the frozen lands. You cannot afford to miss it when it is shown at this theatre. coveretructure and its sheet-Ifo-n ing, one sustaining a broken leg. Notwithstanding the seriousness of the injury Mr. King Is making an effort to save the life of the horse. The other animal was not badly hurt. ,Thls is the third time that runaway teams have come down the alley and collided with the blacksmith shop building. snow-blanket- 0 FUTURE OF WESTERN MET.AIA. o Although western metal producers are struggling to keep up production in the face of enormous Increase in production costs, they show little inclination toward pessimism. Oold is still the basis, actual or prospective, of tbe worlds Inflated currencies, and the demand for the yellow metal was never more urgent than now. High authorities also predict that' in time the copper metal also will come Into its own. The Engineer and Mining Journal says: A decade or more may produce a condition In the copper market similar to that now existing in the petroleum Industry. "We appear to have now a number of copper mines to supply tbe demand, but some will be worked out and disappear, and it is whether new mines problematical can be brought to production fast enough to 'cope with the per capita Increase ln the consumption of copper. "When we look to the electrical power development, ' the ever Increasing market for e vlstual-lscan we electrical appliances, a greater and greater per capita consumption of copper. It is so with many other metals and with minerals. Mining is Inevitable. "Mineral discovery is not as essy as it once was. Metal and mineral prices may be expected to increase materially as a consequence. Just as the porphry coppers, once thought to be too low grade to work, have been improved and new methods become profitable, so will other metalliferous deposits, under the stimulus of high prices, become workable. ed Star Tuesday, August 24th j ' suf-flce- nt Western cannera will not pack any heavy aurplui of canned frnlta or other canned goods this year. Leading cannera, It la reported will pack only enough frulta to cover their actual orders In band and do not plan to pnt up large quantities and take the chances in disposing of these goods in tbe open market later. The prices of all aorta of fruits are the highest on record this year. The policy ofbooeting the price to tbe limit by fruit growers organisations may react to the detriment of. the Industry by curtailing demand. Tbe present demand for fruit and vegetable products baa been created by the cannera through their campaign to place these articles before a world consuming public in canned form. When the cost of the raw material foroea tbe price of the canned product beyond the purchasing power of the masses, direct injury will result to the grower. We may see au illustration of the straw that broke the camels back" in the present situation. i O o E. C. Talbot, of the Con T. Kennedy Shown, spent Tuesday In the eity endeavoring to ecu re permission for the carnival to show here at an early date, bnt their entreaties did not meet with the favor of the city officials who are against tbe appearance of any carnival company here this season. Mayor C. J. Shaddick states that be baa received several applications for a license, bnt it la hla opinion that can get along Just ns well without these cheap attractions, and moat of the cities of Michigan have taken the same attitude. Iron Ora of lahpeming, Michigan. Con T. Kennedy and I Moapa Valley Cantaloupes ablest melons, every one a soon ONE. v Flat Chutes of IS Standard Cantaloupes Flat Chates of IS Jumbo Cantaloupes These prices lacluds all pared post charges to your SS-O- S You win also get our price list of Shurtliff Bros. Vegetable Farm i ar N. a i d. ON MAIN STREET. NO CARNIVALS IN MICHIGAN. OVERTON, NEVADA. What good woman has not been distressed the by thought that some day she might have to make a bitter choice between two evils? None, perhaps. That is the situation that confronted Joan Gray within a few moments after her arrival in the iniquitous mining town of Dawson City, Klondike, during the gold-madays in the'Yukcn. Enticed to the town by the proprietor of the notorious dive, Joan is compelled to choose between him and the wicked crowd which infest the place. Abhorring Geld Dust Baker, the proprietor, Joan chooses the crowd and offers herself in marriage to the highest bidder. And she is won by Jim Blood, the Cur, so called because he is despised by his associates as a drunken brute. But his heart is pure gold. j RUNAWAY Advance OVERALLS. o- - By Walt Maaon. bought a ault of overalls, a auit of dingy blue, with creaaea down the outer walla, and bib and tucker too And nil my neighbor! did the aarne, and everyone in town, to knock the profiteering game, and bring the prleea down. The rich men in their glided halli with poor men fell in line; we all were wearing overalla and feeling mighty fine. At laat wed found u uaefnl way to curb the ril 1 ing coat, and make the profiteering jay feel like an early frost. And then the price of demin raga went soaring to the moon; the dealers sprung the tame old gaga, and crooned the tame old tune. The honest toller in the ditch could not afford to buy new overalla we idle rich had sent the price aky high. The honest workwere ers everywhere in arrayed; the dealer had no duds to spare wed bought hla stock in trade. We wore our overalla a week, and then the thing grew stale; we fig-leav- es , plete line of Fish Lake Tackle: IF ti Paid in THE LAST STRAW. of tackle for both bass and trout fishing, including a --IN- ln ever-growi- Schramm-Johnso- Pace 7 CAMELS have molow-mildne- ss and a flavor as refreshing as it is new. Camels quality and Camels expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos win you on merits. Camels blend never tires your taste. And, Camels leave no unpleasant dgaretty aftertaste nor unpleasant dgaretty odor I What Camgls quality and expert blend can mean to your satisfaction you should find out at ooce! It will prove our say-s- o yhen you ''compare Camels with any cigarette in the world at any price! Si adamUtmltr aaa ltd patkat rhn 300 atmttaa) t ;mr tmm RJ. packmpaa ( atranity rr rammmd Hum ar yaa trrrwL REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. .N.G. mf 30 ghmaina-W- a took and threw them in the creek, or hung them on a nail. And thus a great reform, my dean, was to the discard hurled; and still Che busy profiteers are fencing In the world. o i BUCK CAR FOR SALE. o Will sell Big Six Bulck car at bargain price, or will trade for smaller car. Apply to William Button, Eureka, Utah. |