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Show ' : i::anr ' . . the prbsbullbtin Thr la mor Catarrh In this section .t the country than an other dlceasea put together, and (or yean it was sup--i posed to b incurable. Doctors prescribed , v local remedies, and by constantly (ailing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Catarrh ia a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional con-diti- oti and therefore requires constltu- - ' tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh lledi- - cine, manufactured by F J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is a constitutional i . remedy, is taken Internally and acts i . thru the Blood on the Mucoua Surfaces i of the System. On Hundred Dollars re--. j ward la offered (or any case that Hall's Catarrh Medicine falls to cu(t. Send (or i circulars and testimonials. - r F. 3. CHENET & CO., Toledo, Ohio. I Bold by Druggists, 7Bc. I Hall's Family Pills (or constipation. ' ' - --w I Our new. stock of jYrS ladies and misses fE- A-- Jk 'l2jt M u-- v ' 'iL;'"lll ' ' --V coats for fall have U ' jj arrived and are on Qj J"" j -- a7 I We have a ; splendid r variety of styles and - materials to I choose from. Prices run from $16,65 to $80.00. I Space allows us to mention very few of the many styles i we have on fa - ... jj Brown Wid$ Velour and French Coats..... ...... $16.65 Black Seal Plush, With Brown Fur Collar. 4. .... .$52.00 I Dark Green Broadcloth, Trimmed With Fur Cloth. $21.65 Black Silk plush With IiUe Fur Collar and Cuffs and I Gray Brocaded Plush .$27.50 Wide Fur Band Around Collar ,.,............$60.00 . p Black Poyntex Fur Dress Coat With Brown Fur $ j.) 1 Brown Cloth Coat, With Plush Collar. - $28.00 Collar .. . ... . . . . . .... . . ... ........... . 8 Plum Colored .$45.00 Cloth Coat. ......... ... ........ .$36.75 Dark Green Seal Plush"With. Extra Large Genuine " I Black Plush Coat With Brown Plush Collar and Saltex Fur Collar, Coat Lined With Heavy Green (j i Cuffs ....... i .$45.00 . Satin ......................$80.00 ' I TheBig Store I I : C. E. ADDERLEY, Mgr. 1 ij I WANT ADS " r , FOR SALE Odd pieces of furni- -' ture, range, kitchen cabinet, two beds, cot, cupboard, 96 Carr Fork. ' I FOR SALE Harley Davis motor- - ' i - cycle in first class condition; will sell i reasonable. DrvlFlynn. FOUND (Bunch of keys. Owner can j have sanie by calling at this office and describing, and paying for this 1 ad. '' : - I i . - FOR SALE OR RENT Three room ! i house. Apply at Press-Bulletin- , r LOST Second Liberty (Loan $50 i bond number 4874436 on evening of August 20, 1918, somewhere between i '; Utah Copper, office and upper (Main. t Finder return and receive reward h ' from I 79 Carr Fork, r Bingham. ,' Is POR SALE Restaurant, several I partition rooms, stove, ice box, tables, chairs and everything; best place in I ' town. Inquire at Press-Bulleti- office. ,( FOR SALE '100 shares People's ' Sugar preferred with S5 common, - $8.50; '500 Clark tire, 10 cents. Press Bulletin. MINING LOCATION NOTICES for I sale at the Press-Bulleti- n office. tf FOR SALB-Automo- bile. A new Maxwell Roadster with Goodyear all--' ; weather tread tires. In fine condition, A bargain. Dr. 0. W. Richards, Cop. jperfleld. ' tf I r UMM HHLiP Wanted: Wide awake, energetic, temperate man, 25 to 35 years of age to deliver and col-lect from town and country customers. First class references and $500 bond required. Permanent position . and , good compensation to right party. s L. D. Firebaugt, Box 665, Salt LaKe City. Utah. MODERN ROOMS $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00 per week'. Grand Hotel, 19 Carr Fork, Bingham. 8UGAR STOCK FOR SALE Will sell 50 or 100 shares of Springvtlle-Mapleto- n Sugar stock, below par. Ad-dress, box 275, Provo, Utah. tf FOR SALE Three room house In Carr Fork, lot 'E0v40 feet Call in the evening, located 51, Carr Fork, A. W. Anderson. 'Box 778. FOR SALE jfrsndy and Ice cream j soda fountain, well equipped, good lo-- I cation, doing fine business. Owner is leaving state; act quick for bargain. ' 'Apply (Bingham Realty Co., 6 Carr i Fork. , , ' f 1 M. E. WADDOUPS ' Attorney and Counselor I Suite 610 Judge Building, f Salt Lake City, Utah. i ROGERS ORCHESTRA Can be engaged for dances sociables, .etc. Splendid music. "In your pleasant soft drink parlors we've found service very fine; . Of your sodas we've drank freely ' " - your Ice cream is superfine. In your sanitary restaurants we've - had all that we could eat, Waited on by charming damsels is indeed to us a treat . "Hark're hear the fire gnng sound-ing, 'tis the signal for the feed, Now may Dr. Pearse protect us from all sickness we do plead; With Jiis various antiseptics may he -- dause all. germs to quake. May we, be as free from mlcrob.es as -- Is Ireland free from snake v'-- Chorus: "Farewell members, we may never, have another time like this', Bit thj memory. of this gatherrtir ill to ua be mental bliss." THE BINGnAM HOSPITAL Dr. F. E Straup Office flours: 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. 1 p. m. to 5 p. m. 7 to 8 Evenings Phone No. 4 UTAH STATE HEWS Sixty-on- e boys were arrested at Salt pike In one day for violating the traf-ti- c ordinance. . Forty-tw- o members of the Taber-nacle choir fit Salt Lake have entered the military service. The Utah State Federation of Labor held its annual convention at Ogden, ' September 9 and 10. ' v Utah's crop of pears this season has been the largest of record, with prices most satisfying to the growers. To Provo falls the honor of having the first company sworn in in the new ! regiment of the national guard of Utah i Dow being organised. ' Six men of the 175 sent to Camp Lewis by the Ogden draft board on August 28 have been rejected, accord-ing 'o the advices received last week. Fines collected In Bingham for law, violations totaled $1394.70 in the month of August Most of the money was collected In fines for gambling convictions. . . The first Utah soldier to be reported as Interned In a German prison camp Is Harvey M. Murdock, 24 years of age, of Ogden, whd was previously report-ed missing la action in the official cas-ualty fist of August 29. Through a campaign Just completed at Murray for the sale of a thorough--, bred Hereford cow and calf, presented by Neal McMilllan, the Murray chap-ter e the Red X has obtained the amount of $1433 for relief work ' The national guard movement af Brlgham City, which was only started lati last tweek, haS beaa overenllsted. New enlistments are being taken, how-ever, for fear that Some will fnil In the final examination which-- will be made. . , , , : ;:; Labeled "olive oil," two barrels of whisky were confiscated at the Bing-ham railway depot by deputy sheriffs. The liquor, totaling 100 gallons, had been sent from San Francisco. The consignee will be charged with boot-legging.' Fishing as a cure for shell shock Is one of the plans being worked out br Capt M. S. Game of Fort Douglas In the expectation of the arrival of men suffering from this nervous' mal-ady, who we soon to arrive at Fort Douglas. ' ";. - Official figures show that the aver-age dally cost of a soldier's rations at Fort Douglas last month was 42.88 cents, or a little less than 2 cents a day more than the average cost to feed u soldier at the Presidio in San Francisco. Arrangements have been completed by Salt Lake chapter, American Ked Cross, for supplying men enrolled in the students' training corps at the Uni-versity of Utah and the Utah Agricul-tural college with sweaters, socks and bath towels. Eggs have advanced from 49 cents rn. Anman i AA ortt In Rnlt T.nlro In less than two weeks. The advance be-gan Immediately after restrictions were placed upon the margin of profit the commission dealer and the retailer could collect Samuel Sweat and Fred A. Johnson, both of Bingham, have broken collar-bones, and Fred A. Johnson, also of Bingham, sustained a painful injury to his right leg, as the result of an auto-tomobl-accident at Brlgham City. All three were delegates to the state fire-men's meeting. , . Tuesday, September 17, was pro-claimed Constitution day, to commemo-rate the 131st anniversary of the adop-tion of the American constitution, by Governor Bamberger, who, in his. proc-lamation, emphasises the Importance of observing the day this year, owing to the world war. In order that the surplus of vege-tables may not go to waste, the food administration has made a request that all vegetables over the amount necessary tor immediate needs be salt-ed down for winter use. The process Is simple. The only equipment neces-sary is water-tigh-t kegs. i To enter protest against a proposed advance In commission rates for hand-ling sheep, and against a proposed ad-vance of 25 per cent in wool freight rates contemplated under the new con-solidated freight rates sehedule.'Secre-tar- y S. W. McClure of the National Woolgrowers' association has gone east. Dietrich Wltte, a German, 34 years old, is held at Salt Lake for. Investi-gation by the federal authorities. Wltte walked Into police headquarters at Salt Lake and, after stating that he had traveled afoot from Sacra-mento, Cal., to Suit Lake, announced that he had failed to register as an enemy alien; The double honor of being the first navul officer to be killed In action while fighting with land forces and the first dental surgeon to give his life to the cause of liberty on the bat-tlefields of France has fallen to Dr. Weetlen Edward Osborne, formerly of Salt Luke. Dr. Osborne was struck by n rfiell June 6 and instantly killed, while assisting a wounded fellow offi-cer to a safety zone. Adopting resolutions requesting Gov-ernor Bamberger to exercise his influ-ence to have the t'tnh legislature set favorably on the prolUbition amend-ment to the national constitution, and transuding much routine bunineHB, the I'resliyterian Synod of tJtnh, In session j at Suit Lake, adjourned September 5. i The state treasurer's report for August shows that a total of $851,-ClU.l- fl was the ensh bnlunce on hand on August 81. The cash on hand on j August 1 was $1. (CM 1.072.84, with r.e-- I coiptM of $180 875.0."). The month's ' disbursements were $720,2:f0.33. . The official motion pictures exhib-ited by the Department of Agricul-ture are a part of the great campaign throughout the country for Increased agricultural production. " FOOD FOR ro.OOO.OOQ SHEEP National Forests As Grazing Grounds For Sheep To Pro-duce Wool And Mutton For The War Shown In Movies At The Utah State Fair American grown and American made wool, especially for our soldiers Is a national slogan. Tlfe sheep in the picture are patriotic sheep whose wool will soon be cloth to make khaki and blue uniforms. The government motion pictures, taken by the Department of Agricul-ture and to be exhibited at the Utah State Fair, show the sheep grazing on i the National Forests while their wool grows, being counted by the forest rangers as they enter the forest, mov-ing through the picturesque grazing lands to the watering places which the ForeHt Service is developing In order to render more grazing lands available, being driven out again arid finally their transportation to mar-ket. Every year moro than 10,000.000 sheep feed on Uncle am's great Gov-ernment ranees. Approximately pounds of wool is sheared ev-- ', ery year In the United States. Uncle Sam Is urging farmers and city peo-ple with extensive grounds to, raise sheep this year to add to Die nation's wool supply and the meat supply for our soldiers and the allies. General Manager Imer Pett pf the Bingham Mines Company, showed the employees his ability as an early riser, he having motored out from ' Salt Lake and met the morning shift I before they commenced work on Thursday morning. Some men y Uvea ex-cept when they are running for an office in the county. The Lark livery ba:-- has, once more changed hands. A'my (Kemralngsen, a former proprietor, having taken It over from J. 31. Welch. Mr. Hemming-- ' sen will continue to furnish the pub-- . Ho of (Lark with the best transports--I tion facilities possible, not only to meet the trains at Revere Switch, but by auto stage line to Salt (Lake City, which leaves here twice daily. Mr. and (Mrs. Frank Weiss and fam-ily of Frisco, Beaver County, autoed up from thnt district the past week in his new Chandler and spent sever-- ' al days visiting relatives and friends. Al Huber of the firm of Huber and Keeler, of the Lark pool hall, is now permanently located here, with his family, at the former home of fJupt. Joseph Hyland of the Bingham Mines Company Don't let Wachlngton, D. C, appear on the post mark notifying you that j you didn't buy what you pledged to. W. S. S. Chips and Shav-ings From Lark Through the indefatigable efforts of Mayor Kelly of Bingham and the man-agement of the Bingham Mines Com-pany, a large number of War Savings Stamps have been deposited in Lark and are now for sale at the office of the Bingham Mines Company. It is the duty of everyone who have pledg-ed to purchase a certain number of War Savings Stamps to make their purchases as soon as possible of Mr. Lanros at th above mining company's office. Don t say your pledge is not worth the paper on which it Is writ-ten. Lark pledged $20,000. Are you a slacker'' If not, get out and buy all you possibly can. The war cannot be run with hot air, telling what should be done with the kaiser when they get him. Get him first. Baby Bonds will help. . Some people would He out of any-thing to lie in a county office. Would they? f Since the fire at the Ohio Concen-trator our little camp has shown any-thing but a lively aspect A number of operators and laborers of the Con-centrator and motormen and helpers on ihe Bingham Central Railway have left camp and secured employment elatwhere. 'Everything Is being done by the management to resume opera-tions as soon as possible. Steel work-ers are working two shifts removing all the tangled steel which is being Hhlppcd as taken down. Concrete op-erations will begin this week which will employ a number of laborers and It is hoped before Xmas that the trains of the Bingham Central Rail-way will be seen once more on their continuous run. , Armed guards are patrolling the outside of the mill both night and day and a permit at the office is the safest password if you wish to view the operations. Let Bingham get busy and vote for a county commissioner. We need better roads. Can we get them? Dr. C. O. Dewey who succeeded Dr. T. G. Odell here, is all smiles this week, the renult of Mrs. Dewey's ar-rival from Missouri. If the doctor's business continues to make good. H s understood Mrs. Dewey will remain ;iere permanently. . Mrs. W. Webb returned from Beav-(- r by auto the past week, having fiern spending a month's vacation Ith her daughter there. The Society Contrlbutor to the Lark Md'.itnns of the Sunday Salt Lake Tri-Hin- Mrs. Hy Korenscn, has removed to Fphraini, her former home. n NOTICE " ' ' All males having attained the aee f 18 and not reached their 46th irthday who have not previously reg-tere-must do so September 12. The blowing are the places at which to trister: '." - iTown of (Bingham at Commercial ub rooms, Mr. Nielson, chief regis- - r. .. Copperfield and Upper Bingham. :ah Copper, (Hotel, Mr. Schwerlyn, j ief regiHtrar. Phoenix and Highland Boy, School use, Mr. Winters, chief registrar. Lark,' Utah. "ATL." INGLfiSBY, i Member of Local Board. E. G. LOCKE BECOMES PRESIDENTSTATE FIREMEN H G. Locke, poet laureate of Bing-ham, and member of the local fire department number one, was elected last Tuesday as president at the state firemen association In the convention held In Brigham City. Mr Locke has been active for a number of years in the association and for the past three years has been a delegate to the state conventions. 'Last year at Og-den he was selected on the committee to revise the constitution of the or-ganization and in this capicity he rendered valuable service Owing to an automobile accident at Brigham City, Monday evening Mr. Locke was seriously injured and wan compelled to return home and was not present in the convention when the honor was bestowed on him. 'Mr. ILocke Is a most capable pre-siding officer and he will fill the high office to which he has been elected, with credft. He went to the conven-tion well prepared to assist In tho great entertainment and before! he was injured, r?ad before that hody the firemen song he had prepared tor the occasion and this made. quite a hit with the state firemen. His poem which is to the tune of "Just. Before the IBattlo, 'Mother," is as follows: "We have gathered here this evening of a banquet to partake, Giveq by the city firemen who never make mistakes. They have made an t xtra effort, appe-tites of all to please, When you've eaten their choice vians your hunger'll be appeased. "Friends and delegates we're trou-bled, fearful you will over eat, And be Emitted with a sickness that m may settle In your feet, Then you'll have to call the doctor, bitter pills you'll have to take; All because you drank too hearty and of food you overeat. "In this gay and festive gathering we can see Brother SImonson, Who' In speech at Ogden City, this convention for Brlgham won. As a 'Brigham City booster he stands without a peer, Due to his untiring efforts the fire-men have gathered here. "In this pretty favored hamlet you have horticulture rare. In your orchards grow Elbortas, from your homes- - come peac'ies fair. While the former are delicious, high-ly pleasing they're to ?af., Yet the latter are more 11 'clous even though they causse heart beats. MRS. BERRY HAS NEW YORK WORLD ON V DEATH OF LINCOLN (Mrs. W. H. Berry" has a copy of the New York World published on April 15, 4865 giving an account of the as-sassination of Abraham Lincoln The column rules were .turned upside down and showed heavy black rules over tire front page. Mrs. Berry's mother had kept this for years as a keepsake up to the time of her death Mrs. W. H. Berry will perhaps offer : this old newspaper to the Bed Cross to be sold for the benefit of that or-ganization. , Mrs. Fannie R. Berry was the moth- er of Mrs. W. II. (Berry and also a descendant of General Montgomery They came to Utah County in early days, and have made this valley their j home for many yers. , - t, - CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank all friends and neighbors for their riiany acts of kind- ness during the sickness and death of my husband and for the beautiful floral offering. Mrs. John (Brunton. 1 ; , DIVIDEND NOTICE vidend No. 6, Bingham Mines Company 'otlce Is hereby given to the stock-- rs of the Bingham Mines Com- - v, a corporation of the State of .ne, that dividend number 6 of cents (50c) per share, out of .. . earnings payable In Liberty ; per cent 'Bonds (Fractional . 'unts in War Savings Certificate n.pr.) has been declared by the - 1 of directors upon tho outstand- - : .capital stock of the corporation - hie October 1, ll!M8. to. stock- - , , rm of record September 20. s do not cIoko. id) JAMES !P. GIUVES, , President. THOMAS 3. WOODS, Treasurer. ;1 September 4, 1918. FOR A WEAK STOMACH ' The great relief afforded by Cham-berlaln- 's Tablets in a multitude of cases has fully proven the great value of this preparation for a weak ' stomach and Impaired digestion In many eases this relief has become permanent and the sufferers have-be.-n completely restored to health. |