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Show CASTQFMA , For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30Years Always bear ' signature of jUC&&L l A visit to Salt Lake is not City complete unlesa ' t you have a ' " EBig vim AT THE "SARI" 82 Weil Broidw., ( Two hot sulphur watar pools. Lady and Gon-tlem- en attendants. RHEUMATISM VANISHES TURKISH CRU PATH AND BED tjil ' ! 1' SXlK7 CO." anthems quickly U j boiiKht by Manufacturers. TM I Send a model or sketches nnd dfweriptitm tl 1 of your invention tut FREE SEARCH W I nd report on patentability. VVe get pat Z ent or no fee. Writs for-- our tree book II I I of 800 needed invention. D.'SWIFT fi COJ II Patent Lawyers. EtaM88s. FOR A WEAK STOMACH The great relief afforded by Cham-berlain- '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 cases this relief has become permanent and the sufferers have been completely restored to health, There is mora Catarrh In this Mctlon of the country than all other diseases put together, and for years it was sup-posed to be Incurable. Doctors prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Catarrh is a local dlaeaae, greatly influenced by constitutional con-ditions and therefore requlree constitu- tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medl-cin- e, manufactured by F J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, la a constitutional remedy, is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Bystem. One Hundred Dollars re- ward Is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Medicine falls to cure. Send for Circulars and testimonials. oF;ACH,ENEY c0-- Toledo, Ohio. by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family puis for constipation. t Carter's Little Liver Fills j You Canpot be )k A Remedy That S Constipated .g Makes Life! and Happy xffi ittle Worth Living j .'"o,,.. ?pi3t RWuS Genuine War. .lBn.,Ure I ' ASK ?LlTTZll Z BARTER'S IRON PJLLS I were provided by iProvo ' aitizens. President John Johnson and coun-selors of the; Provo Scandinavian or-ganization desire to express their ap-preciation of the , general and gener-ous assistance by the people of Prov. in making toe reunion a success. To members of the several committees, the citizens who furnished automo-biles and all who In any way assist-ed in entertaining the visitors. SCANOmAVJANfiEUNION HELD IN PROVO MSI SM! ,J . : , ,,r Tie annual Scandinavian confer-ence held here yesterday, was attend-ed by, many Scandinavians from the central part of the slate. September IE was the 6Sth anniversary of the or-ganization of thio first branch' of the church In : Copenhagen, The first baptism was August 12, although a short time previous to that some con-verts in Sweden had been baptized by John B. Forsgren who with P. O. Hansen and ,John f . Dykes had ac-companied Elder Erastus Snow of the Apostles, to Scandinavia for the pur-pose of introducing Moraionismi. The services began at 10 o'clock in the Stake 'Tabernacle with , iiiahop John Johnson, president of the Scan dinavian organization ?n Provo, pre-siding. On the speaker's stand were seated President A. H. Lund, Elder Andrew Jenson, ' Soren , Rasmusaen and A. p. Nelson or Draper; 1. C Thoresen:. O. P. Folkerson, file Col. H. M. . iLund, Bishop Hyrum Olsen, 'Bishop Joseph Chris-tenso- n, Olit Larsen P. tS. Christian-Ben- 1 and John Lawrence of Salt Lake; President Joseph B. Keeler and Coun-selors J. Wm. Knight, and A. N. 'Mer-rill of the Utah Stake Presidency and many others. V The services opened by the Norwe-gian choir, conducted by Carl Samuel-sen- , Miss lLavon Johnson, organist, Blnging, "The Morning Breaks." Pray- er was offered by Elder Martin Nel-son. The choir sang, "Zlon Stands With Hills Surrounded.". Bishop Johnson welcomed the con-gregation, expressed gratitude for the blessings enjoyed by the Balnts and compared present conditions with thosj when he and his parents came to Utah in 1864. President Keeler speaking in Eng- lish welcomed the people and spoke of the influence of the spirit of the Lord, which he had felt in the meet-I- n (?, and the bless 'ngs always received from its manifestations. "A Poor Wayfaring Man of Grief." Reidar Waring, soloist, was rendered by the choir. President ILund spoke of the first fifteen who became members of the church by baptism, August 12 1860 and the organization of the' first Jf&nch In Copenhagen, September 15, 1860, under the presidency of Elder Erastus Snow, and referred to the experiences of the church in Scandi-navia in the early days of the intro-duction of Mormonism there He spoke of the labors or Elder Snow and the comparatively rapid growth of Mormonism, in spit of the not very encouraging report brought to Elder Snow. by Elder P. O. Hansen, who had preceded Elder iSnow by a few months. When he received Elder Snow he told him that the Danes would not receive the gospel and that the church could not be established there. But this did not discourage El-der Snow, and this gathering was an evidence of the progress made by Mormonism in the Scandinavian coun-tries. - . . Hyrnm Christensen rendered a vo-cal solo in English. Brief rominisclent addresses were made by A. P. Nelson, Mrs. Augusta Dorius Stevens and iMrs. Johanna Hanberg Nicol of Salt Lake, two of the early converts and members of the first company of emigrants from Scandinavia and by Bishop Christen-son- . Elder Andrew Jenson of the church historians office referred brietly to the ..history of the church with spe- cial reference to its m:sBionary activi-ties. He reviewed the lives and lab-ors of many early Scandinavia mem-bers of the church, and of the good work they have done. Elder Jenson urged the people to keep records of their most important labors in the church The benediction waa pro- nounced by Elder IB. c Henricksen During the noon hour luncheon was served by the committee on refresh-ments, Mrs. L. E. Eggertsen. chair-man. The afternoon meeting opened by the choir singing, and prayer by Elder Andrew Xnuden. The speakers were Elders I. c. Thoresen, Hugo Peterson, O. P. Folk-erse- John Jawrence, H. ,M. H iLund Soren Rasmussen, Martin Chrintoph-erso- n and O. H. Berg. President Lund was' tho last speak- er. He expressed pleasure and satis-faction with the nddrPRKPa onrt tu music of the meetings, and urged faithful earnest lives on the part of the latterday saints, compliance with the provisions of the gospel and de-votion to its principles. The benediction wan pronounced by Elder Ole Gulbrandsen. . During the meeting vocal selec- tions were rendered by the choir, the National Guard quartet of Provo, and solos by Carl Samuelson, Hyrum Ol- son end Reidar Waring. Following the meeting the visitors were taken on an auto trip to Olm-sted at the mouth of S'rovo canyon and across the Bench to Bishop Otto J. Pouhon's fruit orchnrd where all were treated to fruit The autos DIARRHOEA IN CHILDREN For diarrhoea in children one year old or older you will find nothing bet- ter than Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy followed by a dose of castor oil, it should be kept at hand and given as soon as the first unnatural looseness of the bowels ap-pears." , ,: FARMERS KILL HUN STARVATION PLAN WITHJIG CROPS Pinched by Own Hunger, Germans Watch American Wheat Flow in Plenty to the Allies The soil, the two-fiste- d that fighting men spring from the soil, and the un-conquerable determination of the Americans who till it. are beating the Germans. ..,.'.,: ; .". Thrown, back from W'flrsfHush across the Marne and held at Verdun by the valiant French, the Huns cast all the restraints of humanity and to the winds and ushered in unrestricted submarine warfare with the boast that England would be starved In six months. How nearly they approached success will form one of the most gloomy chap-ter- a In the orld war history; how and why they, failed, one of the most inspiring sections of the epio chron-- . Icle. AMERICA SENDS FIGHTERS FOOD , ... , True, British and American Yeadogs hunted the submarine; American ship-builde- rs launched fleets whose sheer numbers made It Impossible for the iB,rUi.t?i.sBh"bl:aBneda,terror" t0 8ink a of them; conscription turned bun. dreds of thousands of acres of parka and hunting preserves-int- o areas; Hoover and American ,food economy saved millions of bush-jel-a of wheat and shiploads of meat for Ifighting men and civilians in rraace and England. .But In the last analysis it was the Tann and the farmer of America that Ikept allied hosts on every Western ifront in plenty and added despair of ;ylctory to the pinch of hunger behind the Hun lines. I His bumper crops Jolted hopes at Potsdam and Vienna as severely as his ' fighting sons Jolted Teuton generals at Cantigny and along the Marne, since Expectations of American crop failure were based with Germanic com-placency on carefully plotted cam-paigns of propaganda and sabotage in the United States. , HUN AGENTS BURN CROPS H ' 'Wb5..82?eral public is too Uttle aware of the bitter battles the crop grower iias had to fight to bring his wheat to . harvest (jftiKas barns, standing crops, har-Teste- rs and threshing machines were only a part of the widespread ruin planned by these fellows of Boy-Ed,- " Von Papen and von Bernstorff, and In tod many instances their plots were 7 successful. That more were not was lue only to untiring vigilance which can never be relaxed while the war i New goals, not easy of attainment, are placed before the farmer through the plan for raising an army of five million Americans to crush Germany next year. ' ?Iewl11 bo further handicapped by loss of hands to the army, and he nmst raise greater crops. Plans of the Department of Agriculture call for the Increase of wheat acreage in the West by as much as 80 per cent. , NEW EFFORTS CALLED FOR No one doubts that he will rise to the opportunity for service placed be-fore him, any more than any one doubts that he will play his other parts in the perfectly fighting machine revealed when Ameriea turned as a nation to win the war. Not the least of these parts was his participation in the financing of the Jbattle, though previous history had written down much effort to finance the farmer. Rural districts were uniformly more prompt than metropolitan areas in their response to the Third liberty " Loan: Honor flags first flew from country flagstaffs, and those with the greatest number of honor stripes like-wise. The Third Liberty Loan, the great-est financial achievement in the his-tory of the United States, and there- - fore in the world, is to be perhaps obubly eclipsed by the Fourth Liberty Loan. The part of the farmer probably will be as proud. The Press-Bullet- in U H. MASTERS, General Manager, C D. McNEELEY, Editor and Lesee. subscription $2.00 a Year5 In Advance, 12.80 en Time. ... Batered as secon-ola- s joatter Ja is; 1915, at' the poatofflce at Provo, Itah, under the act of March 3d. J879. saued Friday of Each Week at Provo, Utah. A SUCCESSFUL TRIALRUN Preston G. 'Peterson, secretary and assistant general manager of the Big ' Indian Copper Company, has returned irom the company's mill and mine in San Juan County. The mill, which has been "completely and thoroughly ' tested out by several lnrgre trial runs . of a hundred hours each and treating ' from 30. to 60 tons of ore a day, has demonstrated that the ore can be effectively and profitably treated on a commercial scale. An average of 75 per cent of the copper contents' haw beert 'saved: . i' The. milt will now be closed down I for, probably sixty days for. making) .om,o,. additions preparatory to doing . work, on a larger Bcale. Some altera lions wll be made in the water pipe line, a larger series of agitators und anctrior jVecliiitetion boiler installed. , - It is ntctasary to do, this work now while the roads are good, to that lum-be-r for buildings and machinery can be handed. WUiHe the mill is closed sulphur and otter needed material for " a continuous winter run of from 250 to 300 tons a day will be laid In. .. , NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION U. S. Land Office. Salt Lake City,1 Utah, August 20, 1918. I Notice is hereby given that Edmund la. JJUlard of RiverUm, Utah, who on ' October 6, 1914, made Homestead En-try, Serial number 013203, for si sei,4, Section 12, Township 4 south, Range 2 west, Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year proof, . to establish claim to the land above described, before the register and receiver, U. S. Land Office, at Salt iLake City, Utah, on the 2nd day of October, 1918, " Claimant names as witnesses: Alfonso Guittard. William L. Perry, James Chapman, Cecil Mathews all of Rlverton, Utah. ' , GERALD BLAfCEIil.Y, '' J' .'.'i Register. First publication, August 23, 1918. SUMMONS In the Justice's Court, in and for ' the Tenth Precinct, City ,of Bingham,, County, of $alt (Lake-,- State "ot Utah, Angrtlo Corosis', Martin Smolcich and Peter Racheff, ' Plaintiffs, vs. Chris. Kunchif f knd Marco iMladeniff, .State-- ofjUtah, to ' the Defendant, You are hereby summoned to appear before the above entitled court within ten days after the ser-.vic- e of this summons upon you; If served within the county In which this action la brought, otherwise, within twenty days after this serv-ice, and defend the above entitled ac-tion brought against you to recover the sum of two hundred eighty-seve- n dollars and 85-1- on account of rent, goods, v wares and merchandise and money loaned, and in case of your failure to do so, Judgment will be rendered against you according to the" demand of the complaint Given under my hand this first day of August, 19.18. JOHN C, GREEN, Justice of the Peace. SUMMONS : ' In the Justice's Court, in and for the ' Tenth Precinct, City , of . Bingham. County of Salt Lake, State of Utah. Before, Jno. c. Green, Justice of the Peace. : , v. , :, , Brunno Perrl, plaintiff, vs. Guglielmo Pad, defendant. The State of Utah to the Defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear before the above entitled court within ten days after the service of this sum- mons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought, otherwise within twenty days after this service, and defend the above en- titled action brought against you to recover the sum of thirty-fiv- e dollars, legal interest at the rate of 8 per cent from Sept.jlst, 1916, and costs of suit; . : un account or board and lodging sup-- ' Plied by the plaintiff to the defendant, and in case of your failure to do so, -- j Judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the com-plaint. Given under my hand this 11th day of June, 19il8." , ... JNO. C. GREEN, Justice of the Peace. f CATTLE FATTEN ON " THE NATIONAL FORESTS v - Government Movies Show How The Forests Help Farmers To Raise Beef For Soldiers Cattle getting ready to produce beef and leather for the Boldiers are seen on the screen in official motion pictures to be shown by the Unitde ' States Department of Agriculture at the Utah State Fair. Cattle grazing is one of the many uses of the Na-- tional Forests Every year tnouirads of cattle are admitted to the National Forests to graze, and are driven out afterward, ready to be turned Into beef and leather. ' ' Tho motion pictures exhibited ' by the Department are a part pf a great campaign for conservation and agri-cultural production. Pictures V of poultry raising, pig raising, and many other features of the Department's work also will be seen on the screen. CHAMBERLAIN'S COUGH REMEDY This is not only one of the best and mosi emcieni medicines lor coughs, colds, croup and whooping cough, but is also pleasant to take, which is im-portant whf.n a medicine 'must be giv-en to young children. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has been in use for many years and has met with much favor wherever its good qualities haye become known. Many mothers have given it their unqualified endorse-ment. Wm, iScruby, Chillicothe, Mo., writes, "I have raised three children, have always used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and found it to be the best for coughs, colds and croup. It is pleasant to take. Both adults and children like it. My wife and I have always felt safe from croup with it in the house." Chamberlain's Cough Remedy contains no opium or other narcotic. Ruin In Its Walce CZT 4 fHKH At "Five Million Men in France I" thj American" at Cantigny, at Chateau Thierry, along the Marne around Soissons, has proved a whirlwind which von Hmdenburg could not withstand this year, what will be the German terror when "Forward to Victory" rings out next year to armiet that hide the plains. The rich blood of aacrifice already atrengthena the soil of American resolution, from which will spring the flower of triumph. The sacrifice abroad must be met by sacrifice at home. No effort we at home can make will approach the price paid willingly by those who do not return from the battle for Democracy. Register the measure of your support by your oversubscrip- tion of your quota of the Fourth Liberty Loan. DIVIDEND NOTICE Dividend No. 6, Bingham Mines N Company - Notice Is hereby given to the stock-holder of the Bingham Mines Com-pany, a corporations of the State of Maine, that dividend number 6 ' of fifty cents (50c) per share, out .of 1917 earnings payable in Liberty Yi per cent Bonds (Fractional ' amounts in 'War Savings Certificate Stamps) has been declared by the board of directors upon the outstand-ing capital stock of the corporation payable October 1, 19.18, to stock-holders of record September 20 Books do not close. ' (Signed) JAMES P. GRAVES, ... President , , THOMAS S. WOOD3. ' Treasurer. Dated September 4, 1918. . I SUMMONS 1 '' .i i :;" In the Justice's Court In and for the Tenth Precinct. County of Salt Lake, State of Utah, before John C. Green, Justice of the Peace. John Contratto, Plaintiff, vs. Joe Zavagnin Defendant. The State of Utah to the Defendant: -- You are hereby summon-ed to appear before the above entitled court within ten days after the ser-vice of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought, otherwise with-in twenty days after the service and defend the above entitled action, brought against you to recover the sum of $161.10 alleged to be due plain-tiff from defendant on contract, and in case of your failure to do so, judg- ment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the com-plaint. ...... :, Given under my hand this 5th lay of (September, 1918, JOHN C. GilEEN, Justice of the Peace. Apparently the Finnish fly has be--i gun to suspect that it is entangled in a German spider web. - 'Leather Is so high that one suspects the cow or somebody of hoarding it and cornering the market. GOOD FOR BILIOUSNESS "Two years ago I suffered from fre-quent attacks of stomach trouble and biliousness. Seeing Chamberlain's Tablets advertised I concluded to try them. I improved mj Idlv " --Miss Emma Verbryke, Lima, Ohio. Again the Kaiser is disappointed in Ameriea we insist upon licking his "invincible" Prussian guard . Buy and Buy and By and By There'll be no Kaiaerl Liberty Bond or Liberty Bound, Which Will You Have It? ; Put Money Jn Bonds not Bonbons. bnds Speak Louder than Words. : Do Not Be a Bond Slacker. ' Hock the Kaiser and Buy' a Bond. Help Yankee Doodle Do the Des-pot. Pay His Way to 8t. Helena on Bonds. Help Boom the Loan to Doom the Kaerl ' . A Man Who Won't Lend Is the Kaiser's Frlendl The More Bonds You" Buy the Fewer Boys Will Diet If You Can't Fight, Your Money Can. 'Freemen Buy Bonds; Slaves Wear Them. ' ' DU.YUU KNOW WHY - - Those "Colored Wigs Have fUe Men toltig? - t vpr -- j - , iaw for this paper By Flsner .' '. - iNTeunEticst- ... ALU Ri.H. rglry6f-- - ) '" "I , . ; shi . t J ) Oe.eA ) , Q V V r 4 . 'A Wtta l'" n COULOfH ) ' |