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Show ' ' ' WGHt, ' THE PRESS-BULLETI- $100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper win be pleased to learn that there It at least one dreaded disease that science has ., been able to cure in all Its stages and that is catarrh. Catarrh being greatly influenced by constitutional conditions requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Sur-- ' faces of the System thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, giving the patient strength by building up the and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith In the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh Medicine that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Bend for lint of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. Ohio. Sold by all Druggist. 75c WANT ADS FOUND Bunch of keys on ring. Owner can get same by calling at ,Pree-fBulleti- office, describing them and paying for thin ad, . WOULD LIKE TO meet a lady that will give dancing lessons to an Ameri-can man. Prefer to come in i 'ternoons and will come to Bingham or Highland Hoy. N, A. Roberts, 35 Carr Fork, jliinghatn, ' ' ' ' FOR RENT Three rooms furnished lor housekeeping. Inquire 432 Main Street, upstair. FURNISHED ROOM for rent. 353 Main. MINING LOCATION NOTICES for alo at the Press-Bulleti- n office. tf i. FOR SAILE OtR TRADE Two cars, Oakland 8, on easy payments, or will trade for town property. Inquire at the Butte. 25 ladies' White Wash SIdrls OnSale,or $1 .00 Oely H V H . Just arrived, a big line of Silk. Petticoats ; all colors, pink, rose, 1 tan, light blue, black. Priced from $4.95 to .,.$8.50 I ' . New lot Ladies' Silk and Kid Gloves; all colors; $1.50 to. 13.50 'b X.y. Splendid showing of Children's White Lawn Dresses; ages 4 to Jr ' ?K 14 years $125 10 ' : ?3-5- ' jpOT ffJwa Ladies' Collars Georgette and Crepe deTMne; 75c to $2.30, Mn MppjT' ' '' Ladies' Silk Dress Skirts; fancy stripes and plaids; priced $6.75, 13,1 V tf 1 1 "Eli '.l7.50, $10.00 and .............. .'.$11.00 fn I l W ' LJA Big line Ladies' Underwear for these hot days, consisting of Knit O I 1l H " 51 Goods, Muslin and Silk; Ladies' Flesh Colored and White Silk ft'l ' ."""J Princess Slips, $6.75 to ........... ....'......,.........$8.75 " 1 18m beautiful assortment of fen TT ij I Georgette and Crepe de H U Chene Waists for the llfi I Warm Weather I Biimglh&m MeirCo C0 " I - Quality the TL DJ Prices the S Highest liieJDlgjJtOre . Lowest ' Vr C. E. ADDERLEY, Mgr. FOR SAJJS (Automobile. A new Maxwell Roadster with Goodyear tread tires. In fine condition. A bargain. Dr. G. W. Richards, Cop. perfield. tf MALE HELP 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. Ad-dress !. D. Firebaugt, Box 665, Salt Lakelty, Utah. SMAUL ROOMING HOUSES for sale. Bargain if taken at once. For particu-lar- g call at 495 (Main street, Bingham. SAGE AND SULPHUR . , DARKENSGRAY Hi It's Grandmother's Recipe to Restore Color, Gloss and Attractiveness. r Almost everyone knowa that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound-ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Tears ago the only way to ret this mixture was to make It at home, which Is mussy and trouble-som- e. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul-ph- w Compound," you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe, im-proved by the addition of other In-gredients, at a small cost. Don't stay gray! Try It! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as It does it so naturally and evenly. Tou dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small utrand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappear, and after another ap-plication or two, your hair become beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. .Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com-pound is a delightful toilet requisite for those who desire dark hair and youthful appearance. It Is not in-tended for the cure, mitigation or pre-vention of disease. , UTAH STATE HEWS At a mass meeting it was decided by the citizens of Mauunath to eelebraib Independence day In an appropriate and fitting manner. The Salt Lake and Ogden Scots will hold an outing at Lagoon Wednesday, June 26, to celebrate the anniversary of the battle of Bannockburn. The annual meeting of the Utah State Dental society, scheduled for Salt Lake June 19, 20 and 21, In planned to be in the nature of a post graduate course. Without regaining consciousness, C. B. Spraguev the third victim to suc-cumb to Injuries sustained In the fatal automobile ai!ldent near Salt Lake on June 4,' died Ira June 7. The Brotherhood of Railroad Engi-neers held its memorial exercises in Salt Lake,' June t, in commemoration of fifty men and seven women who i bad died during the year. Oats acreage has decreased slightly !n the state, though the Uintah basin shows a considerable increase. Condi-tion of oats in the state is slightly be-low average, being 03 per cent Pearl Hudson, aged 23, was struck by an auto Just as .she alighted from a street car in alt Lake City, and was probably fatally Injured. The car was driven by & son of Mayor Ferry. James McDonald of Ogden sustained deep scalp cuts and one ear was almost torn from his head when a light car In which he was riding came Into col-lision with an auto truck on the road to Clearfield. , - , . Hearty Indorsement was given by the Salt Lake Realtors last week to two proposed ordinances now under consid-eration by the city commissioners to protect property owners against the abuses of tenants. Succumbing to an illness of leas than a week's duration, Colonel Irving A. Benton, general passenger agent of the Denver & Rio Grande railroad for many years, and well-know- n man of affairs, died at Salt Lake, June 9. The women of the southern part of the state have responded enthusiastic-ally to the work of the National Leagtrt for Women's service, according to Mrs. Lily C. Wolstenholme, who has Just re-turned to Salt Lake after an extended trip. The executive committee of the Utah Association of Boards of Education, in a meeting held at the capltol last week, decided to hold the annual confer-ence independent of the time when the Utah Educational association Is to con-vene. f - t" , , To be lost In the mountains and compelled to spend the night in one of the near-b-y canyons, through which there IS no? travel, if the experience that befell hree Ogden wtfmen, who went on a hike' Sunday. ' They were none the, worse for theff experience. Under a recent order of the postof-fle- e department no parcels will be for-warded to soldiers In Europe, In care of the American expeditionary force In France, except at the request of the eoldler and If accompanied by an ap-proval from the regimental command-er.' .t r That the Wendover highway, which parallels the Western Pacific railroad across the Great Salt Lake desert, will be fit for safe travel for the heaviest kind of motor-drive- n vehicles by July 1, Is the expressed opinion of the fore-mn- n of the road gang at work on that stretch. . Arrested at San Francisco on a charge of stealing an automobile. Pri-vate Arthur II. Bulsh, O buttery, 847th held artillery, formerly of Salt Lake, was taken back to Camp Lewis, tried for desertion and sentenced to serve twenty-fiv- e years In the federal peni-tentiary. Denied release under bond from the state mental hospital, Charles Hender-son was given Into the custody of n neighbor for one week, to penult him to attend the funeral of his daughter-in-law- , Margaret Henderson, who was killed by a speeding automobile near Salt Lake. Mark Johansen, 12 years of age, of Huntsvllle, Is striving to gain the title of champion squirrel hunter of Ogden valley. To partly substantiate his claim, he appeared at the office of the county clerk Saturday and received $14.32 bounty upon 484 squirrels, at 3 cents a head. After having made a trip of 10.12 miles through the southern part of Utah, It. II. Slddoway, state fish and game commissioner, reports that such favorable conditions were found for It that a trout-plantin- g campaign will be opened at once In practically all the comities of the south. Measured by the national average of 2S.7 per cent of the first draft regis-tration classified In class 1, twenty-tw- o of the thirty-fou- r local boards In Utah come near that figure, according to 'a telegram received from General Crow-de- r by Captain F. V. Fits Gerald, draft executive officer for this state. Suit to recover $100,000, which he ullages Is due for services In the credit and standing of the Kewhouse Realty company, has been filed by Governor Bamberger at Suit Lake. More than a half million predatory animals have been killed by huntert and $i!H,218.53 In bounties has been paid out to them By the state In tht year ending March 20, according to a compilation made for the biennial re-or- t of the state auditor. ' . If the Utah Light 4 Traction com-ian- y were permitted to operate thelt tive? cars at Salt Lake by the one-nu-plan It would be a violation ol he national labor war hoard principles, icconllug to the decision of W. M. Knerr of the state Industrial commis-sion. LAKE VIEW BOY WINS THIRD PLACE. IN M. . A. CONTEST George B. Glade of the B. Y. U. . . Scored Well in the State M. I. , ; A. Contest James Smedley of Bountiful was de-- , clared winner of the M, I. A. gold medal for public speaking Saturday evening in the assembly hall. The sub-ject of his address was "Why America Entered the War." Walter .Fuhrlman v: f . of Logan won the silver medal, his subject being "A Thorn In America's Side." George B. Glade of Lakevlew, v Utah, wen third ' place and a bronze medal by his talk, "The Strength of Youth." The speakers scored with only three points difference between - the first and second winners and the second and third. , - During the evening 23 ctakes were awarded certificates for activity work accomplished during the past year In read nga, addresses, dramatice. athlet-ics, music, etc. David Reene, and the ladles' chorus of the B. Y. U. under the direction of Prof, C. W. Reed which gave a "Knit-ting Song" coiuponed by Prof. Reed. The Invocation was offered by Elder i Uenjamln Goddard and the benedic- - Hon by Mrs. Emily Hlggs. the country to discourage platinum In jewelry has been initiated by the American Chemical Society. The Women's National League for the Con-servation of Platinum has been form-ed as a national organization with Mrs. Ellwood B. Spear, Cambridge, uMass., as chairman. State councils have bten formed In fourteen of the leading states of the union, and even the efforts of the college women have been enlisted. Already throughout the country thousands of women have signed the following pledge: "I will neither purchase nor except as gifts Jewelry and other articles made In whole or in part of platinum, so that all possible" supplies of this precious metal shall be e.vailable for employ-ment where they can do the greatest good In the service of our country, and I further pledge my influence to per-suade others to take the same patri-otic stand." WHY YOU SHOULD HOT BUY PLMIII-U- W JEWELRY Stock of Platinum Now Held By Jew-elers Has Been Ordered Seixed By Government Officials. WASHINGTON, June 13 The new-est tpe of slacker and one who is doing his country a great amount of harm, is the man or woman who buys or even encourages the purchase of platinum jewelry, according to the bureau of mines, department of the Interior. For the country Is and for many years will bo desperataly in need of the scarce and precious plat-inum in its Industrial work and must have it if the war machine is to go full Rpted ahead. A plan propoted by the federal offic-ials would stop the use of platinum in Jewelry, not only for the war but for all time. Officials of the government who are in close touch with the situa-tion are filled with apprehension as to the future supply of platinum. As far as can be learned, it Is believed that pslde from the large amount of plat-inum metals Jn the form of manufac-tured jewelry, a large part of which Is !n private ownership, there la less than 25 per cent of the normal stock of unmanufactured platinum In this country available tor the needs of the war. In an effort to fill the immediate pressing needs of the government In Its war program, the war Industries board has ordered that 75 per cent of the stock of pli.tlnum In the hands of manufacturing .jewelers be comman-deered and abo the complete stock held by refiners. Importers and deal-ers, but this, 1t is said, will only fill a small gap and that temporarily. It has been hoped by federal offic-ials and chemists throughout the coun-try who understand the seriousness of the situation that the whims of fash-Io- n might yield to national needs and that purchasers of Jewelry would de-mand gold and silver or a white alloy and so releare platinum for Its highest use, but the results have been disap-pointing. The American Chemical Society, an organization composed of the leading 12,000 chemlBts of the country, which is also back of this movement, has Issued p.n appeal to the people not tnder any c'reumstance eithtr during the war or arter the war to use plat-inum Jewelry, but to conserve this unique at'd fact dwindling metal now priced at five times the cost of gold for the exclusive uso of the 'chemical and other necessary Industries. The flrt purpose will be to obtain a suf-- i fk-ieu- t supply of platinum for the needs of war. 'snd then to retain the production of the future for the indus-trie- It Is claimed that even before the war, as a result of this unreason-able craze for platinum In jewelry, the highly Important work of the chemists has been curtailed and research work, especially , in the universities, handi-capped by Inability to meet the con-stantly rising price for platinum "The utmost importance of the en-tire country coming to a full and seri-ous understanding of the dire ned of platinum In the industries, and espe-cially the war Industries, Is apparent to alf technical and scientific men," said Van. If. Manning, director of the bureau of mines, but, unfortunately, the people generally have not the proper conception of the situation. This condition has risen naturally through the insistent advertisement of platinum jewelry, the buyers being unaware of the need of platinum In the Industries. Women Buy Too Much Platinum "The scarcity of platinum through-out the world and its high price is apparently due almost solely vo the fact that the women of this end other countries have been recently led to consider it a choice article for adorn-ment. I believe this to be due to an entirely false conception, as there are other white metals equally available for the setting of gems and the produc-tion, which would be used In Jewelry today e1tc"rt for thr fact that they are not so cotly as platinum. When the price of platinum was less than that of gold, there was practically no de-mand for It in Jewelry and only a slight use as a netting for gems. Over 50 per cent of the country's supply of platinum Is now used annually for jew elry; an entirely unessential purpose. No jewelry Is more easily imitated than platinum, nnd much white metal jewelry Is now on the market which cannot be told from platinum by the uninitiated. "it is Inconcf Ivable to me that any woman would wear a lead colored ring or bracelet or adorn herself with lead-colore- d jewelry, except that its arti-ficially produced high price has been made to give it a false value tn her eyes. 'When our basic war needs for platinum are going to be met only with the greatest difficulty, I certain-ly cannot consider the purchasing of platinum jewelry patriotic now and It appears to me to be very doubtful good taste at any time. "I am most heartily In favor of any crusade that will have for Its purpose the banning of platinum for jewelry for all time and under all circum-stances. I bileve that the women of the country are as patriotic as In any other country and that when they understand the situation, they will decline to purchase platinum Jewelry, and also, if the occasion ever arises, give up all platinum jewelry they now have. Crusade Against Use of Platinum 'The bureau of mines Is pleased to lend Its efforts to those of the Ameri-can Chemical Society In such a patri-otic endeavor." A movement among the women of PIIOIIO MEN FINED S1D0 EACH BYTHE r JUVENILE JUDGE Probation Officer 11. O. Roper took Eugene JeUdns and ilarold G, Clark to Salt Lake City Monday on warrants " from Juvenile Judge Nellson's court and each were fined $100. According to Probation Officer Roper the com-plaints charged Clark with bringing a juvenile and woman from Salt Lake County to Provo and keeping the Juv-- I enile out after S o'clock. Jenkins was fined for indecent language und con- - duct with a Juvenile In Utah County. According to the story of the juvenile officer and the girli Clark picked the girls up in Salt Lake and brought them to Provo, where Jenkins joined him and they started back toward Salt Lake with the girls. Before they got I to Lehi Jenkins said he was not going any farther and the girls left the car j and to k Iho interurban for Salt Lake City. The girls expected the boys to :w" take them back to Zlon. Tn order to pui'lsh these men It is btlieved that the woman, who admit-- I ted th i sho iiinuita'ned a room for immoral purposes In a Salt Lake hotel, , persuaded the girl to swear to the complaint. The girl did not make any charge of adultry, but claimed that his action was too lauuilar. i lie woman j was fined $10 for contributing to the f delinquency of this minor. The woman claimed that they left the boys at Lehi for their own protection and the boys tell a different story. The women " v were brought down several days prevl- - ous to the escapade mentioned above. Probation Officer Roper got one half the fine of these two men for -- j Utah County. : BUM NOW HAS DAILY GARBAGE WAGON The city fathers have made arrange-ments to keep the town clean this sum-mer and In connection with that work have secured a new cart for that pur-pose. The cart arrived this week and will be used dally to pick up and carry fff all the garbage and waste matter. The people of the camp can now place the waste accumulations of the day In the containers on the rtrct and It will be Immediately removed. This will be a great benefit to. the town and will edd much to Its appear-ance, ' Also It will mean that there will not be so many flies in town this summer as there were Inst year. If the town Is kept clean there can be no flies, NOTICE OF HEARING Before the Public Utilities Commis-sion of Utah. Case No. 48. - In the matter of the Application of the Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Company, for permission to chnnge, st and modify toll rates and its rules and regulations provid-ing for a service connection charge In the State of Utah. Notice is hereby given that the ap-plication of the Mountain States Tele-phone & Telegraph Company for the permission of the public utilities com-mission of Utah to and modi-fy its toll rates, and its rules and regu-lations providing for a service connec-tion charge In the State of Utah, will be heard before the commission at Its office, Salt Lake City, on Tuesday, June 18. 1918, at 10 o'clock a. m. illy order of the commission. Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, this 31st day of May, A. D., 1918. T. E. BANNING, Secretary. ADVERTISED LETTERS (Bingham Canyon, Utah,7une 12. Domestic-'-'Agnew- , A.; Ajuriagoltra, M. E.: eesley, Jim; Collantes, Lelfin; Corralezmacarlo; Davis, iMergaret; Delosky, Vergie, Mrs.; Dukeskln, Paneege; Guadio, iFtank; Geramanos, Bill; Holmes, G. A.; Kovlsovoton, Tom; Kotrovulan, Tom; Kaspavlukm, TeupJior; Luncar, Yony; lLoueas, Stavros; Nick. Tony; O'Neill, Walter; Peterson, Gus; Pace. Guy L.; Stewart, Dan S.; Spenser, EUu, Mrs.; Shrock, A. F.j Williams, Henry. Foreign Calezadis, KQarlo; Dalg-vlet- , Angust; Peterson, Royitta, Mrs ; Trelfall, VVm. (3); Wuolle, Matt. RAY GAMNER PRESENTED WITH PANAMA HAT A quartet of the boys at the Old Crow cigar stand last week presented Ray Gamner with a $10 Panama hat in token of the high esteem In which he Is heid by this party, which spends much of Its leisure time on the com- - fortable, easy and restful seats at this popular resort The presentation of this handsome present on the part of the young men was made in a beauti-ful and eloquent speech by 'Mr. Grant. In accepting the gift (Mr Gfimivr ex-pressed his appreciation not only of the valuable Panama, but also of the friendship of the young men who se-cured the present. Definition ot Oood Advertising. The advertising manager of a big store gives the following as his con-ception o what advertising should be: "A reflection of the public's wants rather than an attempt to sell what the store wishes to dispose of. The policy should be to avoid advertis-ing merely to correct mistakes In buy-lug.- " Dalvy Thought Ills conversation does not show the minute hand ; but ho strikes the hour very correctly. Samuel Johnson. |