OCR Text |
Show THE PRESS-BULLETI- N , AIRPLANE TO DEVELOP CHINA ! : :. -r- - 1 American Commercial Attache Point ( OutXow Problem Facing That - Country May Be MeC The keynote of the great problem of development which Is facing China is transportation. The American com-mercial attache at Peking, Mr. Julian Arnold, has laid emphasis on this In an article In the Chinese Recorder "China's Economic Problems and Christian Missionary Effort." Mr. Arnold deals with the necessity of pre-paring the Chinese people for the great economic change which is upon them. Railways' will mean much to China, but the necessity for the train-ing and preparation of which Mr. Arnold speaks' is shown to be dis-tinctly urgent when Prof. Middleton Smith's views on the use of airplanes to China are known. China is a land of waterways, and these waterways afford the necessary existing lines of transportation along which, to secure the success of commercial aviation, airdromes and supply depots should be established. Schools of technical training should supply the necessary Chinese skilled labor, and with these aerial services established, Professor Smith foresees such an Incalculable Increase in the rapidity of communica-tions as completely to revolutionize the country Internally and add to its deep importance as a world factor. SemlolaWcl Co. J. C. WYATT, Proprietor - !WSJU . ;. : RATES: 100 Rooms 11.00 Without Bath, One Person $1.50 Without Bath, Two Persons 100 Rooms 50 Rooms f 1.50 With Bath, One Person $2.00 With Bath, One Person 12.60 With Bath, Two Persona $3.00 With Bath, Two Persons We make special rates on rooms by the week or month. FREE BUS TO AND FROM ALL DEPOTS Note: We advertise 100 $1.00 per day rooms. You know what you are usually told elsewhere when you want a dollar a day room. The Semloh has just secured the services of Mr. V. R. Newbould, for three years room clerk of the New Grand Hotel, also Mr. E. Curtin, for the past five years with the Cullen Hotel. , Catering Only to the Respectable Element. "Nothing wrong with our balance" Chesterfield rrHE right balance of costly Turkish j and Domestic tobaccos, propor- - j tioned by experts that's why j Chesterfields "satisfy.' Every puff brings you the full, rich ; 1 flavor of genuine Turkish tobacco and the lively relish of choice Domes-tic ' x leaf. And the blend the manufacturer's private formula can- - not be copied. jStX ,VJ - Every package enclosed fsCr Y ft v""V in glassine, moisture- - tltMLtmm proof paper that seals in kJTr f jaj J JV j BUY COAL NOW j Dr. Garfield, U. S. Fuel Administrator, is "Uncle Sam's" I j j right hand man where coal is concerned. ' Dr. Garfield has made this pointed statement: t "I do not thhv, I would be doing my duty if I did ? let the public know the situation. Only by I !not coal now so that miners will have work and ; continue to mine coal, can a very serious short-- ; t age be avoided." ; ', j ; , Right now you can secure the coal of your choice at our V yards in any quantity you want and at the lowest shortage ; ! ! prices. o i! CIIIZENS COAL CO. Bingham, Utah H. CJFEDERAL RESERVE. Back toCMlianUAain-- ) and bringing with him the well learned lesson f of the power which arises from efficient organiza- - I t"m J The banks of the country have now an organ- - 1 i ization just as efficient as the military organiza- - V tion which is now being disbanded. It is the I I Federal Reserve System. This bank is a mem-- ber and enjoys the benefits of this great co-- operative organizaton of banks. BiigaMiiState Bank j The Bingham & Garfield Railway Company The Popular Route Finest Equipment. Best Train Service Two Trains Daily Between Bingham and Salt Lae City TIME TABLE Effective February 24, 1918 Leave Salt Lake City; Arrive Bingham: . No. 109 6:55 a. m. No. 109 ...... , .8:25 a. m. No. Ill 2:15 p.m. No. 111... 3:35 p.m. Leave Bingham: Arrive Salt Lake City: No. 110 8:45 a. m. No. 110 10:05 a. m. No. 112 4:00 p. m. No. 112 5:30 p. m. TICKET OFFICES CARR FORK AND UPPER STATION Take Electric Tram at Carr Fork Station. H. W. STOUTBNBOROUGH, A. G. iP. A. F. B. SPENCER, Salt (Lake City, Utah. Agent, Bingham, Utah. MBMBVMMnHBVMHHaVMHnHMHail iiiiiiiimiiuiniiiiiniiiiHiiiiiiiiiuiiniiiiiii j LOOK HERE S S Home Made Candy f g Light Lunches, Hot Tamales and Chili B 5 All Kinds of Sandwiches EP s Royal Candy Co. .IIIIIIIlIBSaillBSaSIBIIBXIZBIISIIBIIEIEIIHIRUUEII R. G. BEE 1 Maker of Good Clothes for Men I Woodring Building 01 J:;:!!;:;: i !!;::!:: t t ::::::::;:;:::::;:::::::::::::;:::!:::::::::::!:!!:;!!;! 1 Most complete line ofstaple and 1 fancy groceries in the camp. Delivery service and prices are I both unequaled. We solicit your business. I J. & H. Grocery Co. f 1 formerly The Just Grocery, I 93 Carr Fork 1 Phone 366. 9 ' & f n I Elden Johnson and I Fred Harville, Props. . HAD AN' OBJECT IN POSING j. Moose Didn't Stand for Her Photo, graph Just to Accomodate the Camera Holder. A moose out In the wilds does not stop to pose for her picture. There is generally a reason for the peculiar actions of wild things. In the current issue of the r, published in Columbus, O., hunters write of their experience. "We had an early start Thursday and Sam soon proclaimed that his iipe foretold moose. The first bend was rounded and knee-dee- p in the water stood a fat sleek cow. Our canoe advanced toward her, the camera set for an exposure. Sum called softly and she advanced a hun-dred feet toward us, ears erect, with a curious 'what are you' manner. "At 75 feet she stopped and posed for the picture, and then waited until we were 50 feet away before she turned Into the woods.At the top of the bank she waited for us to pass be-fore crashing into the timber. "Her action was explained when we turned the bend and at the water's edge saw her calf, a fine four or five months' old fellow, which climbed the bank and was away after her at once." New Cloth for Hard Wear. A new textile fabric which, it Is claimed, will tend to lower the present high cost of men's clothing is being placed on the market by a Pudsey (Yorkshire) manufacturer, writes United States Trade Commissioner Henry F. Grady from London. The London agents of the manufacturer state that the. new cloth is made en-tirely of silk noli (or short fibers) ; and that, while superior In wearing properties to a pure worsted, it can be sold at the price of shoddy cloth, or one-fourt- h the price of the best wool fabrics. It is said to be strong and almost untearable, very suitable for hard wear, and can be obtained In grays, browns and blacks. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR - PATENT. No. 025393. United States Land Office, Salt Lake City, Utah, Feb. 24, 1920. Notice is hereby given, That United States Smelting, Refining & Mining Company, a corporation of Maine, whose postoffice address Is Newhouse Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, by C. B. Allen, its attorney in fact, whose postoffice address is the same, has filed an application for patent for tne lode mining claim called the Grizzly (amended) lode mining claim, situated in West Mountain Mining district, Salt Lake county, Utah, and designated by the field notes and official plat on file in this office as U. S. Lot No. 52, in SE1--4 Sec 34 and SW 4 Sec. 35, Township & South, of Range I West, and NE 1-- 4 Sec. I, T. 4 8., R. I W, of Salt Lake meridian, said Lot No. 62 being described as follows: Commencing at corner No. 1 of said claim, from which the southeast cor-ner of Section 34, Township 3 South, Range 3 West of the Salt Lake meri-dian, bears north 77 deg. 12 min. east 1261.4 feet distant; and from said cor-ner No. 1 running north 36 deg- - 0 mln. west 200 feet to corner No. 2 of the claim; thence north 54 deg. 0 min. east 1600 feet to corner No. 3 of the claim; thence south 36 deg. 0 min. east 200 feet to corner No. 4 of the claim, and thence south 64 dog. 0 min. west 1600 feet to corner No. 1 of the claim, the place of beginning. Said claim is located in the south-east quarter of Section 34, the south-west quarter of Section 35, Township 3 South, Range 3 West, and the north-east quarter of Section 3, Township 4 South, Range 3 West of the Salt Lake meridian. The total area of said claim as above described is 7.346 acres. From which are expressly excepted and excluded the following mentioned areas in conflict with the following named claims, Area in conflict with Lot 55, Kemp-to- n lode, ,025 acres. Area in conflict with Lot 67, Ashland lode, .962 acres. Area in conflict with Lot 150, Orphan Boy lode, acres. Area in conflict with Lot 64, Jordan lode, 1.499 acres. Area in conflict with Sur. 4000, Wa-satch lode, exclusive of its conflict with Lot 64, Jordan lode, .000 acres; total 3.996 acres. The area claimed and applied for' being 3.350 acres. The nearest known locations to said Grizzly (Am'd) claim, as shown by the official plat of survey are the aforesaid conflicting claims, also the Northern Light claim, Lot 53; the Railroad claim, Lot 267; the Jordan Extension claim, Lot 423; the Pro-tector claim, Lot 424; the Walk Off claim, Lot 44.1; the Nemesis claim, Sur. 4857; the Fairvlew claim, Lot 54, and the Neptune claim, Lot 59. GOULD B. BLAKELEY, Register. (First publication April 8, 1920.) No Novelty. "As I came from the station just now," said a recently arrived guest, "I noticed a crowd In front of the Right Dace store and heard consider-able yelling. What was the excite-ment?" "A farmer and the storekeeper were telling what they thought of each other's Infernal hogglshness In want-ing Ave prices for the stuff they had to sell," replied the landlord of the Petunia tavern. "But there wasn't any particular excitement It happens ev-er- y day. The 'crowd merely gathered In the hope that they might accident-ally say something new and Interest-ing." Kansas City Star. Weds During Hit Lunch Hour. How to be married though working was the title of a little sketch staged the other day by K. W. Grleder, a printer employed on the St. Paul Dis-patch. Grleder faced a problem. He was slated as a principal in a marriage ceremony. His only spare time was a half hour for lunch. So he called his flnncee, Miss Clara Lovltz, by telephone, arranged with her to meet him In the office of Henry Galllck, court commissioner, and the ceremony was performed. Grleder then took lunch and returned to work. Valuable Parasitic Fly. A recent agricultural department bulletin states that a parasitic fly. compsilura clvlnnnla, has been used with great success to destroy gypsy moth and brown-tal- l moth In New Kng-tnn- It will also aid In the control of other Insect pests. A few years ago the white-marke- d tussock moth was a serious pest In New England, but has practically disappeared since compsi-lura became established. The cabbage worm, the celery worm and the fall webworm have nil been reduced by the activities of the new parasite. Free From Enemies. The redwood Is pecularly free from enemies. It Is rarely wind-blow- n and the thickness of the bark renders re-sistance to fire so great that It Is almost impossible to kill the trees by burning. Furthermore, the tree is not subject to attacks by Insects. About the only way they can be killed or shattered Is by a powerful bolt of lightning. By far the greater part of the reproduction of redwood Is by sprouts. It I also peculiar In Its abil-ity to produce excellent sprouts from ' very old stumps. Title of Duka. The title of duke, the highest order of the British peerage, was first Intro-duced In 13157, and the Black Prince, the son of Edward III of England, was the first duke, under the title of th duke of Cornwall. Scrap Leather Used on Roads. It has been estimated that 65,720 pairs of old shoes are needed for every mile of a road composition mad of sing, rock, asphalt and scrap leatlh er that has been patented In Great Britain. Quick Action. "The war made exceptional oppor-tunities." "Yes; a fellow could begin at the bottom and at the same time go over i the top." |