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Show r ' " '...". , , .J , ... "' " - PAGE EIGHT - the press-bulleti- n $100 Reward, $109 The readers ot this paper win be pleased to learn that there Is at least on dreaded disease that science has been able to curs in all Its stages and that is catarrh. Catarrh beinf greatly. Influenced by constitutional conditions requires constitutional treatment Kail'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 con-stitution 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. Send for 11st of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY CO, ToledeV Obio. Sold by all Druggist, TOo At the Paramount-Princes- s Theatre Today THE GREAT MASTERPIECE DRAMA The Price of a Good Time Will be showing all day Today and Tonight. Was shown in Salt Lake and turned away as many people without being accommodated as any picture ever presented there. MondaypMar. 4th at the Paramount-Princes- s AND TUESDAY THE 5TH AT THE PHOENIX THEATRE will be shown Thos. H. Ince's newest and greatest spectacle The Zeppelin's Last Raid THRILLING! SPECTACULAR! GRIPPING! INSPIRING! Showing for the first time on the screen a Zep bombard-ment and revealing the secrets of the Vultures of the Clouds. A FLASH OF LURID RED! - An Ear-Splitti- Roar! A deafening choru3 of frenzied cries from the throats of doomed men!: And then the mighty Zeppelin, mortally wounded by an internal explosion, plunges toward the shell-- . ' swept earth, flaming and smoking like a giant meteor. , THAT'S THE TREMENDOUS CLIMAX IN THIS SPECTACLE WANT ADS MINING LOCATION NOTICE8 for talb at the Press-Bulleti- n office. tt FOR SAILB 20 room hotel in the center f Bingham business district. Inquire airs. J. C. Butler, 480 Main. ml CHARLES LARSON, Violin instruc-tor, will be In Bingham every Satur-day, Leave orders or ask for infor-mation at Cley's Jewelry Company. FOR SALE Complete set of furniture for house-keeping- . Bar-gain tor ; quick purchaser. Inquire PresBHBulletln office. 1 TELL YOUR WIFE 1 i CORNS LIFT OFF Doesn't hurt a bit to lift corns ' or calluses off with fingers " Not a twinge of pain or soreness ' before applying, or afterwards. This --j. may sound like a dream to d V-- men and women who have been cutting, filing and wearing torturous plasters. Yes I Corns lift out and calluses peel off as if by magic, says this Cincinnati authority. ; quarter ounce of, freezone costs but IA cents at any drug store. Apply a , drops directly upon your tender corn or callus, and instantly the sore-ness disappear!; then, shortly the corn or callus will be so loose that it lifts off. Freezone dries Instantly. It doesn't eat out the corn or callus, but just shrivels It up so it lifts away without even irritating the surrounding skin. Women should keep it on the dresser and never let a corn or callus ache twice. OPPORTUNITY COMES ONCE TO . EVERY MAN I wish to hear from investors who will go in with me and Incorporate a large WYOMING-iUTAl- I OIL Company Here's your chance to get in on the ground floor; it will pay you to in-vestigate this. Write or call for full information. ORRIN JENSEN, Was. 5840. - 2H7 lAtlas Bldg. Salt Lake City, Utah. These Firms are Advertising in the 1918 Metal , Citizens' Coal & Supply Company "That Good Coal." Copperfield Coal Company Summit County Coal. Palace Confectionery & Grocery Co. 150 Main Stret. Canyon Confectionery Co. Canyon Hall Building. Go'den Rule Stores Co. 175 Stores in the U. S. Citizens' State Bank The People's Bank. Modern Tailoring Co. All kinds of Good Clothes. I. Selvin The Gents' Furnisher. S. J. Hays & Company Everything for the Miner. Bingham Mercantile Company The Big Store. Royal Candy --Company Home Made Candies Daily. ' H. Geffen The Old Reliable Jeweler. Jim's Place Good Things to Eat. R. G. Bee rMerchant Tailor. M. L. James The Up-to-Da- te Store. J. Bourgard The Man With the Meat. Paramount-Princes- s Theatre Good pictures all the time. The Bingham Hotel Bingham's Modoern Hotel. Bingham Livery & Transfer Co. Take You Anywhere in Town. . . Miners' Mercantile Co. General Merchandise. .. A. W. Lubeck The Man with the Goods. Kenyon Hotel, Salt Lake City Stop here when in S. L. C. Bingham & Garfield Railway Co'. Bingham's Best Railroad. Utah Power & Light Co. Power for Everything. . John T. Bogan Hardware, Tining and Plumbing. Bingham Coal & Lumber Co. Everything for the Building. Some advertise with us, some don't, ' , i PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS. . IT WILL PAY YOU TO. THEY PATRONIZE US. BINGHAM HIGH SCHOOL I Your Thrift Stamp Money Buys Rifles lor Our Soldiers , Little by little a nickel here a dime there mill-- " ions of dollars are being raised through Thrift Stamps to buy rifles, food and clothing for our de-,- v fenders in France and on the ocean. Ace you doing your share in this patriotic work? George ChochosisNow Sole Owner of the CHOCOLATE SHOP. Mr. and Mrs. Chochos will be glad to have all their friends feel when they are in the Chocolate Shop that they are in no strange plate. Coasider when here that you are in your own home. We are prepared to treat you better than ever before . and you will always find a warm and hearty welcome. ' CANDY, LIGHT LUNCHES, HOT AND COLD DRINKS, MUSIC, DANCING. 1 Come to see us and you will be assured of a pleasant time. J ' The Chocolate Shop Is your spare change still going for useless little luxuries, or are you lending it to the government by buying Thrift Stamps and War Savings Stamps? Buy a Thrift Stamp today. Buy 15 more as soon as you can. Exchange the 16 with a few cents added - , for a War Savings Stamp. Then do it all over again. In fUe years the government will give you $3 for every one of jour War Savings Stamps. You will have put your money out at 4 interest compounded quarterly, you will have developed the Thrift habit and YOU WILL HAVE HELPED YOUR COUNTRY WIN THE WAR FOR WORLD LIBERTY. War Savings Committee for Utah You can buy Thrift Stamps at any postoffite, any bank and almost any store. Ore or six shots before your knew whether It's booze or not .' The members ot the senior class are now practicing on writing; class pro-phesies and strange to say 'that most the prophesies wind up with one ' member of the class getting married to another of the said members. , .vr':; f: The swimming pool in the - school "' gym has. lost half its attraction since the board has put a ban on the swim-min- g parties. The way it is now five or six boys and their five or six sweet-hearts cannot enjoy the swim at one and the same time. The ban has been lifted from the lamb and now we can have mutton chops every day. And when there's mutton in abundance who cares about the pork and beef? Wise and OtSisrwisc Some people say that sctne of the peddlers who make Bingham have iaUen into the habit of giving short weight There will be no more swimming parties in the gym, Mabel. That mode of pastime, recreation and pursuit of happiness was too good to last The powers that be have said so. The gent down town who Insists on wearing his collars out rather than having the laundry wear them out, is Hooverizing all right ' ' The Bingham youth who insists on kissing his girl over the telephone and gets so much satisfaction out of the experiment, must have a wonderful imagination. In spite of the rupture between Bingham and Jordan basketball there is at quints least one Binghamite who has become hopelessly infatuated with a Jordan chicken. .. Penny ante is growing in popularity with the lovers of chance sjnee pro-fessionalism has been partially sup-pressed. - There is a boy in Bingham who. has a sweetheart an awfully eweet girl and he sees her every day almost. But on those days he does not see her he makes himself mighty disagreeable to the people he does see. : There is a girl in Bingham who is so modest that she cut the eyes out of the potatoes in her bath room. The social lion, the parlor rat, the woman fascinator, who won the love of so many fair maids while In town, has embarked for one of the Latin-America- n republics. The "Cousin Jacks" had a call last week. There Is one thing about the stuff they sell in Bingham at 25 cents a shot, and that is that you have to take A RAILROAD FOR FILLMORE ASSURED The Salt (Lake, Fillmore and Kanosh Railroad Company filed articles of in-corporation yesterday. Tte capital stock is 500,000, in shares of the par value of $100 each. Provo is the con: panys general place of husintss. The object of the incoroporatlon is to build a railroad from iLynndyl on the L, A. and S.'.L, railroad southeasterly by way of Holden, Fillmore and Meadow to Kanosh, a distance of 50 miles. The Incorporators are W. 8. McCornick, president of the (McCornick Banking Co. of Salt 'Lake, T. D. Kimball, of LSalt Lake, president of the Sevier Land and Water company; George W. Craig"", i. Geo. E. Robison, A. V. iRcbison, Alva Nelson, !Lee (L. Baker, Dr. Walter T. Hasler, W. I Biersach, IL. B. Buxton, G. J. Carpenter and N. C. Spaulding, all of Provo. The following are the directors and officers': Geo. W. Craif. president; F. D. Kimball, vice president; "Alva Nel-son, treasurer; W . McCornick, G. J. Carpenter, Geo. W. Robison, W. L. Biersach. A. V. Robison is the secre-tary. , , Surveyors began work Tuesday, es-tablishing the grade south from 'Lynn-dy- l, and construction work is expected to begin .May 1. The company is fully financed and it is the intention to have the road in operation in time to move this year's crops from the large farm-ing district through which it passes. The road will be a standard gauge, single track steam road. It passes through a rich agricultural country, much of which is undevelop-ed, but for which irrigation facilities are now being provided by flowing wells and otherwise. The Sevier Land and Water Company will furnish water for 30,000 acres and residents of Dese-re- t have bought 6,000 acres of this land, which will be brought under cul-tivation this spring. IA total of about 100,000 acres of new land, of excellent quality, is expected to be farmed with-in the next two years, in addition to the large acreage which has been cul-tivated for years. IA sugar factory is assured for 1919, and it is fully ex-pected that other sugar factories will be built. The rarilroad compnny has made in-vestigation of the extension of the road from Lynndyl northwest, about 25 miles to the Deseret Mountain and Dugway mining districts, and a final examination of this district is now be-ing made. It is fully expected that this extension of the new road will be made. Mr.' Craig, who is an experienced railroad man, has had the project un-der consideration, for about a year, as the field seemed to him the most promising for a feeder railroad ot any in the western country. A few months ago he interested Salt Lake and Pro-vo men and after a thorough, examina-tion of the conditions it was decided to organize arid push the project to completion as rapidly as possible. Rainfall in Bombay. Bombay averages more than 72 Inchc of rain a yea; and gets most of It within four or five mouth. UTAH BANKS PROFIT FROM ,' LIBERTY LOANS Statistics 6how Increased Savings and Commercial Deposits Increase In Resources After Second Issue Was " $4,000,000. ' Each of the two liberty loan bond Issues of 3917 were followed by in-creased savings and commercial de-posits in the banks of Utah and by Increased total resources of the banks themselves, aa shown by the figures of the state bank commissioner In his annual report which is now being completed. Instead of taking money away and decreasing bank deposits- - the Liberty loan campains have had the directly opposite effect of increasing bank deposits, the figures show, indicating that a most healthy state of finances exihts throughout the state of Utah. In fact the liberty loan drives aid' prosperity, it is declared, and they stimulate saving among the people that is strikingly evidenced by the In-crease in savings deposits in the banks which have followed each ot the Liberty loan drives in this state. Savings Increased " Savings deposits in the banks of the - Btnte lumped nearly fl.000,000 after the first Uberty loan call In June and after the, second In September they increased correspondingly. Commer-cial deposits increased at a healthy ratio also. The total savings deposits In the banks of Utah at the end of the first quarter of 1917 and just before the first Liberty loan call amounted to $29,011,33.20, as shown by the quar-terly report of the Btate bank commis-'sione-r for that period. The report issued immediately after the first Lib-erty loan drive showed the total sav-ings deposits to be f 29,95594.73. The report issued immediately after the second loan, in September shows the total savings deposits to be $30,006,6 14.35. Resources Enlarged Commercial deposits in the banks of the state before the first Liberty loan were $25,481 J148.03 and after the first loan they were increased to $26,403.-474.62- . Following the second Liberty loan the commercial deposits Jumped to $30,247,050.25, or an increase of nearly H.ooo.oov in the third quarter of the year. This is considered a re-markable increase in commercial de-posits. Total resources of the banks of the state privr to the first Liberty loan were $75,709,064.70 and following this loan they jumped to $78,553149,53. UTAH FJIIAIICIERS EIITERJL GAME Articles of incorporation of Utah Oil Company have been prepared and it is expected will be filed today. At the head of the organization ' are Jesse Knight and Jos. R. Murdock, and the object Is the development of 20,000 acres of oil and oil shale lands in the Uintah basin country, and leases of oil shale land In Spanish Fork canyon which Mr. Murdock and D. H. Gustave-son- , the company's consulting engi-neer, have been rounding up for sev-eral months. The capitalization will We $500,000 in shares of the par value of 50 cents each. Approximately SOO.000 shares of stock are to be placed in the treasury to provide funds for development and no promotion stock is to be issued. The only stock put out In connection with the organization of the company Is that issued in lieu of land acquired by the corporation. Nogotiations are under way for drill-ing equipment to be brought from Cali-fornia and drilling operations will be-gin at an early dale. The compnny al-so expects to engage In oil refining. The officers and directors of the company are: 'Joseph R. Murdock. president; Jesse Knight,, vice presi-dent; John Pingree of iSalt Lake, Jo-seph B. Keeler of 'Provo; lr. John T. White and A. iH. Crabbe of Salt Lake. B. B. Brooks and Parley T. Wright of Ogden, and R. S. Collett of Roosevelt, additional directors. An executive committee of four Is to be selected from the board to conduct the affairs of the organization. The executive committee and the secretary-treasure- r are to be selected at a meeting of the board, which probably will be held within the next few days. Among those interested In the eor-- i poration, In addition to the directors, are: Former Governor William Spry, A. II. iWoolley, Ir. ft. 8. Olsen, lM. C. Godbe, Reuben May, A. R. Lundfn. Judge J. L. Brown, B. W. iMusser, L. R. Martineau, D. IT. Custaveson and J. Wl Musser. all of Salt Lake; W. II. Shearman, B. til. and R. S. Brooks, George J. Cunningham, Joseph II. Myers, J. iW. IPike, C. L, and A. h Miller, George Timmerman, R. iM. Moyes. John A. Snedden, F. I Wright, Dr. fX M. Conroy, Dr. P. J. Carver. George D. Wheat. F. W. Chambers, all of Ogden; Joseph IB. keeler, George H. Brimhall, R, K. Allen, Provo; A. J. Evans, Lehl; I. B. Perrine. Twin Falls; Dorothy K. Lavielle, Evanston; John C. Jen-sen, Jleber; John Van Fossen. Omaha; T. E. Morgan, A. K. and H. R. Beeler. Los Angeles; E. C. Rampton, Pocatel-lo- ; i.Mrs. Hattie IL. JI. Cartwright, Illi-nois; T. M. Douglas, Idaho Falls, alid L S. Pond, Brigham City. GOVERNMENT INSTRUCTS FAC-TQRI-FS TO HOLD All CANNED eOODS Instructions from the food adminis-tration at Washington to hold for gov-ernment use all canned corn, peas, to-matoes, string beans and salmon, were received by the canning factories throughout Utah in comn on with all other state of the Union. News of the order to all canners is contained In dispatches from the national capital. Previous orders had been issued re-quiring the canners to hold 35 per cent of the tomato and 25 per cent of the pea crop for 1918, for war purpos-es, but the orders today virtually re-move these staples fnm the market and it is expected that within 30 days it will be imiKssible to buy canned corn, peas, tomatoes', string beans, or salmon. Reports of the holdings in these ar-ticles must be made at once, separate from those to be submitted before March 15. Canners who have no stocks are reqnirtd to report Indicating this fact. Quantities not wanted will be released promptly. HENRV JONES THROWS SOLDIER ANTON IN TWO STRAIGHT FALLS (Henry Jones came out victor on Monlay night last, when he threw Sol-dier Anton In two straight falls The first fall came in seventeen minutes and the second in fifteen minutes. Tloth men were 1n good condition, but the soldier boy lacked experience, and although he seemed much stronger , th:m Jones, being able. to break many of Henry's holds by mere strength, his lack of a knowledge of the game was ' a big handicap to him. Optimistic Thought A prince of talent will recognire th. talent of others. i PROVO FARMERS INT BET-TER PRICE ffllHHEIR WHEAT At the meeting of the Provo Farm Bureau local, held here last night, a resolution was adopted asking the County Farm .Huivau directors to take up with the National Food iAdnilnlntra-llo-the question of a DPtter price for wheat to be obtained by the loeaV growers than is now offered, here. It was stated that the price pfi'd has been from $1.T to 1.S per bushel, the hit ter price being offered now. The resolution will be presented to the directors at the meeting to be held hor (MonilRV. ' JACK DEMPSEY WILL FIGHT FRED FULTON Chicago, Feb. 26. "Why do they make such a fuss over me? If it Is be cause of my victory over Hill Hrennan. then I say Just wait until I hit my Rait" Jack Dempsey, the Utah man, who conquered Hrennan in six rounds at Milwaukee last night, made this state-ment here this afternoon. "I am not at my best Just now," Dempsey said. "I hae been 111 and am Just retting bach in form. I will show a lot better whon I perform against Fred Fulton and his fate will be that of Hrennan. "They say Jess Willard is too big for me, but I am. sure 1 can hit him and I question his ability to take a stirrer licking than Hrennan did." Demprey N hotWul of meeting Fred Fulton in Milwaukee on 'May 1 and eliminating the lat obstacle hftwppn himself and Willard. 'Milwaukee pro-moters are confident that the Fulton-Oorniisf-- y match will be arranged. After the second loan they Jumped to $S2,7S2,G.-7.0- 3. The increase in resources after the second Liberty loan was more than 14.000.000,. and while thf figures for the lant quarter of 1917 have not been completed as yet. It is estimated that a Ktill greater Inert-ax- e in resources will be shown by tbjn when they are com |