OCR Text |
Show "" " V THE PEESS-BULUETI- ' .. - . EIGHT - - - - s - ; ; Cetarrhal Deafaess Cannot Be Cured ty local application M .?"'! 7 dieeaaed portion ot tne inly on. way to oure catarrhal deafneaa, ISd that I. by a con.Ututloi.al remedy. tetarrJial Dm(iimi t eauaed by an In- - emd condition of tne jpucouj nln of tne Eustachian Tube Wien tube IS , you have a rumbling sound or lm- - Lfet liearln. and when it la entirely ZloVed, Dafnee. if th. reault UnleM th. Inflammation can b. reduce and thle tuo. re.tored to Ita normal condition, nearina will be destroyed forever. Many caeej of dearneaa ar. caueed by atarrh. Is condition of the roucoue iur-JJc- ea Hall'l Catarrh Medicine acta thra the blood on the xnucoua surf ace of tna WWa,wHl' One Hundred Pollara for " oate of Catarrhal Deafneea that cannot cured by Hall'a Catarrh Medielne, Clr- -- . aulara free. All Druiraieu. He r. J. chenk; a co.. Toiada, o. WANT&APSl FOR I M MEDIATE SALE The foi; lowln g articles i AXmlnstor rug' room size; 1 wool fibre rug, room size; 1 sewing machine, Standard; 1 brass bed, spring and mattress; iron-ing board; kitchen utensils, all kinds; electric Iron, iHotpolnt; 2 kitchen chairs, sewing table. The above ar-ticles lf in good condition; must be ' sold at once, iB. E. (Willis, at J. C. Penney Co. ll iPFfij- - mm . lr, ' ' : y: : H 'V, ,.,.:,,v, . -- v:v,. -V - r': v v " : yrV": -:- :B I In order to close out a number of items ofsummer goods j we are going to give you some genuine bargains this jj s week. ; ; S frt. All Ladies9 Straw Hats, price 75c to jD 81 j VI $4.00 ONE-HAL- F PRICE . $7fo ; i! 5 wl i4 Children's Straw Hats, price 45c fMm ' a I lffi 75c, ONE-HAL- F PRICE BllM : ?- W'llELS"- A Ladies' Summer Dresses, Lawns,- - Organ- - ,1 zjl' ' ISvJ ' Si ! Ill die89etc.,priteM$2$'$20i$2S59$3.259 $3J59 ' J 1 I F U $3i95 to $5.00, ONE-HAL- F PRICE, M S "' 3CS ' All Ladies' Summer Suits9 white and colored I S S J 'r prices $4.85, $4,98, $5.75, $7.50 ani $5.75 B S :it Jl ONE-HAL-F PRICE jj 8 jM4H ' 'v' All Children's White Dresses, prices 49c, 75c, $.25- - , ' 3 8 ; ilp ' ": $L5 io $2'50, ONE'HALF PRICE ; OX - s H f S vfL All Children s Summer Coats, sizes up to 15, prices 1 S A $5.00, $5.50, $7.00, $7.50 up to $15.16 at a reduction ' v 3 8 OF ONE-THIR- D R B, r: , . , ; ..; ,..:,.::yr g S These are only a few of the splendid bargains you will find in our g air Dry Goods Department B IBiifiairinivMlife C0. f I TWBigStdi--e pK2e SI ' i r C.:E.ADDERLEr,,Ueri , 1 i?. FOft SALE Furniture for two apartments, consisting of two stpves, cooking utensils, beds, sanitary , couches, nearly new davenport, .chairs, kitchen furniture and other articles. This furniture will be sold at & bargain and the purchaser can . if desirable rent the building In which -- ' the same Is located. Apply. Press-- ' - (Bulletin. MINING LOCATION .NOTICES for alb at the Press-Bulleti- n office. ' tf FOR SALE OR TRADE --One car, Oakland 8, on easy payments, or will trade for towa property. Inquire at the Butte. FOR A new Maxwell Roadster with Goodyear tread tires. In fine condition. bargain. ,Dr, 0. W. Richards, Cop- - perfield. tf MAIM 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 referenda and $500 bond required. Permanent position and good compensation to right party. Ad-dress U D. Firebaugt, Box 665, Salt Lake City, Utah. v WANTED A Japanese woman wishes a position as family cook. Has bad good experience. Salary $40 per month or up. Address further inquir-ies to P. 0. ox 517. Bingham, Utah. JtflB '" LOST On evening of July 8, lady's ' lavaliere between Chocolate Shop and Bingham Merc. Finder return to Press Bulletin and receive 10 reward. y " MODERN ROOMS $3 60, $4 00 and $5.00 per week; Grant Hotel, 19,Carr Fork. Bingham, v FOR RENT Three room furnished flat with bath. Inquire at the Butte. ' , FOR 8ALE "Modern, restaurant, splendid location. Inquire at the Butte. FOR RENT Three furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Apply at K4 Wain street. ' I ' M. E. WADDOUPS Attorney and Counselor Suite 610 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. THE BINGHAM ' . HOSPITAL Dr. F. E Straup Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. 1 p. m. to 5 p. m. 7 to 8 Evenings Phone No. 4 DR. P. S. HAGEMAN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bingham Canyon, Utah. Office: Above VVoodrings Drug Store. Residence: Eckman Aranntents, Telephone 35. Office hours: 1 3; 7-- 8. v ; Kind, Not Critical. Think as well as you can of every one who is trying In these hard times to do his duty to be brave, cheerful and useftil. Let us not be among those "who wet their tongue like a sword and bend their bows to shoot their arrows, even bitter words." Kindness helps, where criticism can-notExchange. YOU ARE DOING IT Every time you read, you purchas-ers of Liberty Bonds and War Sav-'ing- s Stamps, of whet the United States Is doing in France In building wharves and railroads, or deluging tho Germans with gas or shelling them out of position with b!.g guns or shrapnel, or of bombing their arenal or cities, or of the great work of our Army and our Navy, or of the building of shirs here, or of any or all of the great or small achievements of America, here or abroad or cn the teas, vou buyers rf Liberty fimids and Wir Savings Stamps truthfully can tav, "I had a band In this;" "I con-tributed to this;" "I am helping do this;" "It is part of my work." ..Utah is the first state to Inaugurate j M clay for the benefit of I War. relief funds. j Dora Montague, of Payson, has en-- J lifted in the navy as a yeoman and Is i erring as a clerk in the naval recruit-- j ing office at Salt Lake City. I Miss Lavorne Frantzen, diiuhter of , Mr Matilda Frantzen, of Spring City. J baa left for Washington, D. C to be employed in the office of the adjutant j I general. j The threatened strike qf the Salt J Lake fire fighters, which was to have j taken place Sunday, was called oft i both sides to the controversy making j concessions. J Due to the accidental discharge of a i rifle Clement Koldwyn, of Ogden, met j with a painful injury to his hand at t Buntsvllle, the bullet passing through the palm of his hand, Edward Scherrer, a registrant of,the Ogden City draft district, Is in Jail in j Cincinnati, 0., because he is alleged to j have misrepresented his dependency j status in his questlonnlare. j That road construction on the west- - i em end of the Lincoln highway will' be j rushed to completion was evidenced j last week By the installation off addi- - tlonal road building machinery. j The total tax rate on Salt Lake City j property this year will be 19.80 mills, s against 20!20 last year, a decrease of .40 of a mill on the dollar, or 49 cents on each $1000 of property value. J. II. Manderfleld, manager of the Salt Lake Union stockyards, has been appointed by Governor Bamberger as Utah, repesentatlve on the highways transport committee of the council of national defense. ' Instructions to Utah draft boards to exert every precaution In ridding the national army of unpatrlotio enemy aliens and at the same time accord Justice to loyaF soldiers of enemy birth have been Issued. ,, Tlans for the fourth Liberty loan campaign In Utah are now being work-ed, out by Heber J. Brant, state chair-man, and his associates. Unlike the loan campaigns of the past, the coming campaign will last but three-weeks- . , Two men who are alleged to have taken In one week from .various Salt Lake hotels more than $1000 'worth of Jewelry and money are Being held In the city Jail: They are John Murray, 21 years of age, and George Jackson, & . A sliver an Inch in length was re-- , rooted from the right tonsil of Thelma. McComb, daughter of Robert C. McComb, by attendants at the emergency hospital at Sah Lake. JThe cJUld had attempted to swallow the silver. ' Nearly $3,000,000 will be the revenue from the 1918 Utah ta levy, fixed at 4.7 milis, according to action taken by the state board of equalisation. This levy, it was explained, is $ of a mill lower than the total state tax for last, year. ,'. It Is announced that 1076.95 acres of land in the Dixie national forest will be thrown open, to homestead entry on August 2L Should Uiere not be suffi-cient applications under the homestead act by Auirust 28, tne land will be open for other entries. ' Claud Sapp, son of the barn foreman at the United States Fuel company's mines at Panther, was Instantly killed when a boulder weigh-ing six tons rolled down the mountain aide, striking hint on the head and crushing his skull. T President W. B. Ennls of the Salt Lake county farm bureau, has an-- 1 nounced that arrangements are under way to provide a uniform scale of prices to be charged farmers for threnhlng grain. Existing prices range from 10 to 20 cents a bushel. ' Appropriations made by the last legislature for the construction of two new buildings atthe University of Utah, with an adVmlonnl $18,000 by the state council of defense, have been re-leased by Governor Bamberger and work was begun on the buildings last week. ' Of 31.G83 cattle in Utah subjected to ( tuberculin teMs only 200 have been condemned and destroyed up to July 15, according to a report compiled by Thomas Redmond, secretary to the state livestock boar.d. It is estimated that there are nearly 500,000 dairy cattle In the state. The state veterinarian is investigat-ing the poisoning of three cows be-longing to Leroy Barker of Pleasnnt View. About five minutes after eating a quantity of hny the cows died. It Is believed the hay had been sprinkled with a poisonous mixture in order to exterminate gra choppers. As a result of arbitration, the price for threshing has been set at 13 cents for wheat 11 cents for barley and 9 cents Tor oats for Weber and Davis counties, where farms are nnirorraally smaller than In other counties, except Ogden valloy and the Bountirul dis-trict of Davis county, where special prli-e- s will prevail. While the corn production for Utah for WIS cannot even be estimated as yet. It is declared that it will go many thousand of bushels over that of any preceding year, according to the re-port given, out at the offloe .f the federal food administrator for Utim. The killing of a real timber wolf within the limits of Salt Lake City on July 24 wns In accord with a proper celebration of Pioneer day, In the opin-ion of J. F.. Mammott, who shot the pnhnal near hN home. He collected $50 bounty for elimination of the animal. WHAT PEOPLE ' i MK ABOUT People are" very much inclined to talk , about matterB on which they do not have complete Information and this is probably due to the fact that they are anxious to acquire more knowledge of the real facts at Issue In matters where the facts are well known and there Is no secret in con-nection therewith the people take DUt little Interest But a live topic of conversation Just at present among the wise ones who have their ears to the ground is ibat of the "underground railroad", from Montana and Wyoming Into Utah. Now this is a matter of which the general public has no knowledge ad those who are doing the talking 1 now but little, rut they have thought a creat deal and with their, imaglna-- , nels on the road 'that day and they had not been wised tip that the "kins-ca-do no wrong," and they unwit-tingly arrested him and confiscated the booze. Of course this made 'th bootlegger yery wrath for he had alW ready arranged for protection witM the higher-ups- . Those two deputies will be fired at an early date for Improperly discharging the duties of their, office. They also say that the license tax that the bootleggers now have to pay is almost prohibitive. There are so . many, it is said,' who are entitled to a rake off. According to the reports the surplus revenue now derived from the sale goes Into the pockets of the " protectors. Now for this there Is no foundation so far as we know other than talk. It may all be the product of some fer-tile imagination, but there are those j who say and no doubt believe that such a system is In operation and that there Is quite a little profiteering In this business. About this we do not know, but we do believe that booze is getting scarcer and weaker In, Bingham. tions have coupled up a story of ncre than Interest. This underfc-oun- Is not In reality a su;)way or even a railroad at all, but ! It Is a system by which whiskey is transported with safety from those states to various arid sections of the 'state. The people who are talking do not know the exact location of the I main trunk line, but af r this state Is reached there are runy branch, lines which penetrate tin communi-ties where lintild refreshments are j I In demand. This railroad like many others has a ; resident, a board of traf-fic managers and frlecds at court. Of course we do not know anything about this, but the people sav that there are a number of public nfficers who arc connected with th- - organiza-tion and tbat the revenue they collect Is something enormous. They are "silent" partners end their duty is to see that afl cars carrying booze for the Great Company ere allowed to pass without being molested. The main public highways of this state are now guarded by officers to see that automobiles laden with booze do not get by) So It Is easy to see what one company can do ohould It have these officers as profit sharing associates. They say that the hand-ling of such a concern though It Is one of difficulty, because there Is a danger of some of the officers who ere not connected with the business being located at the wrong place, or that new and uninitiated officers may be placed on duty. Such things happen you know, and Uiey say that such a thing did actu-ally happen. Not In this county, but in an other county where booze lovers live. The king of the bjotlcggprs was pacing through that county with a cargo of good. Unfortunately two new deputies were acting as sent!- - WWaWaM11wl,,M',lM - Chips and Shav- - ! ings From Lark President Wilson has set his teeth against any shadow of a suggestion of an unwholly peace. Peace, be has told the nations, must be made only through the German people' them-selves, and not with the lying, thiev-ing, murdering Prussian autocrar.. Germany must be beaten. Yes. help-lessly, hopelessly, eternally beaten and not until then can America join In any peace talk only by bull t and shell We must not be delnied, the price of Peace will be a heartbreak-ing one for us all but it will stauip Prussian autocracy so deep In tNt mire that it will take a cnturv to recover. . John Rendlesbach and Will. Calla way, two popular young m vrled men of Lark, received their Iraft call and have left to Join the U. S. force' and will probably be station d at Camp Cody. They leave with the well wishes and praver. ot the com-munity, , X, Fred ,Metcalf the soft drink manu-facturer of Bingham brought over a load of his products during the past week and also lntrodu I Ills new drink "Xtra," accompanying him wa his brother Vernon, of Oglen, who la holding a It erative government posi-tion. making surveys In the Bingham mines properties on Friday and Sat-urday last. Mr. and Mrs. W. Paige were visited by the stork the past week-- With the ussistance of Dr. Dewey a sweet lit-tle baby girl arrived. . Mrs. H. Kuphaldt of the ranch is visiting near Oakland, California with Mrs. Brandow, a former resident ot Lark. t . - Did It Ever Occur To Yo-- i That some people think it smart to tecch their children to lie, a habit which when formed, places tne child In later years whee no confidence can be placed in him, or be trusted by anyone." ' That Lou Is making some of the other peddlers sit up and take notic,e. That some women when painting their face forget how badly the out-fld- e of the house needs paint. That Germany's greatest mistake was that during her forty years prep-aration for var no preparedness hod been made for defeat That dogs who stick a man up on the street should be sent to France. That the movies at the amusement hall are turning out big crowds these days. That Bingham's pioneer tonsorial ortlst would surely make Kaiser Bill hold up his hands if he could get clo enough. That prayers may be allrlght, but the danger Is some people offer noth-ing else. Will Henry Ford get the hoys out of the trenches by Christmas with his new "'Eagle?". 'May It be so we pray. That al and Orson at the pool hall are busy these warm days handing cut soft drinks. That it Is rare that anybody wants tholr names published when they write a piece to the paper knocking somebody. 4 Messrs J. Marshall of Salt Lake City and Ralph Zwlckey of Bingham were busy at the Lark stor- - stocktak-ing the first of the week Albert Hubcr, of Salt Lake City, the eldest son of Al Huber of the Lark pool ball, has secured a position with tne clerical forces of the Ohio Concentrator. Joseph Hyland, Jr.. ot the Lurk store, spent the week end at Salt Lake City with his folks. Miss .Mildred Hasting of Eurtki, Is the guest of Mr. and Mr. Abe Hastings, Bingham and district Is entitled to a county commissioner, John C. Green Is a potable candidate. Lit us each one and all do our utmost t r his nomination. Juilge Green s lm partiality and fairness should receive the hearty sup)ort of the commun-ity. Lark baseball U-a- on Sunday got whipped on their home grounds by Herrlman.-b-ut look out for the return match, llerriman. "Josh" Hillings, the man with a smile, came out from Salt Lake City and was busy with his theodolite Most Powerful of Snakes. One of the moet difficult reptilea to . ; capture is the regal python, also a na . Uve of India, that giant snake that measures as long s 30 feet in extreme cases. This immense constrictor had; In its wonderful colls the strength t5 crush on ox. A 10-fo- python could hoot its head forward, strike a big j man In the chest, fell him, and crush , j him bone from bone and the pythons caught by the snake man pre .wlce and sometimes three times as long, i ' - ' Pride that comes with sorrow is In-deed a blessed pride. We sorrow over every son who dies in the nation's service and yet are thrilled with pride by every name thus added to the city's honor roll of heroic sacrifice" SAVING AND SAVING AND LENDING Sir William Goode, of the British Food Ministry, says that from July, 3 317. to April, 1918. the United States exported to the allies 80,000,000 bush- - . ; els cf wheat products. Of this It Is as- - serted that 50,000,000 bushels repre-- ; sented voluntary sacrifices by the (American people In their consumption t 'of wheat. ' . j There Is a triple economy, a aspect to this saving of wheat. ' It ' raved wheat for our Army and the armies of our allies; It saved money to the American people, and for the most part this money went for the purchase of government war securi-ties. There Is another saving still; this ' sort of sacrifice and economy Is help-ing win the war shorten the war with the resultant saving of soldiers' lives. . f ' " ;l New Dieting Advice, An anxious young theologtwil ito-de-once asked Henry Ward Beecher what was the best and most successful method of preparing for a lecture or sermon. The reply shot back In one sentence, "Just fill yourself chock full w" your subject and then let nature caper I" id the bes-- : general advice for hygienic dieting runs along similar Sows; Just spread a liberal table and then let. your appetite caper. Ex--i change. I ' fc |