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Show THE PRESS-BULLETI- N, BINGHAM, UTAH. i i i i it I. i. ii . f For Infants and Children. Sii! Mothers Know That iliilllll Genuine Castoria f1feS the iy neither Oplam.torphtnenor a l .a iVr Prfe'1 Jen" It If ft .n In &; j$xst ft $ Use Exact Copy Wrapper. the cintaur copah, hkw vork city, jjW f I JjjJLetV settle . . ? i My WW- ' - right now? TSfeSt No man ever smeked a ' Jm better cigarette than Camel! ifB b 1 1 jjl You'll find Camels unequalled by J 'fl : hW any cigarette in the world at 'any J if f w$m I price because Camels 'combine ' mjm ; wWUl every feature that can make a KSI F$mw cigarette supreme I ffP! B Camels expert' blend of. choice KBffc'W' Turkish and choice Domestic ' j ' ISii IT1 Irifif tobaccos puts Camels in a class by i B-ClJl-lvl themselves. Their smoothness J "S'&i aPPea to yu' anc permit I jj 1 you to smoke liberally without tir-- HI liT Sfeai mg your taste! ..; y& fcBS'T Camels leave no unpleasant ciga-- igk jjf ; retty aftertaste nor unpleasant fnTSnT f5l cigaretty odor ! fl You'll prefer Camels blend to either iplijl' kind of tobacco smoked straight! Ljjlla TVUS-iS- U'i ' pmckafes of JO cijanttm for 20 cenfs, or tea pack' 1 II I tfc R jf. B N ' u 9 j?OoEF "es tioO cijre(res) ma (f;aine-p(ior-eovor- I iMUt li CSi--' carton. Wo utronflly rocommend thi carton or LjL i FT Hi yii 'j'jL offica tupply or wion you frarol ' ftUULa,. JjS&If "r" R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co Vt v I c DON'T THROW Zzj ll ?f I away thG pprtun,ty t0 have V jii your bin Hlled with h,gh fiipv V:ff grade, well screened coal. It )vF- Is a great satisfaction to q y yi-r- - 'J know that you have your Sl EzSfjM MrkT winter's supply safe in your (Hz yiV'ilm house before cold weathor w uLrllIll (ir Je?'n4 w U the time CA vA 'j 1 by ordering from US. CITIZENS COAL CO. Bingham, Utah ! warn. I j B 400 Rooms - Fireproof 0 H g Every Room with Bath g 1 ' B g $2 a day and up gj I J.H. WATERS 8 S Managing Director g R. G. BEE I Maker of Good Clothes for Men II j Woodring Building illllllllMIIIEIIIIIIIlllliaiBIIIEIBIIIEiaaaiBIBIBIIIB 5 3 1 Pocket Billiards, Great Variety of Soft 5 jS Drinks, Cigars, Tobaccos if At The Oxford i S ' First class barber shop and steam heated rooms in building B MtfflflBBBBflflBrBCI3BBBB93i2IS33G3BBCB&flS3BKX3ia3Z2ZIBEBH 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. Ill .3:35 p. m. Leave Bingham: Arrive Sdt 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. STOUTENBOROUGH, A.G. P.A. F. B. SPENCER, I Salt Lake City, Utah. Agent, Bingham, Utah. era mid department stores T 'mTfrrjt' ENGLANDER SPRING BED CO. , sa , Newlfork Brooklyn-Chicago ARROW COLLARS I J' 7f 1) THE BEST THAT YOU msikJ CAN BUY AT THE U AL J) PRICE YOU PAY CluetU Peabodv t Co., Inc., Troy, H.Y. V LOSE YOUR HEADACHE QUICK !, USE THE DEPENDABLE 3 JP LIQUID REMEDY TM (EASY TO TAKE-SPEED- Y BELIEF): '. . ifMWi 4 I. (TAPUDINE r GRIPPE AND BACKACHES. TOO O 1,1 UTAH STATE HEWS Utah will produce this year at least 4,000,000 pounds of honey and the quantity may be larger than that. H. H.- - Bullen, Salt Lake aviator, flew to Ely, Nev., a distance of 2G0 miles, In three hours and twelve min-utes. - On the Levan ridge in Juab county the combined harvesters have been so busy that the farmers worked thein at night. In the seven months ended July 31 the people of Utah invested In thrift and war savings stamps to the ex-tent of $73,000. The Farmer-Labo- r party of Weber county named a ticket for the county election at the convention held at Og-de- n last week. A course in commercial engineering will be given at the University of Utah when It opens for the autumn quarter, September 27. Pickpockets operating In Salt Lake and on the electric trains between Salt Lake and Ogden relieved their victims of $341 in a few hours. W. D. McPherson, 03 years of age, city attorney of Springville, died sud-denly In the county courf house at Provo, while representing a client.- Ten million fish are to be cared tor at the state hatchery In Springville. An enlargement of the plant is to be made, both In building and equipment. Bees In Utah, in many instances, are becoming migratory. Their owners ship them from the state in the fall for warmer climates, and, as a result, the bee.s do two years' work every year. The ieachers of both Logan city and Cache county held an institute in Lo-- , gan, September 4. Both districts con-template a most successful school year, with an unprecedented at-tendance. William Dunlap, aged 51, was killed In an automobile accident In Diamond Fork canyon, near Thistle, his machine turning turtle, Dunlap be-ing pinned beneath the machine and drowned. Democrats of Utah will participate In a monster parade in Salt. Lake on the afternoon of September 15 during the visit there of Governor James M. Cox, Democratic candidate for the presidency. Charles C. Hood and William Christ-mas, both of Spanish Fork, were se-verely Injured when their automobile rolled down an embankment on the road Into the Strawberry project, forty miles from Spanish Fork. The mystery surrounding a sup-posed attempted holdup of a train on the Southern Pacific railroad near Lit-tle Mountain has been apparently solved In the arrest of John W. Boss, 29, a farmer of Plain City. Marion Lyman Young expects to re-tire as superintendent of state printing in the near future to accept a com- - mission as first lieutenant in the reg-ular army. He recently passed the ex-amination for his tommlssion. The Utida , Pumping company of Cornish filed articles of Incorporation with the secretary of state last week, showing Its purpose to be the distri-bution of waters obtained from the West Cache Irrigation company. Care of the three children of James Clough,' murdered at Ogden, on Au-gust 15, by the oldest son at the In-stigation of the mother, who is now In the Insane asylum, has been assumed by the Children's Aid society of Og-den. Twenty thousand school children were in attendance at the public schools of Salt Lakn City on the open-ing day. The enrollment for the first day Is In the neighborhood of 1000 greater than upon the opening day last year. When the brakc-- s failed to work, an automobile driven by William Howard Griggs, aged 19, went over an embankment a distance of thirty-fiv- e feet and landed right side up. Griggs was only slightly injujred, but the ma-chine was wrecked beyond repair. It is announced that the work on dry farming by Dr. John A. Wldtsoe, now president of the University of Utah, written while he was president of the Utah Agricultural college, will be translated into modern Hebrew for use by Jewish colonists In Palestine, William Wrigley, Jr., largest manu-facturer of chewing jjum in the world, last week entered the sugar industry In Utah when a deal was completed whereby, with W. Harvey Ross and R. T. Harris, Salt Lake capitalists, and O. II. Egge of Sanla Ana, Calif., he se-cured stock control of the Gunnison Valley Sugar company. Utah's eight-hou- r statute Is not ap-plicable to the office of registration agent for election and women who are registration officei--s must keep their offices upon the required thirteen hours, regardless of the statute which provides that no female shall work longer than eight hours, per day, the attorney general has decided. While It was but a few days ago that the ratification of the suffrage amendment by the state of Tennessee ciwnert with victory fh" long and w;nry battle of this wi men of the na-tion for the ballot, Irrespective of the state In which they live, Utah has the distinction of being one of the pioneer commonwealths In the struggle for equal rights. K. C. Rice, 47 years of oge, a res-ident of L"S Angeles; sh'it and- - killed ICd A. Mayer In a win at a hotel in Rait I.'Ae. UVe claims he sliot In M'iMefousP. HARDING AND COX SUB-MIT VIEWS TO ENGINEERS The American Association of Engi-neers made public letters from Gov-ernor Cox and Senator Harding in an-swer to a questionnaire recently sent the presidential candidates. i Governor Cox wrote that "Ms. reply to every one of the questions you ask Is unequivocally 'yesk'" while Sen-ator Harding, in a lengthy letter, out-lined his views more fully. Among the questions asked were whether the presidential nominees fa-vor a national department of public works for the purpose of reducing and many bureaus and com-- , missions; the appointment of an engl-- j neer as a member of the interstate! commission; a .progressive program of conservation and development of pub-- 1 lie resources; the budget system of ap- -' propriations and the reclamation of waste land with a special financial system to aid the settler In reply Senator Harding said he had been considering the question of a department of public works, but feared, "I should be unworthy of pub-lic confidence if I ventured to decide so important and g a ques-tion without the very fullest study." "You may say, in a general way," he continued, "that I think very well of the appointment of an engineer on the interstate commerce- - commission and I have always spoken heartily of a progressive and constructive policy of conservation, I am sure you know that I favor the budget system and a very forward policy relating to recia-matio-and irrigation." The American Legion Weekly has brought to the attention of the bureau of war risk Insurance and other gov-ernment officials --several cases In which red tape and delay have in-flicted serious hardships upon dis-abled men and their rela-tives. One man who had a large sum of money due from the government died penniless and almost destitute before Jt could be paid, and before the bureau could settle the case and make any payments to the widow, she also died. A statute recently passed by the West Virginia legislature providing that on recommendation of 20 per cent of the voters of a county, the county court can make a levy of five per cent on taxable property for a memorial building has been taken ad-vantage of by the Welch Post. A $40,000 house and lot has been bought by McDowell county court and turned over to the Degion for a home. Wheedling a Lion. Lions are not tempted, like other an-imals, to strict obedience to their trainer's commands by the offer of luscious foods. Practically every ani-mal but the Hon Is tauglu to do what Is wanted by giving It a reward every time It does It or makes an effort to, eitbor"o lump of sugar or a vegetable or a bit of fish or some other thing of.whleh It is fond. This Is Impossible with the lion, as It eats only merit and Is only allowed a certain amount of that. This Increases tht difficulty of the lion tamer. |