OCR Text |
Show " "' . r , ' ' - - ' ' - f tsi y - f , ; t ' ' ' ' ' ljf , " ' " " ,.' ' ' '' , . ' ' ' ' " '' ' ' '" ' ' ' '' "" " ' " " ' ' " ' ' t4 ' EIGHT '. . THE PRESS-BULLETI- . a WANT ADSj FOR SALE OR RENT Modern up to date restaurant, good location, in-quire at tha 'Butte. ' FOR SALE illarley Davlsr motor-- . " cycle in first class condition; will sell reasonable. Dr. Flynn. ' FOR ' SALEd.917 Indian motor-cycle with side car and everything In - good condition, JSlectric headlight and improvements. Apply, to lAnselmo & Pezzopane. ' . . FOR SALE Vase & Son piano, will cell at a bargain and take Liberty Bonds In payment. Inquire Frssa-Bulleti- n. office. LOST Bunch of keys. Finder re-turn 'to PretwBulletin Office. FOR SALE Chicken and fruit ranch, acres, good water right and well, four room house In good condi-tion, poultry houses, cement cellar, shade trees, fine hedge; located on car line; owner going East. J. B. Cochran, general delivery, Murray, ' Utah. ' ! CLOSBMG GUI I I "At 14 Price T t ' ' ' 1 1 I ;' - . ; :, . . ij:.; I We have a number of Ladies 'Suits which we are closing I Out at Fifty Cents on the Dollar : I p J Indies Suits, Regular Price $10.00; Now ,$5.00 "JL J j Ladies Suits, Regular Price $15.00; Now $7.50 -- 4r $t Ladies Suits, Regular Price $21.75; Now.. $10.90 TSy" I j ff Ladies Suits, Regular. Price $22.50; Now.... ...'.$11.25- , Ladie Suit3' Regluar Price $25-- I Now S12.50 . Mfr I LI Ladies Suits, Regular Price $30.00 ; Now ............. $15.00 fjQl .. r. ) rPR j i' Ladies Suits, Regular Price $36.50; Now. ............. $18.25 ifW?)' j . '. adies Suits, Regular Price $37.50; Now.... .........$18.75 . IL J ta' 4 SY LADIES RAIN COATS REDUCED ONE-THIR- D I' I ! ffff Ladies Rain Coats, Regular Price $5.95; Now ....$4.00 j j If II ' Ir 1 ladies Rain Coats, Regular Price $7.00; Now $4.35 I II - I !y jl ?.adies Rain Coats, Regular Price $7.50; Now ......$5.00 "Mffl ffiF ' Ladies Rain Coats, Regular Price $9.90; Now.... $G.GO I fl 'WS' Ladies Rain Coats, Regular Price $11.00; Now......... $7.35 VlW ') S ' ff Ladies Rain Coats, Regular Price $12.50; Now, ......... $8.35 f1(- - - , . A. One Lot Ladies All Wool Drawers, Special, Pair........ $1.00 ) ' 'e)' One Lot Children's Hose, Special, Pair.....' 25 )r ... .... t : I - - . I Eiinighainni Merc0 Co 1 : I 5?&?c 'The Big Store PT , i, i C. E. ADDERLEY, Mgr. I Ul STATE HEWS ! Herman Knudson, a resident of Frovo since 1S04, died October 31, aged : 62 years. More than 1,230,000 caes of to-- matoeg have been packed und sold i trom the 197.8 crop in Weber county, j W. H. Stratton of the firm of Ktrat-- j ton Brothers of .Ogden, dropped dead J of heart failure, last week while duck i hunting west of Ogden. Members of the students' army ! training corps at the University of Utah who desire to attend officers' 5 training camps are to be given an' op- - portunlty to do so, ' ) Word was received at Spanish Fork 5 last week of the death of Private Charles J. Stewart, the first Spanish jj Fork boy to be killed In action on the battle front in France. Grover V. , Sorenson, the son of Christian Sorenson of Vine- - $ yard, died in France September 29, as a result of wounds received in action, according to news received last week. Mr. and Mrs. William Zabriskie of Mt. Pleasant have received advices f that their son, Henry M. Zazriskie, hud 5 been killed in action In France. He j, met death October 1, according to the & message. . 5 , Merl Wheelwright, of Ogden, was killed In action on October 6, accord- - ing to a message received by his par S cnts. It la believed that he met his death while In the offensive northwest of Verdun. The district court has Issued a for- - ' tnal order calling a special grand Jury ijj to Investigate the affairs of the de-- funct Merchants bunk at Salt Lake, jjj The inquisitors are to report for duty ( November 18, gi Clarence S. Jarvls, a former Provo ( man, who assisted in the subdividing of the Uintah reservation and later was In the reclamation service of the f government, has been commissioned captain In the army. ' i. If the stork that supplies Salt Lake J, with babies had traveled faster on the Jj! night of October 31, 300 children would j. have been born there Inst month. But f, as he was a couple of hours late with oue little girl, only 2!K) babies arrived. ? Unless the margin of profit on coal Is Increased, tnnny conl dealers of the J. city will be forced to close down their establlnhnients, according to Ellas S. S Woodruff, president of the Retail Coal Iculers' association, of Salt Lake 5 City."-'- v : ; , Marriage licenses were not in much demand in Suit Lake last month, ac- - '9 cording to John E. Clark, chief deputy 'f; county clerk. Only 151 licenses were $ Issued In October, 1918, a decrease of C 321 as compared with the previous g year. j:: Boy scouts of Salt Lake have been designated secret service men to round up all slacker phonograph records and persuade them to do their duty 5 by singing for the boys in the trenches and the cantonments and on the large transports. The Utah Agricultural college has completed the Induction of more than 700 young men Into its students' army training corps, as it apiears from re-ports from the various induction of-- I flees maintained by the Institution In this state and Idaho. ; , George Farrell, ranchman end land promoter and a brother of Will O. Farrell, president of the Salt Lake Rotary club, was accidentally shot and ; killed at a hotel In Salt Lake while handling a shotgun with which he in-tended to go hunting. In a raid on an alleged Chinese gambling den at Salt Lake, officers ar-rested twenty-nin- e Chinese, one a woman, on the charge of gambling and violating the state health law, 'which prohibits the congregating of two or more people In one room. Permits for the purchase of RUgnr for home canning purposes will no longer be issued in Utah, according to telegraphic Instructions from Wash-ington ordering a discontinuance of the practice which has been genera throughout summer months. , ' A conl miner, even though an alien-enem- y, can do the country more good In a coul mine than he can in a war prison. This "was the attitude taken by the United States department of Justice last week when Paul Rosendah, nn Austrian, arrested at Kenllworth for seditious remarks, was placed on parole. , 7 Regarding payment of school teach-er during the enforced vacation due to the Influenza,' state superintendent. Cowans has announced that such ar-rangements should be made between boards of education and teachers as will do Justice to the teachers and at the same time b consistent with good public policy. , Alleged failure of some Utah papers which are printing political advertise-ments to file statements of their own-rrshl- p with the secretary of stote un-der the corrupt practices act,' caused 8 meeting of the attorney general and fertary of state last week for the purpose of considering steps to om-pt- -l a compliance with the low. The f1rt Christmas soupons to be sent Into Utah by soldiers on overseos duty tame fcurt wk, hwi from wow on there Hi sxpvrted to fct a flood Of the little white sUp that permit a friend or relative fci swud mm fellow "over thurn" a holiday rwamUimoce. Tlis unjxrnfive od of BwtdJcal ex-amination of ad children entering schools throughout Utuh is empbaatzed by Dr. Wu.lt er M, Stookey in his re--j imrt of findings during a three years' j fcurvvj of pbyuicaj conditions among children attending the training school of the University of Utah. ' ') .: ' I f EVER TRY A LILY BED7 j By L. M. BENNINGTON. i As the cold winds of winter are making doubly cheery the window gar-- den in the sitting room, the prospects Jtor a season of beauty in th garden next year occupies a great deal of thought and attention. If the whole garden outlook Is to be changed or if only a few improvements are to be made in its outlines, the winter nights are the time to develop the changes that you are going to make in your home grounds. No really effective change has ever been made by experimenting without some planning. If you plan to make lily bed choose a well-drain- spot tor them, and if possible where the flower will have a background of ever-greens, shrubs or screen of living green to set off their pale beauty. A back-ground of climbing plants Is also good. Dig the bed two feet deep and throw Into the excavation rubbish, tin cans, old shoes, rocks, brick bats and the like, , Insuring drainage, as the lily cannot stand cold, wet feet. ' Enrich the soli with manure from the cow stable, worked well Into the soil with sand or sifted ashes. Plant the bulbs eight to twelve inches deep, according to their size, in a pocket of Band."": ' ' Just before the cold weather sets cover the bed with a litter of old )n being sure that the storms of winter will not uncover the bed. Lilies shade during the hottest part of gjnt ' Lilies are easy to force if the fol-lowing instructions are carried out. Select large, solid, heavy bulbs of the Perauda lily. Prepare soil that is light, fine and tery rich, with well-rotte- d manure cow manure is best. Fill a large pot half full, then press In three bulbs, al-lowing them to touch one another, with three inches of soil between them and the pot. j The size of the pot depends upon the size of the bulbs. The bulbs should be set in a nest of ' sand and sur--' rounded with it."( Thetf covef the bulbs with about two Inches of" soil and place the pots in a cool corner of the j cellar, allowing' the bulbs to make . plenty of root growth. . In about six weeks the roots shmiTfl . appear plentifully outside of tht bull of earth, and when this happens the pots are ready to be taken into light end warmth. , As the stalks shoot up, fill the pots with earth to within an inch of the rim of the pot ! " '.. Do not put the pots in a hot, dry atmosphere at any time, but at first they should be kept just above freez- - ng. , Little by little accustom them to the air of the living room. same day s paper, in deadly parallel, (and the happenings since) show that j the typewriter has done a few things; f f t only saved Lille from burning, Uk. it is a wonderful achievement. As i' read Wilson's last note today, finally wringing the necks of the hypocrites oversea, yet leaving the open door for the honest Germans to tread the path of peace via Democracy, I thought of your sneer at Mr. Wilson's phrase, "to make the world safe for Democracy." Can't you get off your "high horse" for once and give some one else credit for having inspiration patriotism and ability? ' A FORMER SUPPORTER. " P. S. Cater.. 1 see by today's paper that the war Is won, Turkey and Aus- tria Hungary are on their knees, and Germany is only waiting to see what the election returns show in Ameri-ca. You may not realize it, but your speels of late have been simply an echo of German desires. . AN OPEN LETTER TO JOOSEVEIT The following letter was sent to Theodore Roosevelt, under date of October 31, by a prominent Progress- - ive of Provo: Dear Teddy I stumped a big part of southern,, Utah for you when you were running against Taft, at my own expense; and i am only a free lance Hn politics, never held an of-fice and never sought one. But I drop you his note to say1 that I thought so much of you that I even forgave you for scuttling the ship at Chicago after yon had been honored as no American could be, aud left we Progressives holding the sack It looked like you ere merely an "opportunist," but I gave you the benefit of the doubt, thinking you may have had more information than we scrubs. And if you had placed yourself at the disposal of Mr. Wilson when we first went to war, instead of cam-paigning to be sent "over there" with a special wire running back home to tell of" each day's "doings of Teddy," you would have been the greatest American yet! Who else could have aroused the Datrlotlsm of American youth as you could have done, had you merely said, "Mr. President, here am I; take me for what I am worth; I am at your ser-vice?" - And now while Wilson is walking the tight rope across the greatest Niagara that ever raged, you keep shouting at him and telling him how to- step! ; - The attached clippings, all from the FOR INFLUENZA VICTIMS 400 FLASKS OF WHISKEY A bootlegger drove into Roosevelt a few days ago and the officers were following him from another town. When the first search was made of his car nothing was found, but upon closer investigation by an expert ma-chinist a secret chest was found In which was stored four hundred flasks of whiskey. It was just over the radi-ator between the body of the car and the hood, over the engine. Instead of allowing the booze to be destroyed the mayor of Roosevelt and the offic-ers decided it should be used on the influenza epidemic. However none of this contraband can be secured with-out a prescription from the physicians and then only in small quantities. If the "Flu" decides to flee from Roosevelt do not be surprised, be-cause that much whiskey ought to scare the dread disease away regard-less of its hold upon the community. Wise and Otherwise A fellow up street says he is pes-tered with a nocturnal visitor who calls at 2 a, m. , , Much fine oratory has been canned during the past few weeks on account of the prevalence of the flu. The chief source of revJnue of the town of Murray Is that taken away from Blnghamites who drive automo-biles through that berg. If the auto-ist- s were to decide to use the Red-wood road "Murray would be bankrupt in a few months. A few nights ago a fellow entered his office and found a box marked, IHercules Powder, High Explosive Dangerous.' lie at once called up the police, and when the officer ar-rived he found it was only kindling mod a friend had broucht in, but somebody, was terribly sewed. It makes it pretty hard for a fel-low's girl to live in Ogden, especially when he can only pay Tier a three days visit on account of his work. Who is the mysterious person with a beautiful baritone voice that sings loudly and lustily when he comes from work at about 4:30 a. m. Did you see the two . plcanninies that were in town Wednesday? We are told that they are two very dig-nified high school girls. Some people in this burg have a rather high opinion of themselves,. A young man very handsome, made his appearance in town Wednesday night. He sure was a lady killer, and the girls went wild, simply wild over him. But we learned later he was one of Bingham most popular girls. A pretty girl in town thinks her best beloved might tell her when he has the "flu " iCourage. girls, there's tome conso-lation In the fact that the Bingham boys stand up for you. One writes from France. "The French girls are cute, but not half so pretty aa the Bingham gTrls," and an Eastern sol-dier saw a Bingham girl's picture and he says, 'iBinghara for me after the war is over." So perhaps that travel-ing man can't see straight after all. Some of the girls would fall for some of the boys if it weren't for the fact that pipes. ciRarets, and cigars are not agreeable to some people of the feminine gender, Save your to-bacco ' for the soldier boys. I . The boys say that the fellow here, who has a girl in town and one down in the valley Is still holding on to the one down there to keep the girl here guessing. And he has her guessing now having sloughed a date with her one night thiB week and now has a date down in the valley next week. They are almost at outs now, but as they are both going to thfr western coast within the next two weeks, It Is possible that they win have time to make up. While the flu Is still raging and a ban has been placed on public gather-ings the girls or some of them, are evading tha regulation by having a few come together now and then. At ono of these unlawful parties the other night two boys who were not invited decided to break up the game by climbing upon the house and cov-ering the chimney with a sack nnd thus smoke the youngsters out. But the plan did not work as the party got scared and beat it before the boys could scale the roof. COURT NOTES Ike Isaacson, Victor Johnson, Carl J. Johnson, John Horn bloom, arrested by Chief Deputy Fullmer, on a charge of intoxication, entered a plea of guil-ty and were fined $50 each. John Huertado who was charged with displaying a deadly weapon by Charlie of the Flag, was dismissed as the prosecuting witness did not ap-pear. . The case against, Louis retlch, charged with intent to kill, was con-tinued. The case against Chela Santa, for disturbing the peace, was continued. Warrant was issued for John Mit-chell for issuing a bad check; Louie Thomas for petit larceny, and Louie College for obtaining money under a false pretense. . The cases against Orson R. Lott and Dewey Mayne, charged with as-sault on the "persons of Vergil Savllle and Sadie Burke, were continued. INVALID SENT TO EUREKA The local health and municipal au-thorities this week located the family of John Carter, who has been em-ployed at the U. S. Mines, and who is critically ill with miners consump-- - - tion. He had been staying at the Bingham Hotel, When his people were located at Eureka the authorities at once took steps to prepare to have him sent home and thus prevented him becoming a charge on the town and county," LATE FALL AND WINTER HINTS I ' By BETTY PAKE. ' Now Is the time to pot bulbs of the "black" calla. Plant one bulb in a seven Inch pot. using good rich soil It re-quires water regularly. When the ground is frosen hard enough to bear a team, haul mulch to the strawberry bed, the newly planted trees and shrubs, the borders and beds ' of roses, hardy perennials, etc. If yon have a bed of horse radish r other perennial you wish to get rid of, dump a load of fresh manure upon v It and leave It there until later in the spring. This is a good way to destroy clumps of poison Ivy. The aspidistra is a plant that will thrive in almost semi-darknes- is in-sect proof, does not require rich soil, and gets along if almost do attention Is paid to It , 1 Early in December dig tip a com-pact lilac, syringa or day lily, in fact almost any of the hardy shrubs or per-ennials, pot or box them, and put la a cool cellar. A month before they are wanted to bloom bring into a warm . room, and give attention as regards, sunlight, water, air and ventilation. They develop fast, and give quick and ample returns for the trouble taken jwUh them. ' Teach Children Thrift ' Thrift ts a very taporttmj element in character. Chose who learn to be economical in ymrth have no difficul-ties wlw-- n they ase responsible for the ; Income necessary t&,malntam a home, l It Is the mau or woman that allows want to dominate and lives beyond the income that has difficulties when the income Is small. Children should be taught economy and thrift early la life. They should be given a chance to earn and a dWinee to use their "arnlngs. This will give thm respon-slbilit- y aud teach them the worth of money. . BINGHAM BOY COMMENDED FOR HIS BRAVERY Vernon Cuymon, a Bingham boy, who Is now doing service at the battle front in France, has been commended for bravery. He enlisted shortly af-ter America entered th war and was at the time a Bingham school boy. He is now a sergeant. The story of , his wor kis as follows: "The marines needed mcnts. Germany was hurling line af-ter line of gray clad soldiers against Bouresches in a desperate attempt to retake the town. The leathernecks were fighting, under every possible advantage. Someone had to get through the flaring wall of gunfire to doliver the call for more men. Ser-geant Vernon M. Uuymon volunteer-ed. Darting through the barrier of machine gun bullets, he delivered the meswage and brought the reinforce-ments. Bouresches remained in Am-erica's hands." New Use for ths Interesting experiments have been conducted at Munich and Vienna in the examination of old portraits with Roentgen rays. One of the curators of the art museum usJ the X-ra- on an old Madonna portrait and discov-ered evidence of a later overpolntlng. (n Vienna Prof. Max Dvorak applied the same test to a picture of the Man-tegn-a school, which had been bftd'y disfigured by luter attempts at recon- - struetlon. The X-ra- y photograph closed perfectly the original coutour of the painting. ' Simplest ef Cements. Condensed milk applied to the edges f pieces of broken china will keep the article as intact as the majority of ce-ments on the market today, says th discoverer He adds that he has mend-ed g'jcers that hove withstood wash-- - Ings In hot water, and tins mended a telescope lens of fairly large size with this unique cement. |