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Show ;v THE PRESS-BULLETI- N 7 gEyjj? iii.,. in WE WILL BUY 500 Am. IDrug Syndicate.. .$ 8.50 700 Thompson Malted Food" .91 1000 Peerless Cool ........ .Offer WE WILL SELL 600 Iron (County Coat .12 10 Pan Motor 8.00 600 Montana Wyoming Oil. .17 1000 Wyoming Con. Oil.... 07 5 Utah Power & Ught Pfd 89.00 ilOO Kolby Wheel ......... .45 600 Utah Wyoming Con. Oil .24 1000 John T. Clark Tire.... - .10 C00 Old Colony Oil J22 RALPH A. BADGER t CO. 400 Utah Savings & Trust Bldg. Wasatch 3330 7 The Bingham & Garfield Railway Company --The Popular Route Finest Equipment. Best Train Service Two Trains Daily Between Bingham and Salt Lake City jj TIME TABLE ; r .. - 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. tn. Leave Bingham: Arrive Salt Lake No. 110 City: . ..... . .8:45 a. m. No. 110 .... .. .10:05 a. m. No. 112 . , .... .4:00 p. m. No. 112 ... .... .5:40 p. m. TICKET OFFICES CARK FORK AND UPPER STATION Take Electric Tram at Carr Fork Station. H. W. STOUTENBOROUGH, A.G.P.A. F. B. SPENCER, Bait Lake City, Utah. Agent, (Bingham, Utah. The Evans Ice Co. ' Wants to sell you your ice this summer. . Family trade is solicited. Delivery is made to your door every morning. If you want good, pure, clean ice call No. 9. CHAMBERLAIN'S COLIC AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY ., Now is the time to buy a bottle of this remedy so as to be prepared in case that any one of your family should have an attack of colic, or diarrhoea during tho summer months. It is worth a hundred times its cost when needed. Advt. To Prevent Belching Make a regular habit of eating slow-ly,, masticate your food thoroughly, and you may have no further trouble. If you should, take one of Chamber Iain's Tablets immediately after sup-per. I ? RANCH BARGAINS I 12 ACRES NEAR BOUNTIFUL, UTAllAll in crop. Full y water right, 5 room brick house, all outbuildings, 4 good y horses, 3 cows, chickens, etc., all implements and tools, har-- , 5 ness, buggies, all in good shape. Including the above, all for R $4,200.00, or without crops and teams, etc.. $2500.00. Half 4 down, balance on terms. V - J 25 ACRES NEAR DRAPER Full water right, 6 room j irick house, all outbuildings and highly improved, good crops. An ideal place for an. active farmer- - All goes for $5,700.00, on terms. -- . . II 55 ACRES NEAR OGDEN All highly improved and in crops which goes with the place, 5 room brick house, teams, hogs, chickens, full water right, all implements, wagons, A buggies, etc.. harness, good outbuildings; 23 acres in beet crop, the balance in hay and grain; the crops will more than half pay for the place this year. An ideal place, a V sure independence for an active worker. All for $7,250.00, with $2,500.00 down, the balance on easy terms. 9 ACRES, WITH GOOD WATER RIGHT All level land, an ideal place for hog ranch, about 5 miles from the city. Well worth $1000.00, but will sell for $750.00. A great bargain. 32 ACRES, SPLENDID IMPROVEMENTS All in best crops of grain and alfalfa, and various other crops, full water right, fine lot of implements and tools, some good teams and cattle, hogs, chickens, in fact everything to step right out with to make a fortune; closeUo good markets. There is also a good house and outbuildings, corrals, cow I sheds and coops and stabling. Crops and everything' in-cluded ' at $250,00 per acre, on terms. ! For Full Particulars See Bingham Realty Company W. Rook, Manager 6CaFork j"0"6 123 ' ' Which? Boy (handing . the Jeweler a $1 watch) Just clenn and regulate this and put In a new crystal, will you? If I had the price I'd buy a nev one. A BIG SURPRISE TO MANY IN BINGHAM People are surprised at the IN-STANT action of simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in ONE SPOONFUL flushes the 0NTIRB bowels tract so completely it relieves --ANY CA19E of sour stjm ach, gas or constipation and prevents appendicitis. The INSTANT, ple:i-a- nt action of Adler-1-k- a surprises both doctors and patients. It removes foul matter which poisoned your stom-ach for months. W. H Woodnng, Druggist. - DOING GOOD i Few medicines have met with more favor or accomplished more good than Chamberlain's Colio and Diarrhoea Remedy. John F. Jantzen, Delmeny, Sask., says of it "I have used Cham-berlain's Colic" and Diarrhoea Reme-dy myself and In my family, and can recommend H as being an exception-ally fine preparation." Advt ; SUMMONS la the Justice's Court, In and for the Tenth Precinct, City of Bingham, County of Salt Lake, State of Utah, Before" Jno. C. Green, Justice of the Peace. . Brunno Perri, plaintiff, vs. Guglielmo Pact, defendant The State of Utah to the Defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear before the above entitled court within ten days after the service of this sum-mons upon you, if served within the county ia which this action is brought otherwise within twenty days after this service, and defend the above en-titled action brought against-yo- to recover the sum of thirty-fiv- e dollars, legal Interest at the rate of 8 per cent from Sept. dst, 1916, and costs of suit; on account pf board and lodging sup-plied by the plaintiff to the defendant, and in case of your failure to do so, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the com-plaint. Given under my hand this 11th day of June, 1918. JNO. C. GREEN, Justice of the Peace. POLES DRIVEHTCT GEMIYTOWORK Hun Commander's Brutal Order --- 7 Issued to Conquered and Helpless People. ' , T Every Abie-Bodie- d Man forced to Leave His Starving Family- - and Labor Under Shocking Cond-itions for the Oppressor. , $ This 1 have teen. I could not v believe It unless I had seen It y .through and through. For sev. eral weeks I lived with It; I ? , X went all about It and back of 1 T It; inside and out of It was 3 shown to me tmtll finally I T came to realize that the Incredl- - - bio vfas true. It Is monstrous, I It le unthinkable, but It exists. It Is the Prussian system, F. C. ? 1 Walcott . i - 'H' F. C. Walcott, a member of the United States food administration, and during the time America was feeding the civilian populations of -- Belgium, - ..,.. Serbia and northern France an asslst-ja- nt of Mr. Hoover in these invaded countries, has pictured in a graphic way the conditions he found among the jpeople it was his duty to help. After describing the terrible condl--" tions in Poland in 1916, the millions that were dying of starvation, the hundreds of thousands of defenseless people that had been ruthlessly cut down by the sword of the German con-queror, he says: ; , In that situation, the German com-- J mander issued a proclamation. Every .able-bodie-d Pole was bidden to Ger--' many to work. If any refused, let no ; other Pole give him to eat, pot so I much as a mouthful, tinder penalty of I Oerman military law, . This ts the choice the German gov"-- j ernment gives to the conquered Pole, I to the husband and father of a starv- - 1 lng family: Leave your family or die r survive aa the case may be. Leave ": your country which Is destroyed, to "jV work In Germany for its further de--V traction. .If you are obstinate we shall see that you surely starve. Staying with his folk, he Is doomed and they are not saved ; the father and husband can do nothing for them, he only adds to their risk and suffering. Leaving them, he will be cut off from ; his family, they may never hear from him again nor he from them. Ger-- f tvi r man workman may be released to fight .against his own land and people. He . ehall be lodged In barracks, behind barbed wire entanglements, under armed guard. He shall sleep on the ' Ktvre ground With a single thin blan-- ' ket. He shall be scantily fed and his ' earnings shall be taken from him to ' pay for his foodL That Is the choice which the Ger--i man government offers to a proud, sensitive, high-strun- g people. Death or slavery. , 1 When a Pole gave me that proclama- - tlon, I was boiling. But I had to re-- ; strain myself. I was practically the. i only foreign civilian in the. country ! and I wanted to get food to the people.; ! That was what I was there for and I must not for any cause Jeopardize the undertaking. I asked Governor Gen-eral von Beseler, "Can this be true?" "Really, 1 cannot say," he replied. J "I have signed so many proclamations; 1 ask General Von Krles." I ' So I asked General von Krles. "Gen-- i eral, .this Is a civilized people. Can this be truer I --Yes," he said, "It Is true" with an , air of adding, Why not? I dared not trust myself to speak ; I turned to go. "Walt," he said. And ; he explained to me how Germany, official Germany, regards the state of " f subject peoples. I It is hard for us to imagine such a j ' condition in America as Mr. Walcott j has described as existing in Hun-rid- - i den Poland, and yet that is Just what j would exist should our boys, and the J - boys of our allies, now fighting in France faU to defeat the soldiers of ! this murder empire. This fair coun--! try of ours would be made into a Ger-- man province; our people would be ! the slaves of the Junkers of Germany, ' subject to the beastly whims of the Ameers of the German army. In no j .. war in which America has ever en--I gaged have the stakes been so grqat as In this present conflict Should we, I by any chance, lose; should the nun, i ,i ' by any chance, win; our liberties, our - ... happiness, everything Americans hold J dear, would be lost " Some very good people have talked and talked and stilt the war Is not won. ; MMMMMMMMMBMSMBM SUMMONS In the Justice's Court, in and for the Tenth Precinct 'City of Bingham, County of Salt ILake, State of Utah, Angello Corosis, Martin Smolcich and Peter Racheff, Plaintiffs, vs. ."..Chris. Kunchlff and Marco (Mladeniff, De-fendant. The State of Utah to the Defendant. You are tiereby summoned to appear before the above entitled court within ten days after the ser-vice of this summons upon you, If served within the county In which this action is brought, otherwise, within twenty days after this serv-ice, and defend the above entitled ac-tion brought against you to recover the sum of two hundred eighty-seve- n dollars and account of rent, goods, Wares and merchandise and money loaned, and In case of your failure to do so, Judgment will . be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint Given under my hand this first day of August, 1&18. ' JOHN! C, GREEN, . Justice of the Peace. WIVESOFSBLDIERS WILL GETLESS PAY Every Enlisted Man Is Duty Bound To Allot $15 A Month To His Wife And Children, " To Which The Government Adds $15. Some 250,000 people will be won-dering next month why their allot-- , nient and allowance checks from the Bureau of War Risk Insurance are reduced In amount, v - The Treasury Department has is-sued several releases on this subject; one of which I attach hereto. This is not particularly new, but It tells the Btory better than any others. The Associated Press carried about a' stickful several weeks ago, but this was hardly adequate to drive the les-son home. ' " - In spite 6f whatever publicity the Treasury Department has been issu-ing, it is hardly possible that the sit-uation Is understood by the public as yet. Although I have had this sub-ject personally in charge for many months, I em myself still quite shaky on some of the legal aspects of It, and am quite confident that It is not yet familiar to everybody. Every enlisted man In the military or naval service is under duty to al-lot $35 a month from his pay to his wife and children. To these compul-sory allotments the government adds family allowances, ranging from $5 a month for a motherless child, and 15 for a wife witlfout children, up to a maximum of $00, The compulsory i allotments are the same for all en- - listed mn, regardless of rank or pay. j In addition to the compulsory al-lotments, the enlisted man may alro make voluntary allotments to his par-- ! ents, grandparents, brothers, sisters, or grandchildren, and If they are de-pendent upon him for support, the government may add certain' month-ly allowances. If the enlisted man Is already mak-ing a compulsory allotment to his ' wife and children, he need allot only $5 additional to his brothers, sisters, parents, grandparents, and grandchil-dren, if he claims a family allowance for them. But it he Is not making a compulsory allotment, he must allot 15 to such .other relatives to obtain a government allowance for them. The Bureau of War Risk Insurance will pay allotments only when they carry with thtm government family allowances, and then only in amounts ' All other allotments will be paid by ' branch of the military or naval' serv--, ice in which the man Is enlisted. The essence of the whole change in dollars and cents Is simply this: Heretofore when an enlisted man allotted more than the required amount the (Bureau of War Risk In-surance Included this excess is . the check which It sent to the relative. Now this is changed. All excess allot-- 1 ments will be paid by the Army, the Navy, the Marine Corps and the Coast Guard directly. , ) Another element which will tend ' to reduce the Bureau of War Risk in-'- . surance checks is this In the past a compulsory allotment made by an enlisted man to his wife and children varied according to his rank and pay. The amount was not fixed. The only limits were a mini-mum of $15 and a maximum of half the man's pay. Between these two poles, the allotment depended upon the man's pay, the law specifying that be had to equal, if possible, the government allowance. This sliding scale arrangement was changed by an amendment to the War Risk In-surance Act effective July 1, 1918. Hereafter, allotments, as stated pre-viously, are the same for all enlisted men regardless of rank or pay. In other words, a sergeant making $48 a month, who under the old sys-tem would have been compelled to allot $24 to his wife and children will We should also remlud people that July allotments are not payable until August that August allotments are not payable until Soptember and so forth. The iBureau of War Risk Insurancd has on the press an explanatory pam-phlet which we will send to the State Councils as soon as it is published. At the same time we will send them a copy of the Insurance Act as amend-ed to date. Without waiting for these we must do now what we can to forestall con-fusion and avert the worry or mis-apprehension likely to foSlow on this purely technical change that Is being made. This is a matter Inseparably linked with the morale of our fighters and the morale of their homes. The information which the State Coun-iei- ls can diffuse will go a long way towards buttressing this moralo. ters a day and that complaints and inquiries about specific cases always delay action because they result in the papers being taken out of the files and losing their regular position. We should tell people to wait until the end of the month before writing to anybody. If they have inquiries regarding excess allotments, they should consult the Home Service Sec-tions of the American Red Cross. These sections, because of their inti-mate contact with Soldiers and Sail-ors families, have already been re-ceiving from their Washington bead-quarter- s complete and detailed In-structions as to these changes in law and governmental procedure, with ex-plicit suggestions as to the manner of explaining them to the relatives of enllstsd men. If any Individual cases need attention at Washington they will be referred to the Red Cross to the Quartermasters General of the rmy, the Navy Allotment office, the Paymaster of Marine Corps, or the Captain Commandant of the Coast Guard, (as the case may be) all in Wnsbington, T. C. now be required to allot only $15, thus lopping $9 off the check which the IBureau of War Risk Insurance will send to the sergeant's family. If the sergeant wants to continue to al-lot $24, the Bureau of War Risk In-surance will pay the $15 and the ex-cess of $9 will be paid by the War Department through the Quartermas-ter General. . The result of this new system will be to speed up the delivery of checks to dependent relatives, becauee it will reduce the amount of mathematics re-quired to make awards. The Important thing to tell tho public is that although in some cases the first check tnay be smaller than usual, there will probably be another che!" coming from a different depart-ment to make up the balance. The relatives should be urged to write to the enlisted man to find out how much he is allotting, and how much of this is paid through the Bureau of War Risk Insurance, and how much by his own service department We must also emphasize the fact that the IBureau of War Risk Insur-ance Is overloaded with correspond-ence, receiving upwards of 20.000 let-- TO IMPROVE YOUR DIGESTION "For years my digestion was so poor that I could onty eat the light-est foods. I tried everything that I heard of to get relief, but not until about a year ago when I saw Cham-berlain's Tablets advertised and ' got a bottle of them did I find the right treatment Since taking them my digestion is fine." Mrs, Blanche powers, Indiana, Pa. ' Rafts In Lifeboats. Rafts hinged to the sides of a life-boat and which spresd out when it Is afloat to give additional buoyancy form a recently Invented device for safety at eea. : : : - - i CURE FOR DYSENTERY "While I was in Ashland, Kansas, a gentleman overheard nr.e speaking of Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy," writes William Whltelaw, of Des Moines, Iowa. "He told me in detail of what it had done for hfs family, but more especially his daugh-ter who was lying at the point of death with a violent attack of dysen-tery and had been given up by the family physician. Some of his neigh-bors advised him to give Chamber-lain's Colio and Diarrhoea Remedy, which he did and fully believes that by doing so saved the life of his child. He stated that he had also used this remedy himself with equal-ly gratifying results," Wanted. Butter Treated. Mary got up one morning and found that she could not spread the butter on her cracker because It was too hard. Going to her cousin, Lillle, she said : "Here, Lillle, put this In the kven ani make It easy." NOTICE TO WATER USERS Notice Is hereby given that all water users are cautioned, warned and admonished against sprinkling their lawns and yards before 8 o'clock in the evening, and then for not more than thirty minutes, and all persons having defective taps or toilets which permit of leakage or wastes are noti-fied that the same must be repaired and placed in perfect condition Im-mediately or such offending persons will be disconnected. The available fupply of good, pure water Is ample providing the people exerciiie proper care and discontinue wastage. - TOWN OF BINGHAM, ; William Robbins, Watermaster. . SUMMONS . In the Justice's Court In and for the Tenth precinct, City of Bingham. County of Salt Lake, State of Utah, Bart Allais doing business as the Pacific Market vs. Dan Stetich and Stana Stetich, defendants. The State of Utah to the defendant. You are hereby summoned "to appear be-fore the abovo entitled court within ten days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought, otherwise, within twenty days after this service, and defend the abovo entitled action brought against you to recover $138.55 and le-gal interest upon three causes of ac-tion alleged to be due upon three sep-arate accounts for goods, wares and merchandise. The accounts of the se-cond and third cause being assigned to thta plaintiff before the commence-ment of this cause of action, and in case of your failure to do so, Judg-ment will be rendered against you ac-cording to the domand of the com-plaint. Given under my hand this 8th day of August, 1918. " JOHN C. GREEN, "' Justice of the Peace. First publication, August 9. 1918. Reasonable Conclusion. "Although the footpad who robbed me of my watch and money last night appeared to me to be unusually tall, he offered In extenuotlon of the out-rage the excuse that he was exceed-ingly short" commented Professor Pate. "The deduction 1 draw from the Incident Is that In addition to being dishonest, he was also untruthful" Kansas City Star. - , Word From Bre'r Williams, bar's land 'nuff ter feed de wort', but don't miss de feet dat It needs coaxin. After you git in a g jod workln' Xumor, you got ter make de land feel Jiod. nit's de only way ter have a happy time all roun'. Psaltery Like Modern Guitar, The psaltery wiw a stringed musical Instrument to accompany the voice. In the prayer book version of the Psalms the Hebrew word is glveri bs "lute." This instrument resembles th ruitar, but was larger with a convex back, resembling a gourd, ' ' work on Sunday tf that Sunday work - Is necessary to produce food crops to "" help whip Germany. . WILL "USE NOTHING GERMAN" ' Club Organized for the Purpose of Boycotting Products of Hun j ; ' Manufacture. , ' Chicago. nigh art and low art, j music and literature and dolls that talk and walk are to be tnboo forever , and forever to members of a new club I ar 1,'re when thoy benr tne "MaJ() a i Germany" stamp or flavor. , i i.Tjse Nothing German" Is the name I of the club. And the women who have formed It sweur that they mean what ! they Miy, and that after the war they I Intend that the kaiser does not re-- I cupernte from the Ills he has brought 1 upon himself through their aid. j The club expects to spread Us mes-- I siige countrywide, and thus to Induce j women throughout the United States f to buck them up in ignoring every- - ' thing Gennun. ' " Orawa for FlStlSt . - 00 yOU KHOW WHY Time Is. So totals Ti Some Cms? L .Ji' I ' 7 . |