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Show . I ' j ' THE PftRSS-BULUCT- Pi ' x RESOLUTIONSOF CONDOLENCE Whereas, The Angel of Death has visited our Review and taken from us a beloved sister, Millie McKenzIe, Resolved, That we, the members of Highland Review No. 17, W. B. A. O. T. M., do hereby tender to the family of our deceased sister - our sincere sympathy in this our common loss; and, Resolved, That in token of our sor-row and sympathy our charter be draped in mourning for a period of thirty days; and, Resolved, That these resolutions be spread upon the records of our Re-view, and a copy sent to the bereaved family. Hers was a beautiful life of service and loving kindness and helpfulness for all with whom she became asso-ciated. In her dear memory let us strive to say the things that she would say and do the things that she would do, and so go oh with the beautiful work she left unfinished when called' to her reward. Peace to her soul. Amen. MRS. VINA BALL, Coll. MRS. ANNA TREGAKIS, R. K. MRS. MILLIE JONES, Chaplain. Highland No. 17, W. B. A. O. T. M. CURRY OF UINTAH STATE BANK WOULD BE STATE TREASURER A Democratlo leader returning re-cently from the Uintah basin brings word that L. W. Curry, state repre-sentative from Uintah county, is being urged by his friends to enter the con-test for the nomination as state treas-urer at the coming state convention of the party. Since the withdrawal from the po-litical field of Harden Bennion, secre tary of state, the Democrats of the basin are understood to have been seeking one of their strong men to represent the district on the state ticket Mr. Curry is now serving his second term as a member of the lower house of the state legislature. He is an old resident of the Uintah basin and has played an active part in the develop-ment of that section of the state. For many years iMr.. Curry has been cashier of the Uintah State bank of Vernal. His acquaintance includes many throughout the state. Joseph Ririe, present state auditor, has already made official announcement of . his candidacy for state treasurer and will oppose Mr. Curry at the state conven-tion should the latter be prevailed upon to enter the race. HARDLY KIIEW HER! AT FIRSJ SIGHT Mrs. Peck's Friends Are Astonished By Her Wonderful .. Improvement "I have gained some eight or ten pounds since I commenced taking Tan-la- c and feel perfectly splendid in every way," said Miss Annie Peck, living at 1421 Charlotte St., Kansas City, Mo. "I just can't thing of enough good things to say about Tanlac," she continued. "My troubles began about a year ago with norvous indigestion and my stomach finally got into such had con-dition that everything I ate disagreed with me. After every meal I would be perfectly miserable from gas form-ing, and this gas would press up against my lungs and heart until I could hardly get my breath. I also suffered from severe headaches and became so nervous I rarely ever got a good night's sleep. Pmaiiy I became so weak and run down that I had to give up trying to do any work at all. "My brother had gotten fine resulta from taking Tanlae so I began taking it, too, ar.d rigit from the first I could just feel my strength coming back. I continued to improve and now am as well and hearty as any one could wish to be and never have a sign of stomach trouble or nervousness any more. I am looking so much better that my friends who haven't seen me since I began taking Tanlac hardly know me at first sight, and I am feel-ing so perfectly fine 1 just want to tell everybody about Tanlac." Tanlac is sold in Bingham by W. H' Woodring, and by the leading druggist in every city. (Adv.) Warn WfUl For Infants and Children. ; wiMHi Mothers Know That lMilii Genuine Castoria fS1 Bears, the 'yV IlilThercbprupwf Signature if,W nor a it gSSaoTNAHCOTie 01 AW iP U0. y Y ConstipationandDiarry U M U O U . p-1r,- J For Over j ilhgifcJ : Thirty Years Exact Copy of "Wrapper. thi hto comnt, hcw yok citt, 1 J Interest m v Percent Savings - , JL. Interest I pyM I Annually y Accounts ' j YOUR HONEY WILL WORK FOR YOU A Liberty Bell Bank will help you save at home ; $1 deposit-- ed here at 4 per cent interest, cdmpounded semi-annuall- y, secures one for you ' You can't afford to put it off start your account today; $1.00 is all you need. 'ii.ii.iMl $1.00 gets the bank starts the account draws interest and is refunded when the bank is returned. f SEE THEM IN OUR WINDOW I CllBMBfllEUl I R. G. BEE i Maker of Good Clothes for Men f Woodring Building The Bingham & Garfield Railway Company The Popular Route Finest Equipment. " Best Train Service Two Trains Daily Between Bingham and Salt Lake City ' TIME TABLE j Effective February 24, 1918 j 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 Salt 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. STOUTENBORQUG H, A.O.IP.A. F. B. 8PBNCBR, Salt Lake City, Utah. Agent, Bingham, Utah. DON'T THROW I awa7 the opportunity to have jjjLn 1 fjg grade, well screened coal. It TV zZZZ0Wjhl '8 a Sreat satisfaction to w vy YhJ''""i1 .juja know that you have your Tlm'wit l winter's supply safe in, your I 'ft ill house before cold weather t if fijp Jf conies and now is the time 7 . t t0 lt' before prices go up, g:rAVvj! by ordering from us. CniZENS COAL CO. Bingham, Utah niiiniiumiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui B" Pocket Billiards, Great Variety of Soft Drinks, Cigars, Tobcccos At The Oxford I BE I rooms in building gg I warn I 0 400 Rooms - Fireproof 0 S g Every Room with Bath g 1 $2 o day and up g I , J.H. WATERS I jjj Managing Director j 4 Will to Do Is Imperative. Thoughts of doubt and fear never accomplished anything, and never can. They always lead to failure. Purpose, energy, power to do and all strong thoughts cease when doubt and fear creep in. The will to do springs from the knowledge that we can do. Allen. UTAH STATE NEWS For the first time in two years, . a county fair will be held in Vernal. John Widdoup, aged 42, of Ogden, was killed in a runaway accident at Treiuonton. The cattle range is good, and stock are doing well In the southern part of Tooele county.' Work has been resumed on the hard-surfacin- g of the state road between Brigham City and Willard. A heavy rain, accompanied by hall, which visited Vernal, did considerable damage to the crops of the basin. Wilma Reeder, aged 14, of Brigham City, ran a knife blade into her eye-ball and may lose the sight of the eye. The Boy Scouts of the four wards of Brigham City are enjoying a week's vacation in the hills sixteen miles from the city, Walter Laricy, aged 21, of Brigham City, was fatally Injured in an automo-bile collision one mile north of the Utah Hot Springs. The Logan tabernacle choir is be-ing reorganized and present indica-tions point to the best choir ever or-ganized in the city. , ' The Uintah Telephone company pe-titioned for a raise in its rental rates at a hearing before the public utilities commission last week. Miss Florence Johnson, 30 years of age, of Payson, was injured when an automobile struck a motorcycle driven by Hilmar Larson, near Salt Lake. Bob Officer, Sam Neel and F. M. Garnett, all of Salt Lake, took the titles In the Utah state tennis tour-ney by winning out, in the finals at Logan. v The people of Garfield are vigorous-ly opposing the plan of the Salt Lake Route to eliminate the service of two trains daily between Salt Lake and Garfield. The state school offices have been advised from Roosevelt that arrange-ments have been made to keep open the high school of the district the com-ing winter. Joseph W. Smith, 52 years of age, an employee of the Salt Lake chemi-cal plant at Burmester, six miles north of Grantsvllle, was killed in a fall from t settling tank. The state superintendent of public Instruction announces that the Mur-ray city school district Is the first to submit a report of school district cen-sus returns for 1920. Sadie Whitehead, aged IT, who es-caped from the Ogden Industrial school by Jumping from a second-stor- y win-dow, is being sought by the police. Her home is In Tooele.- - Announcement is made that James W. Funk of Richmond, president of the state senate, has resigned as federal fair price commissioner of Utah. Isaac Blair Evans is to have charge of the office. ' Many thousands of acres of wheat, oats, barley and corn owned by home-steaders In the Uintah Indian reserva-tion are burning up for want of water, according to complaints made by white settlers on the reservation. The secretary of the Harvard club of Utah announces that the annual award of a Harvard scholarship val-ued at $300 will be made within the next few weeks and that Utah young men desiring to enter Harvard are privileged to make applications for the scholarship. W. H. Cahill, who recently won a wager of a sack of sugar by carrying the d bag a mile and a half in the heart of Ogden, will attempt to break his record on August 14 by car rying a sack of sugar from the mouth of Ogden canyon to the Reed hotel, about three miles. The state board of land commission-ers adjourned without taking any ac-tion with reference to the proposed de-mand, announced some months ago, to be made on the Saltalr Beach com-pany for rental of the portion of the lake bed of Great Salt luke on which the pavilion stands. At a meeting between the board of regents of the University of Utah, the state board of examiners and the state land board, it was decided that the land board should advance $150,000 to the university for the construction of stables and buildings to house the equipment of the field artillery battery organized at the slate school. In reply to an Inquiry from Joseph Rlrie, state auditor, with reference to the payments to be made by the state road commission for the construction of a power line between St. George and Cedar City, Dan B. Shields, attorney general, has rendered a written opin-018.7- 5 should be paid by the state. The injunction case brought by the Deseret Irrigation company and other owners In the Sevier bridge reservoir against the state engineer, George F. McGonagle, and L. McBride, water commissioner for the lower Sevier river, was settled out of court at Fill-- , more last week. Death of three horses belonging to Albert Green of West Ogden has been traced by the state livestock inspec-tor to infectious anemia, otherwise known as "swnmp fever," believed to have been caused by turning the ani-mals onto infected pasture. Lewis Sorensen was killed by light-ning on his farm at Bothwell. Mr. Sor-ensen, his son and a hired man were operntlng a combined har-vester In the wheat field, and an elec-tric storm came up, the party taking shelter under a tree, which was struck by lightning. SHALE EXPERT GATHERS MUCH DATA President Alderson of Colorado Re-turns From Investigation Trip in Europe. President Alderson of the Colorado School of Mines has returned to New York after investigation of oil shale industry in Scotland and England, says the Boston News Bureau. The fundamental fact disclosed is that the retort used In the Scottish shale oil Industry is not suitable for the rich oil shales of the United States. Of fourteen types of retorts used in Eng-lish shale refineries possibly one might be suitable for handling Ameri-can shale. '.. Another development is that the English shale has an - excess of sul-phur, which must be eliminated be-fore it can be commercially handled. There are sufficient deposits in Eng-land to last centuries, but the excess of sulphur is a serious obstacle. Scottish shale yields about twenty barrels to the ton, about half the yield from American shale. Despite this in ferior quality and the fact that wages are high for mining shale, the men receiving 17 shillings and six pence a day, and that mining is conducted by hand, there is a net profit of about 50 cents a ton on Scottish shale. Political and economic importance of oil is paramount in England, and energetic efforts are being made to develop the empire's resources. Anglo-Persia- n Oil company, in which the government has a two-third- s interest, is building a large refinery at Swansea: Wales, to operate on crude from Per-sian fields. The Anglo-Persia- n has taken over the Scottish shale oil re-fineries. It has arranged to give those plants a supply of liquid crude to augment their shale supplies. This has effect of giving a greater degree of stability to the shale ' Industry. Dr. Alderson anticipates extensive development of oil shale beds of Colo-rado, Wyoming and Utah, where rich ness of the shale would allow of a profitable return. At present costs crude oil can be produced from Bhale at $1.85 a barrel in Colorado and Utah, where there are 5,500 square miles of oil shale, which with a yield of one barrel of oil to one tone of shale would produce a practi-cally unlimited supply of oil. One ten-fo-seam of shale, yielding one barrel to the "ton, would give 15,488,000 bar-rels to the square mile. The 5,500 square miles of oil shale in Colorado and Utah at that rate would produce 255,000,000,000 barrels. Production of petroleum from wells in this country to date has been obtained from 4,109 square miles, with estimated yield of 2,280,000 barrels of oil to the square mile. Amphibious Crayfish. The crayfish usually lives an aquatic life. Some of those found In Australia, however, have forsaken the water and excavate burrows. The tunnel lead-ing to the heart of the burrows is free from water, but it Is always present in the chambers at the end where the crayfish lives. army during the time of war. Students are furnished with army equipment and Juniors and seniors are paid. The work at th university is elective, car-ries college credit and leads to a sec-ond lieutenant's commission in the reserve corps. Plans for next year have been re-ceived and will be put into effect with the opening of the fall term, September 27. henry oddie repre-sents utah at cam Henry W. Oddie, of Bingham, was one of the University of Utah R. O. T. C. unit which represented the state institution at the recent encampment held at Camp Knox, Ky. According to Major Randol, in charge of- - this work at the university, the Utah group was not surpassed by any other col-lege and second honor In the entire camp went to a Utah student. For the six weeks of the camp the men lived under military discipline and were Instructed In the various phases of field artillery work, they were free to visit points of interest near the camp over the week-end- Expenses of the encampment and transportation were provided by the government. Every R. O. T. C. stu-dent must attend one such encamp-ment during the four years of his course. The object of this reserve officers training corps is to train men that they may serve as officers In the Collies Best 8heep Doge. The department of agriculture says that the Scotch collies are the favorlta sheep dogs of America. Their tireless watching even at night, their barking at the approach of any prowler, and , their Instinct for keeping the flock to-gether are of great value. The stray dog Is one of the sheeps' worst ene-mies. Long and Short Reigns. The longest reign In British history Is that of Queen Victoria, which be-gan on June 20, 1837, and ended with her death on January 22, 100163 years, 7 months and 2 days. The shortest is that of Richard III, who begun to reign on June 20, 1483. and two months and seventeen days later was slain in battle with Henry Tudor, earl of Richmond, who reigned as Henry VIL ' "8hun-Plkes.- " Not all dictionaries contain the word "shun-plke,- " but It was In com-mon use In this country a century ago and throw an amusing light on the character of some of our thrifty an- -' cestors.- - A "shun-plke- " was n short byroad that left a turnpike on one side of a tollgate and Joined It again 00 the other. Youth' Companion. - When the Storm Breaks. Our observation Is that a woman con get very tired of a husband who thinks his station In life demands more clothes than hers does. Dallas News. |