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Show - ' ' i ,i x ., , . 1 jlj- - ;WH!TE SHOE OEJESSIIIG; 2 KEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT . THE BIG VALUE PACKAGES S LIQUID AND CAKE Alo Fastetand Liquid for Black, Tan, Ox-Blo- and Dark s Brown Shoes '. X THB P. F. DALLEY CORPORATIONS LTD.. BUTTALO, N. T. ssss7 1 1 1 1 u 1 1 n vxX ; iffiSTfflaWte f UV; - Of U Jul JForinftirtftTid Children. jflsW Genuine Castbtia . i ,t! Bears-th- e - Jjhy ISSignatiiie Jrilr jChccrfulncssandReCoirtJK , CVAlri 1 Skotnahcotk v . oi tLMYri IIIIII.JtallSlttf . i K' '''' Vr, M, YTjHr-.'J- ..l Senna J" .', 1 V ' '1 a , t 1A "; '' ' 43g 1 . 036 iSLis yr - For Over . Exact Copy of .Wrapper. ' TMI otTu oemn, " o errr. Back of Every ' i55V Member Barlk: $2,200,000,000 In PS f(eyulSi Gold Reserve ' g Jt'il jjm- - j W lNsystemx w I m bur Share in thisVast Reserve Cry i I $2,200,000,000 I Co HpHIS vast Gold Reserve ia only one of our Y7 1L 1 advantages as a Member Bank of the Fed AJj ; . era! Reserve System. - . . . . . , jTj And when you come to us for your banking 3 rnfh Bec8 4'8 advantage is yours also. ' ' Banking safety U the result of thiSi mem- - : Bingham State, Bank I ' - ' "'. 'i X;.h"V- I .... 1 iE. j g 4tWoom5 ;- -; rireproor w I ;;( j ra $2 0 day and up g J. H. WATERS I g Managing Director H Pocket Billiards, Great. Variety of Soft v.' Drinks, Cigars, Tobaccos g At The Oxford j !J First class barber shop and steam heated g rooms in building 4 ,S , . .... ... . . - , ' 1 f " ! ""SLANDER ; C ScMeverywW by fornix I' ' ' Cftnb jor illustrated loJdei Better and more pteastrig than, any rpild Havana cigar. l 'your dealer can't supply you wife at psSi I. LEWIS CIGAR MFG. CO. NewarlcKa1 jjkyovtr dealer or year Svonifeie ' ' ' 11 1 W...hen Is a Wife . 1. Not a Wife? v". 1 r ' V Do you realize that In certain States the marriages of divorced persons are not recognized? .Yon canu . Imagine what dreadful complications that can lead to. A perfectly respectable couple in Arizona may be '' liable to arrest in case they move to New Jersey. And it all comes from the muddled condition of our differ-- ;, ' " ing divorce laws. Read Ida Clyde Clarke's entertain- - ' lng article on this subject on page 20 of ;i Pictorial Review for September m mm nmwii inima ip nii aiitiiii am mwm imijus J tVpWnBMsBBiWWl lpMMWMlsst LOSE'YOVR HEADACHEQUICH s r' USE-THE-LIQUID REMEDYYpi (EASY TO TAKE-SPEED- ; ' U &OD FOR GftlPPE AND BACKACHES TOO - 10 AO DOPE -- no ACETANILID. . Bo1tl5 l'M Iff "' ' i - - --- t IARROW COLLARS ... '. ' . LAUNDERED OR SOFT -- I , ITI THE BEST THAT YOU liifMirilf I'M" Jf ' ' .' 1 ' Clutttfeabady d' Co.. Int., Troit, K. T. '.TM '. .' '.'''.1 ''.',.( -- !, 11 ( UTAHMEMS Grain and bay which lad been cut near Price, was damaged by a severe rain storm last week. I Frank Germann, a miner, was killed In the Peerless Coal company mine, near Helper, by a falling rock. Inheritance taxes so far received by. the state of Utah during August have reached a total of more than $6000. Taxes paid on the capital stock of Utah corporations during July and to August 20, amount to fully $300,000. While playing near an old reservoir at Tooele, Irene Solomon, 6, daugh-ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Solomon, was drowned. Effort is being made to unite the Mosida and Elberta projects in Utah county, by which 30,000 acres of land may be brought under Irrigation. Government supplies to the extent of more than $100,000 are beginning to arrive for the equipment of Salt Lake's landing field for the air mail service. An educational drive now under way in Hinckley to secure $20,000 for the erection of buildings sufficient . to house 300 students Is meeting with suc-cess. Utah cold storage warehouses have much smaller supplies of eggs, butter cheese, fresh and cured meats in cold storage at present tlnfh they had a year ago. Emery county has 2316 children of school age, according ' to the census returns made to the superintendent. of public instruction. The boys number 1219 and the girls 1097. Populations of incorporated places in Summit county, Utah, as announced last week, are as follows : Coalville, 771; a loss of 205 since 1910 add Park City, 3,393, a loss of 46. Wasatch county school district ls year 6hows a total of exactly 1500 pupils of school age, as reported to the state superintendent of public Instruction. This . was divided, 725 boys and 775 girls. ' More than twenty contractors in the western states have submitted inqui-ries at the office of the Ogden arsenal, seeking information regarding the sixty buildings which the government will build at Sunset The Brigham City Canning company completed the preserving of the pie-cher-crop of the community last week. Three thousand cases of this fruit have been preserved and each case holds six gallons. The Utah public health association will begin September 1 the publica-tion of a health bulletin designed to deal with publc health questions of particular interest to Utahns and to give Utah news on public health lines. Representatives from sixteen cattle ' associations of Wasatch, Juab and Utah counties met at Provo last we,7i and registered a protest against the proposed closing of forest reserves to cattle up to May 10, beginning next year.3 ' Of ' 201 , arrests made by the Salt Lake police department during the last ten days' for violation of traffic ordi-nances, 100, , or over one-hal- f, . have been icharges of violation of section 9, which prohibits faulty lights on an au-tomobile. ' Salt, Lake stands an ' excellent chance of obtaining the international convention of Klwanls clubs In 1923 as a result, of the splendid hospitality shown delegates who passed through the city to and from the annual con-vention at Portland. Thdmas Redmond, secretary of the livestock commission and of the Utah Horsegrowers and Cattlegrowers as-sociation, has been asked by the Cal-ifornia Cattlemen's association regard-ing holding a convention at Salt Lake October 28, 29 and 30. The Joint cost of operation of the hureau of biological survey, United States department of agriculture, and of the Utah state livestock board, dur-ing the year ended June 30, 1920, was $117,315.12. Of this amount, the gov-ernment paid $41,707.33. The quality of tomatoes in Weber county is better this year than any time heretofore, due to the fact that the farmers are with the farm bureau and canning company ex-perts have found a tomato of superior quality which can be harvested before the first killing frost. If the 25 per cent Increase in freight rates authorized by the Interstate com-merce commission is allowed to be-come effective in Utah It will have a very serious effect on the mining In-dustry of the state, the public utilities commission was told by some of the most prominent of the active mine op-erators. While sitting in an automobile at Blnghnm, Mrs. Julia E. Esgar, 72 years of age, was the victim of a peculiar accident when the car broke loose from Its moorings and coasted down a hill, turned turtle and threw Mrs. Es-gar out with such violence, mat a se-vere scalp wound and internal Injuries resulted. J. H. Borst has been extradited from Colorado to face an embezzlement charge. Borst Is alleged to have ap-propriated to his own use certain au-tomobile fixtures of which he had cus-tody as express agent at Bj station in the south end of Salt Lake, county. University of Utah's football team this year Inaugurated the plan of mak-ing Its own schedule, in the hope that Utah this year, or In the years to come, will meet all western university teams, In the past, Utah has playet) only mem-oi- s of the.ltocky Mountain confer- - " Ray Consolidated Copper company-report-for ' quarter- ended June 30, 1920, a gross profit after: charges s of . $387,255, - equivalent to 24 cents . a share. " ; ' ' , . 'i ( 'c Nevada Consolidated Copper com-pany for quarter ended June 30, 1920, shows total Income after depreciation charges of $384,000, .'equivalent to 19 cents a share, says the Boston News ' " Bureau. ';.'.' ' ',' ' Additions were made lost week to the force employed at. the property of the Tintic Paymaster Mines company,:, operating in the North Tintic district, and work Is .being pushed as rapidly as ' '' " ' possible, 'j. The adit of the American Consoli-dated Mines company, whose property Is situated la the American Fork can-yon district, has reached its objective," the Bog fissure, ' approximately 1900 feet from the mouth of the tunnek At the Eureka-Croesu- s 100 tons of ore of the same high value as the ship-ments of recent weeks are now In the bins at the Catlin shaft, and will be sent to Salt Lake as soon as railway cars can be secured at Eureka, Nev. The ..Eureka-Nevad- a Mining com-pany's crosscuttlng adit is now in 550 feet and is in broken lime. It will have about 100 feet further to run before it is expected to strike the ore body encountered in the upper tun-nel. High freight rates, which will be put Into effect very soon, will add to the burdens which are being carried by the mining industry of Tintic, but all of the operators are optimistic and hope to keep things moving in the usual fashion. Stockholders of the Godiva Mining company met last week and after "con- - sidering a proposition for the sale or the entire holdings of the corporation, accepted it. As it is understood, the proposition is more in the nature of a reorganization than a complete sale. Two cars , of ore recently shipped from the Great Valley mine at Hamil-ton, Nevada, to Utah smelters by Ed. Wilson and Ole Johnson; who own ,tbe property, "returned $4,849.80, as ls shown by the smelting report." The cars contained about forty tons each. The advance in the price of silver to .$1.02 per ounce for both the fore-ign and the domestic product, as well as the improvement in the price of lead during the past two weeks, Is of considerable significance to the min-ing industry of the Intermountain country. . A report from Santa Maria, Cal., states that' a party of officials from the Office of the United States Pro-ducers' Refining company, shale oil developers, have left there for ft six ..months' trip u northern Texas, where they will make locations for leases and the building of a $1,000,000 shale oil plant. . Within the next day or two the first carload of concentrates from the new plant of the Grlggs-Huis- h Leasing com-pany, at Eureka, Utah, will be placed on the market and assays which have been made from day to day show that notwithstanding the low grade ore treated, the concentrates are of excel-lent grade. Since the government began buying silver In June under the provisions of the PIttinan at at a price of approx-imately $1 per ounce, about ,9,000,000 ounces of silver have been purchased for the purpose of coining dollars to replace the 200,000,000 silver dollars melted and sold to Great Britain dur-ing the war. Some Idea of the income accruing from the development of oil lands within the state of Wyoming, may be had when it is known that more than $25,000 a month is now flowing into the permanent school funds of the state of Wyoming from oil royalties, according to reports from the state capital at Cheyenne. That the treasury can avail Itself of the Pittman act to prevent a runaway movement in silver has been admitted by Director of the Mint Baker, says the Boston News Bureau. He Is ol opinion that the recent decline, due to a lull In buying from the far east, is only temporary, and that the metal will again advance. ' The extreme dullnes prevailing In the copper Industry since the buying movement which ended last March was Bharply reflected, says the Boston News Bureau, In the reports of the Hayden porphyries Utah, Chi-n- Ray and Nevada Consolldated-f- or the second quarter of 1020. Except-ing Chlnb, they all had to dip Into sur-plus to meet dividend requirements. At Buby Hill the work of putting the bl pumps Into successful opera-tl- u In the Locan shaft has been prog-ressing favorably during the week, says a Eureka, Nev. dispatch, and al-though a number of changes and alter-ations have, been found necessary, Master Mechanic Hutchison stated that he' believed they would soon be ready to commence steady pumping. , Probably the most valuable oil well in the United States is that of the Texas company at " West Columbia, fifty-fiv- e miles southwest of Houston, its output has been worth more money In a given time than any other well In the history of the petroleum Industry. Reports covering operations of the Rochester Silver corporation for the first half of the yeur show an excess of current ussets over , nubilities omnuntlnt to $209,991.19, nearly all of which is in the, form of cash In bans, bullion on hand, or, In transit and in supplies on hand. , j Short atry About RfeMao. ghe"AC 1 the Joint product of t wets and plants ;and ccnes from 'fl-4- The Uc insects m about 1 f r inch long, a bright rl In color. 0y ick the Juices f plants, di-gest thcta and exdde the in the form f resin, which soon encases the whole insect When the young insects bare swi.nnd out, the resin 1 scraped from the branches, ground, washed, mixed with colophony and orplment, eoked lowy ttnd drawn oul lnt0 Ui" Original Harmony. A traveler-o- a walking tonr In one f the northern counties came across a solitary old man 'who, seated In the doorway of his cottage,' was fiddling away quite regardless of such trifling conventionalities as tlra and tune. The traveler listened a whHe In amuse-ment and then Inquired; casually: "When do yon tune yonr violin r The reply came with refreshing Ingenuous-ness : "I don't tune It It don't sound right If I do." |