OCR Text |
Show " .'"' '. ' ' ' .'" '. THE PRESS-BULLETI-CASTOR IA For Iafants and Childrea In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears ig nature of Obtained througn the old established t J SWIFT 4. OO." bpb boiriff quicltly t I boujrht by Manufastuiviru. ' Send a model or sketches and description ' ' ot your invention lor FKiiB SEARCH and report on patentability. We tret pat-- enta or no fee. Writ tor our free book I , of 300 needed inventions. D. SWIFT & CO. Patent Lawyers. -- Estab. 1839. i t307Sevtnth St., Washington, p. C.J jxjj I, fijawf A vimt to Salt Lake City 1 is not complete unletm I you have a S Big Swim AT THE "SARI" 52 Krai Brwawaj Two big natural hot aulphur watar pools. Lady and Can tlsrnen attendants lilll l MATISM VANISHES I TURKISH $1 BATD AND II E I D JL J VS J) 1 An irioo Prospect I 8 The Stock of the 1 (Golici Emminnia MMniiiC0 1 8 For the First Time g Is Now Being Offered to the Public fj 2 The company has thirty claims, located in the famous Dugway District, Tooele coun- - H Utah, comprising approximately 600 acres. Eminent engineers, including R. O. Sty, of Salt Lake City, have passed on the company and are enthusiastic over the show- - j r ing thus far made. VA YA George F. Busch, who was connected for over ten years in the successful operation S3 u of the Tintic Standard (a mine that has produced and is producing thousands of dollars 29 H monthly in dividends), is president of the Golden Emma Mining Company and believes im- - fft U plicitly jn its great future. The success of the Tintic Standard is in great measure due to tji Ta Mr. Busch's foresight and judgment. A M The properties of the Golden Emma are situated in the center of a high-grad- e, gold- - ui silver mineralized area, carrying both lead and copper values. The claims are located be- - M . tween the famous Buckhorn and Silver Bell properties, both of which have produced high-- Ul 3 grade ores. ffj Traversing the property are three main fissures and numerous cross fissures inter- - fj sect these ledges at various points. The outcrops of these fissures are very silicious and as show a high mineralization. They are undoubtedly a continuation of the fissure system Kl w. of the Yellow Jacket property, which has been a producer of high-grad- e lead carbonate S k ores-- VA 9 Surface assays from the company's properties have run over $100.00 a ton in gold, A 1 silver and lead. , fl s3 A smelter is about to be erected to take care of the ores of the Dugway Mining dis-- Strict. This will eliminate the expense of making shipments to the Salt Lake smelter3 nj will enable the company to obtain a much higher net returns on their ores. VA Public interest in mining has been greatly stimulated by government needs and the a stock of a well-manag- ed mining company in a proven district cannot be exceeded as a M . speculative investment. The Dugway District has been proven and the development has Ul fi clearly indicated that the high mineralization that is found increases as depth is attained. Di fl The capitalization of the Golden Emma is 1,000,000 shares. There are 656,991 in jj H the treasury to be used entirely for development purposes under the management of George F. Busch. That this management will be practical and efficient, everyone in Salt M k Lake City and other parts of the country who has .witnessed the success of the Tintic IM Standard knows and realizes. Mr. Busch has made many careful, exhaustive and com-- wi prehensive examinations of the various claims comprising the groups owned by the 5fl 8U Golden Emma Company. He has assured himself of its wonderful prospective value and Bl has recommended it highly to his friends. . Ul f R. O. Dobbs, one of the best engineers of Salt Lake City, has passed judgment on the fl properties and declares that the conditions are extremely favorable for making this prop- - VA S erty a big producer. The stock of the Golden Emma Mining Company at anything less jA than 25 cents a share offers wonderful opportunities to the prospective investor. wi u . The stock is listed on the Salt Lake Mining and Stock Exchange. M S Place your order immediately with your broker for as much of Golden Emma stock S3 as you can afford to buy. Tintic Standard, under the of . Mr. Busch, has y gone from a few cents to $1.50 at the close of the market yesterday. The stock of the Hi B Golden Emma has as great potential possibilities as that of the Tintic Standard had at VA the same stage of. development. Get in now while the stock is only a few cents a share. 8 As soon as it is listed it is bound to go higher. M Full particulars regarding this offering will be sent on request. ul I The Golden Emma Mining Co. l 426 Vermont Bldg. g Wasa,ck 2922 1 Salt Lake City Fill out the coupon and get the information. After securing full knowledge of the n B plans and purposes of the company, buy as much Golden Emma as you can afford. The fl stock is going up. See your broker and ask him about it. If he has knowledge of the $J M facts regarding the company he will advise you in the affirmative: jjl TA GOLDEN EMMA MINING CO., HJ 2 426 Vermont Building, SI JJ Salt Lake City, Utah. 1 Y Without obligation on my part, plee send me full information regarding the n ' 'A stock of the Golden Emma. Ifj Name Business Jjj Street City State SI g .. csssanHoaaoi A M. E. WADDOUPS Attorney and Counselor Suite 610 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. THE METHODIST. EPISCOPAL CHURCH Bingham Canyon, Utah. TH08. J. TRAMEL, Pastor. Phone 302. 'flea. Apt No. 8, Vienna. Phone 302. MORNING 8ERVICE 1st and 3rd Sunday at Bingham, 11:30 a. m. 2nd and 4th 8unday at Highland Boy, 11:30 a, m. . AFTERNOON SERVICE 1st and 3rd Sunday at Lark, 2:30 p. m. 2nd and 4th Sunday at Copperfield, '.2:30 p. m. EVENING SERVICE AT BINGHAM 6:30 p. m., Young People's Service; 7:30, Preaching. ' DR.P.S. HAGEMAN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bingham Canyon, Utah. Office: Abuve oodriig's Drug I Store. , Residence : Lcknian Apartments. Telephone 35. hours: 7-- BUTTE CAFE, now under new offers you excellent iOt'riee painted and napered. new specialties will put up for miners. (Courteous treat all patrons. TjteRINGUAM HOSPITAL Dr. F. E. Slraup ' Office hour-s- 9 A. M. to 10 A. M., From 1 IJ. M. to f IV M. and 7 to - "8 evenings . y PHONE . No. 4 COMB SA6E TEA IH HIJOJMEII IT It's Grandmother's Recipe to keep her Locks Dark, Glossy, Beautiful. The old-tim- e mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur for darkening gray, streaked and faded hair Is grand- mother' recipe, and folke are again using it to keep their hair a good, even color, which Is quite sensible, a we are living In an age when a youth-f- ul appearance la of the greatest ad-vantage. Nowadays, though, we don't have the troublesome task of gathering the sage and the n jssy mixing at home. All drug stores sell the ready-to-us- e product. Improved by the addition of other ingredients, called "Wyeth's Sae and Sulphur Compound." It is very popular because nobody can discover It has been applied. Simply moisten your comb or a soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, but what de-lights the ladles with Wyeth'a Sage and Sulphur Compound, Is that, darkening the hair after a few application!. It also pro- duces that soft lustre and appearance of abundance whleh is tin attractive. This ready-to-us- e preparation is a de-lightful toilet requisite for those h desire a more youthful nprri ranee. t . Is not intended for the cure, mitlsa-Uu- n or prevention of dis-a- . 4 f BACK HURTS USE SALTSFOR KIDNEYS tat leu neat if Kidneys feel like lead or Bladder bothers yon Meat forms uric acid. Host foils forfjet that the kidneys, ke the beel, get sluggish and cloggea nd nerd'1a flushing occanionally, else we ive .backache and dull miwry in the ilney region, severe hcaducbef, rlieu-i'.'- t twines, torpid liver, aria stomach, , lcMne-- i and all sorts of Madder die iou simply must keep your kilney ve and clean, and the moment you an ache or pain ia the kidney 'in, pet about four o'mce of Jad Its from any good drug store here, '.as a tabltispoonful in a glass of water ;ore breakfast for a few daya and ur kidneys will then act fine. This Minus salts is made from the acid of pea and lemon juice, combined with his, and ia harmless to flush clogged .Ituvfe and stimulate them to normal .tivity. It also neutralizes the acids 1 tho urine so it no longer irritate-- , 'mis ending Madder disorders. Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive; iake a delifbtful effervescent lithia-ate- r drink which everylody should take uw and then to keep their kidneys clean, Ints avoiding serious complications. A well known local druggist says be Ih lets of Jad SaHs to folks Who believe 1 overcoming kiduey trouble while it ia .17 troubl. TRIBUTE TO A i SCHOOL MATE Charles E. assistant! Hontz, former city edifor on The Gate City, and now city editor on the (Burlington Gazette, read of the death of James 'MoKenzle on the field of battle In France last May, in The Gate City recently. He has written the following verses ded-icated to "an old school comrade," James McKenzie, corporal First Roy-al Scottish Fusiliers, killed at Arras May 3, 19it7; My school day friend, it seems but yesterday We laughed and played and lived our school boy way1 But four short years ago and now you He Dead on a field of Flanders, killed in May. When May was here in that lastyear of high We did not dream that fate was standing by To lead you to that great adventure far; To war and death beneath an alien sky. You heard the call ere one brief month had fled Of this great war. You bravely fought and bled At iLoos, at Arras, on the war frontiers And now your name is posted with the dead. Adventure.s light burned in your Celtic heart; The Scottish clans called not in vain, Your part In this great drama of the flaming fight Was writ in blood and anguish from the start. There on the tangled wires of war.s I estate ' You made the sacrifice supreme, and Fate, Ever beside you saw your last breath quenched. Your rich red stream flow on the fields of hate. While charging o.er that battered waste of land On that last day, I wonder if you scanned That brief and vagrant yesterday, or thought Or dreams you dreamed, or glowing things you planned. So you are dead in France! The veil of years Is swept away and we through bind-ing tears Must still recall you as the happy lad Who shared our school day joys and fears. L'envol Prince behold there lies a broken lance, Shattered to bits upon the fields of chance. So lay him low and let his dreams be deep. There In the warm ground of eternal France. For he has trod the puth that heros tread. And with their bloSd his blood was freely shed; Their cause was his as well as all the world.s; He did his part and died thus, com-forted. Deep In his narrow cell he cannot" hear The cannon roaring in the distant hills. The cheer Of victory stirs not his breast; his eyes Are closed before those things he once held dear. In future years when war's red hand has passed And the white peace of hope is born at last, The cause for which he died, but not in vain, Shall hallow his broken body and torn breast. And overhead the first sweet flowers of f pring Shall spread their multi-colore- of- - ' fering.' And fragrant winds ot summer stir the grass That twines about his simple cross, and sing. And autumn with its robes of gold and red Shall fling its votive gifts above his head. And winter with a wealth of virgin snow Trotect the hallowed ground that holds the dead. And you whose safety that he helped to buy, May sometime wander there where . he shall lie, ' And gladden that he gave a few brave drops That anguished France and freedom might not die. SPENT ABOUT HALF HER KIN BED Real Estate Mans Wife Gains 15 Pounds on Tanlac Now i Well Woman. "I have gained fifteen pounds since taking Tail lac and am feeling like a well woman for the first time in six years." said 'Mrs. J. H. Smith, wife of a well known real estate man and living at 215 Callahan, Muskogee, re-cently. "I suffered from a severe case of In-digestion, nervousness and a general breakdown, she continued, "and in spite of everything 1 could do I kept getting worse all the time. I had no appetite, and for weeks at a time I lived on raw eggs and sweet milk and even that would nometimes disagree with me. I had dizzy spells and my head would swim so I couldn't walk across the room without holding on to something. My nerves were all on edge and I couldn't hardly sleep at all for worrying about my condition and by morning I would be so weak and fagged out I was hardly able to get up at all. I was fast going down hill and I actually got so, weak and listless at last that I bad to take to my bed and stay there half the time. "One day my mother came to see me and she told me so much about the good Tanlac had done her that I or-dered a bottle and started taking it, and I had taken only a few doses when I knew 1 had at last found what 1 need-ed. 1 have improved right along ever since and I can now eat anything I want and it agrees with me. I don't have those dizzy spells any more, my nerves are all right again and I sleep like a baby. I have gained so much in every way that I am strong enongh to do all my housework and find it a pleasure instead of a tank. I have taken many different kinds of medi-cines during the last six years, but Tanlac was the only one that really did me any good." Tanlac is sold in (Bingham Canyon by VV. ill. Woodring, in Magna by R. B. Douglas Drug Co., In IMldvale by J. IM. AVatson, in Sandy by Mrs. S. J. Schmidt and in Garfield by Garrield Trading Co. SEND IN THE SOLDIER LET- - TERS TO THIS PAPER You w ill Ret a number of ters from time to time from your soldier frk-nd-- t and we are glad to publish them if you will send them In. If there are parts of these whleh you do j not want published you can make a copy and leave out the personal parts. In fact we ' would rather you would do this and this will make it possible for vou to keep the original let- - ter. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR PATENT United States Land Office, Salt 'Lake City, Utah, February 19, 1918. Notice Is hereby given that Utah Copper Company, a corporation of New Jersey, whose post office address is MoCornick tBuilding, Salt Lake City, Utah, by John M. (Hayes, its at-torney in fact, whose postofflce ad-dress is McCornick Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, has filed an applica-tion for patent for the lode mining claim called the Atlanta lode mining claim, situated in West Mountain Min-ing District, Salt Lake County, Utah, and designated by the field-note- s and official plat on file in thta office as Mineral Surrey No. 6461 In Sections 14 and 2-- Townsh'p 3 South. 'Range 3 West, Salt lake meridian, said Miner-al Survey No. 64C1 being described as follows: Commencing at Corner No, 1 of the claim (from which the northeast cor-ner of Section 23, Township 3 South, of Range 3 West of the Salt Lake Base 'and Meridian, bears south 67 deg. 48 jniin. east 1120,4 feet), and running thence north 51 deg. 34 mln. west 376.4 Ifett to Corner No. 2 of the claim; thence south 43 deg. 23 mln. west i 1100.2 feet to Corner No. 3 of the .claim; thence south 51 deg. 34 inin. east 600 feet to Corner No. 4 of the claim: thence north 43 clog. 23 min. east 950. 1 feet to Corner No. f of the j claim, and thence north 16 drg. 01 m'n. east feet to Corner No. 1 of jthe claim, the place of beginning, j The area of said claim us above de-scribed by metes and bounds Is 18.064 acres. From which are expresnly excepted and excluded the following areas In conflict with the following named' claims, to-wi- Snr. 47M, Allie ITfidi'l lode, 1.1H2 ncres Sur. 47!3, Droad Gauge lode, .719 acres; 1.871 acres; the net area of said claim (being the area claimed and applied for) hoing 16.1ft,'5 acres. Said claim is located In the south-eaH- t quarter of Section I and the northeast quarter of Section 23, Town-nhi-and Range aforesaid. j The claims adtoining nald Atlanta lode mining claim, as shown by the official plat of surveys are as follows: Allie Heidel lode. Survey 479:5; Bread Guage lode, 'Survey 4793, and A. J. L. ,lode. Survey 5836. I direct that this notice he published in the Press-Bulleti- at Bingham Can-jyo- n for a period of nine consecutive issues. - GOULD B. BLAKHLY. Register. I (Kirst publication Feb. 22. 1SM8; last j publication April 19, 1918.) The Press-Bullet- in I. H. MASTERS, General Manager, " C. D. McNEELEY, Editor and Leeee. Subscription $2.00 a Year In Advance. 12.50 on Time. Entered second-clas- s matter Jan 12. 1915. at the poatoftlce at Provo, Utah, under tha act or March 3d, 1879. .leeued t rlday of Each Week at Prove, Utah. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Having sold out my Interest in the Copperfield Coal Company. February i 6th, to Steve Amicone, I will no longer ;be responsible for any of the obliga-tions contracted by that concern j GKOKG-- GAVA!I ADVERTISED UNCLAIMED LETTERS Remaining In Uingham Canyon post office March 6, 1918. Domestic. Andersen, Alton. Anderson, Isaac. Anderson, I)e Yere. Baum, Mrs. Harry. iBowes, . AVm. Conqulst, Mrs. Heber. Cole. N. A. . Carillos, Victor. Carlsted, iMlss Alice. Darns, Mrs. M. Dykes, V. M. Ewing, Oliver E. Fechser, Crystal. Lawrence. Frank. Moore, Glen. i.Moore, AV. Miller, A. R. Miller, Glen. iMarkey, Martin. Face, Guy. l'eterson, Creorgo. Parcell, Ora. Richards, Oscar (2). Itoper, Chan. Taylor, V. Turner, AV. E. Wheeler, Wm. E. Foreign, Carr. Stephen. Domcnioo, J'ellz.aro. VIA BINGHAM & GARFIELD RAIL--I WAY Excursion to Salt 1.ake City, account if D. S. Conference; $1.00 round trip. Sale dates April 2nd to 7th, inclusive. Return limit April 12, 1il8. ,. OHow Egyptians RPd Onln. 1 The ancient Egyptian renned their I . Tla close to the ear and afterward ' rut the straw close to the ground and J Uld It by. It was this straw thnt Tim- - A rnoh refused to give to the Israelites. I It wns because of this refusal to give I he longer straw to tr, Israelites that L they were compelled to gnll.or "htub- - ' ble " This was a matter of consider- - Bble difficulty, seeing that the straw ' Itself bad been cut iff near to the ! ground. Teeth Under Suspicion. " Ihid teeth re now believed to be nn Important wnirce of rhetmmtlsiiOienrt disease end kidney trouble. The germ: producing these diseases may get Into the system from nn unsuspected abs-cess nt tho root of a tooth, whoe pres-ent'" may be revealed only by nn y photoirrnph. Iootnrs te'il of chll-Ire-recovering from l'.rlght'ft disease us soon ns their teeth are properly cared for. In fact tho teeth hevo come under suspicion along with the tonsils, and pictures of them are pnrt of a thorough physical examination. Psaltery Like Modern Guitar. The psaltery was n stringed musical Instrument to accompany fha voice. In the prayer hook version of the I'snims the Hebrew word is given as "lute." This Instrument resemble tb guitar, hut whs larger with a couvei buck, resell. Ming a gourd.' f Few Are What They Geem. In all the professions, every one at look and exterior, in feet a particular crder to npp-- .r what Lavishes to be . thou"l)t; so that It may be sale the f worlfl is made up of aitpeurauces. ! ' JLu Rr.chef'.lici.llld. Natural Inheritance. June "Does he got his mechanics.! ingenuity from his father's side or his iiother's?" Hess "From his mother's; the w as a poetess !" Life. (Rainfall in Bombay. Bombay u em pes mow than 72 Inrhis of mln a yen; nnd wets most f It within four or five niouiua. |