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Show PAGE gCHT THE PRE88-BULLET- W , WANT ADS 1 MINING LOCATION NOTICE3 for alb. at the Press-Bulleti- n office. tf KR SIAJLE Good line of slightly used furniture. For particulars call at Press-Bulleti- office. tf FOR SAIUB 20 room hotel in the center of Bingham business district. Inquire Mrs. J. C. (Butler, 480 Main. ml jBetween Season Sale II I With Winter soon a thing of the Past, 1j i and Spring not quite here, we hold this 0 great In-Between-Se- Sale to keep the ball a- - rolling, Q 0 and at the same time clear our stocks for Spring and S Summer arrivals. Chiefamong our offering are those of J $ Extraordinary Values in Coats. Suits, I h Furs and Dresses Jf Vk ON WHICH PRICES HAVE BEEN SLASHED, REGARD- - ( A&ft SK-L----- T 53 ' LESS OF ORIGINAL WHOLESALE COSTS. Sifm ' ?5 j v 'i':. MANY OF THESE GARMENTS ARE OF MATERIAL WJll S nrWy(U H 0 LIGHT WEIGHT ENOUGH FOR THE COMING SEA-- P J II jQm tSJLwg SON'S WEAR, WHILE OTHERS WITH SLIGHT ALTER- - J iltSOf' 18ff fIcO ' THAT, YOU CAN READILY MAKE IN YOUR 1 PMl Wi, H 0ATIONS WILL GIVE YOU A SPRING COSTUME AT 1 JPSrjjA Wj$L J pStj. ; H AN IMMENSE SAVING. ClraV. Kl NOTHING RESERVED. PRICES ON 1 l VS S EVERYTHING jfi x in CUT FOR QUICK CLEARANCE. L g 1Eioglnam Merc Coc V W The Big Store f - S C. E. ADDERLEY, Mgr. v I Business Proposition ' Over $400 worth of fur-niture for $200. Four rooms fully equipped ' for light house-keepin- g. Building rents for $20 and equipped sub-ren- ts for $37. It's a snap. Call at Press- - 1 Bulletin. I Obtained through the old catabllshoi j "O. WIFT CO." are boine quickly I bought by Manufacturers. Send modal or sketchea und dc?rr!ntIon f Of your tnvontiou for FREE SEARCH L ana report on patnntabllity. We (ret iwt Z cnta or no fe. Wriu, for our true booit ( of 300 needed Inrenlions. i D.SVIFT&C0, Patent Lawyers. Estab. 1889. 5 V307 Seventh St., Washington, D. C.) A visit to Salt Lake City ; is not complete unleas you have a Big Swim AT TUB . I "SAM" 52 Wm Bre.aw.jp Two klg natural hot aulphur Jj water aaola. Lady ana) Can. fj tlamen attandaota 1 RHEUMATISM VANISHKS TURKISH (Jil j BATH AND BED tl! JL I rvAnCwTiAwDiiIAin - For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30Years Always bears -- g.BBa aig nature of I Teaclalnf Lessons begin Monday and will continue every 'I Monday and Friday. I HOURS, 1 P. M. EVENING, 7 P. M. I We guarantee to teach all the late dances In I one course. 1 WILL BE AT COPPERFIELD THREE H I EVENINGS EACH WEEK. I Prof. Siegel 1 $100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper will ba pleaaed to learn that there Is at leaat . one dreaded dlseaaa that science has been able to cure In all Its stagei and that Is catarrh. Catarrh beins greatly Influenced by conitltut'nr.l conations . requlree conatltutional treat mont. Hall's Catarrh Medicine la taken internally and ' acta thru the Blood on the Mucoui Sur-faces of the System thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, giving the patient strength by building-- up the con-stitution and aesiatlng nature In doing Its work. Tha proprietors have so much faith In the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh Medicine that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any caae that It fails to cure. Bend for list of testlmonlala. Address P. J. CHENEY & CO, Toledo Ohio. Sold by all Druggist, . v Chamberlain's Tablets. These Tablets are intended especial-ly for disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels. 'If you ar troubled with heartburn. Indigestion or constipation they will do you good. THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Bingham Canvon, Utah. . THOS. J. TRAMEL, Pastor. Phone 302. Ret. Apt. No. 8, Vienna. Phone 302. MORNING SERVICE 1st and 3rd Sunday at Bingham, 11:30 a. m. 2nd and 4th Sunday at Highland Boy, 11:30 a. m. AFTERNOON SERVICE 1st and 3rd Sunday at Lark, 2:30 --y. 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. i ii ii ir M. E. WADDOUPS I Attorney and Counselor I Suite 610 Judge Building, I Salt Lake City, Utah. I IficorgeChochosisWow j Sole Owner of the CHOCOLATE SHOP. Mr. and Mrs I Chochos will be glad to have all their friends feel when they 1 are in the Chocolate Shop that they are in no strange place. 1 Consider when here that you are in your own home. 1 We are prepared to treat you better than ever before Jf" and you will always find a warm and hearty welcome. CANDY, LIGHT LUNCHES, HOT AND COLD DRINKS, MUSIC, DANCING. Come to see us and you will be assured of a pleasant time. The Chocolate Shop rT-Tf- fll m 'T'miiriiiiOTiiiTraillf When You Have a Cold. It Is when you have a severe cold that you appreciate the good qualt-tie- s of Chamberlain's Cough Kemedy. Mrs. Frank Crocker. Pana, 111., writes: ."Our five-yea- r old son Paul caught a severe cold last Winter that settled on his lungs and he had terrible coughing spells. We were greatly worr1l about him as the medicine we gave him did not help him In the least. A neigh-bor spoke so highly of Chamberlain's Cough Jtemedy that 1 got a bottle of It. The first dose benefitted him so much that I continued giving it to him until be was cured." TheBINGDAM HOSPITAL ,. Dr. F. E. Slraup . Office hourl 0 A. f. to 10 A. M., From 1 P. M. to 5 P. M. and 7 to 8 evenings PHONE No. 4 "EYES FOR HAVY"., FROMTHE PUBLIC CIVILIANS HAVI SLMT IN 6,000 GLAS8ES OF VARIOUS KINDS, BUT MORE ARE NEEDED. ! APPEAL TO PRIVATE OWNERS General Crozler on Age Limit Enlarge- - ment of Selective Service Law LI- - cense Required to Ship Goods Abroad by Parcel Post. (From Commute en Publlo Information.) WaKhington. Over 6,000 glasses hove be'n received by the navy In re-sponse to Its call through the news-papers for binoculars, spyglasses, tel-escopes, sextants, and chronometers. There Is urgent need for many more. Heretofore the United States has been obliged to rely on foreign coun-tries for most of Its supply of such ar-ticles. These channels of supply be-ing closed, It has been necessary to ap-peal to the patriotism of private own-ers for "eyes for the navy." All articles should bo tagged with name and address of the donor and sent to Hon. Franklin D. Roosevelt, as-sistant secretary of the nayy, care of Naval Observatory, Washington, D. C. Those not suitable will be returned to lenders. Careful records will be kept of accepted glasses so they may, If pos-sible, be returned at the termination of the war. As the government under the law cannot accept services or material without payment, $1 will be puld for each article accepted. Discussing enlargement of the age limit for selective military service, Pro-vost Marshal General Crosier said: "A pronounced majority of the boards favor some enlargement, bnt there is great diversity of opinion as to the proper age limit. Nineteen and thirty-liv- e are perhaps the limits most frequently suggested ; but aome recom-mend forty or forty-fiv- e years as the upper limit. There is a distinctly stronger demand for raising the muxl-mu- m age than for lowering the mini-mum." General Crozler estimates that 1,389.-38- 8 acceptable single men would be made available by an Increase In the age limit to Include men up to forty-Bv- e years. The estimate places the number of acceptable single men be-tween eighteen and twenty-on- e years at 1,546.283. The number of probably acceptable single men already regis-tered, but not called. Is 1,321,845. Ac-cording to these figures, should the age limit be enlarged to include men of from eighteen years to forty-fiv- e years, Inclusive, 4.28T.516 physically and oth-- 1 ' erwlse qualified unmarried men would be open for call to service. The war trade board Is calling at-tention to the fact that license Is re-quired to ship abroad goods on the conserved list, even when sent in small quantities by parcel post In many cases this has been done by persons Ig-norant of the president's- - proclama-tion concerning exports, or who do not know of the many ar J3s which may be exported only under license. For violation a fine of not more than $10,000 or Imprisonment for not more than two years, or both, form the pen-ally. Licenses may be applied for at the bureau of exports, Washington, D. C or any of Its branches which are located at Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Nogales, El Paso, Eagle Pass, Oulveston, New Or-leans, Mobile, Savannah. St. Louis, Cbl-- i cogo, Boston and New York. ' A copy of a broadside forbidden In Germany has reached the committee on public Information. It Is a single sheet of foolscap size, printed on hots sides, and bears a coarsely executed woodcut representing a soldier In arms, a workman In a Mouse, and a woman nhovlug a rock off a precipice, beneath which Is seen the head and bust of the emperor, crowned and sccptered and mustached, looking up In terror at the fate Impending. The last puragntpn of the text Is as follows: Man of toll, awake from alumberl Reroanlie thy growing might. All the wheels will lose thrlr motion Without thy strong arm a devotion. Down with the war! Down with the gov-ernment! Peare! Freedom! H'ead! I SCHOOL NOTES; WISE; UNWISE MO OTHERWISE Last week, under the heading of School Notes, appeared an article cri-ticising a Salt iLake paper for an arti-cle In which they had claimed that some electrical appartus had been in-stalled in the domestic science depart-ment of the High School. To show to the people of Bingham that that paper was giving them news printed aa though it were over with when it had not been begun yet, the writer wrote the article calling the town's attention to the fact that the work of installing it had not even been start-ed. In writing that article the writer did not mean that it should be inter-preted by some as a school criticism, but as a personal one made by the ' ...in... , - fcW der of Fleas? If you haven't, you had better watch them. When a man makes a fool of himself he had better keep still. It don't pay to tell everyone about It. Don't have too many girla at the same time, because if one gets jealous you're in a fine mess, Have you heard about the editor be-ing arrested and then released for his Intentional or unintentional act of try-ing to crack the Ice In front Of a cer-tain business house the other night. A Joke Is a joke. 'Rut some Jokes are taken wrong. Always try and find out whether a man can take a Joke, before you try making one on him. a certain reporter or a certain pa-- : per should find out what churches be- - j lieve In giving dances before he says,' that fhey are. j Did you notice the editorial on So-- i and-s- last week? He has had a photo taken of the piece and haa had it en-larged; It is now hanging in his room. A man ought to be able to live on 60 gallons of water a day, but when a man don't drink water, how many gallons does it tak to keep him alive? iWhat is the 'Bootlegger's iltch?" Ask Mac. WJien a sleigh hits you on the "sidewalk" it not only menaces you but It sometimes cripples you. writer. I also mentioned that I did not want to detract any of the honor of getting the board to buy the appara-tus, from Mr. Quinn. for I feel sure that the school appreciates the fact that it was through his efforts that the apparatus has been ordered. That criticism was a personal one, written by Clyde Countryman, and was not sanctioned by the school. Hereafter any article appearing under the name of Clyde Countryman, Is not to be con-sidered a criticism made and sanc-tioned by the entire school, but giv-ing the personal opinions of the writ-er. School. Last week's assembly was under the supervision of Miss Mildred iMatt-son- , of the Commercial department. The program rendered waa a very good one. and was esi.:.iyed by every-one present The first number was a paper by Alius Mattson on "Success or Failure. The next was a duet by the i Misses Phoebe and Anna blasters. The next and last number was a piano se-- j lection by iMiss Jennie Jackson. This week the assembly will be In charge of (Mr. P. S. Marthakis, chemistry teach-er- . The program will be printed next wek. 'Last Friday night Coach Homer Christensen spent the night In Salt Lake attending the Junior Prom of the University of Utah. That night the team played Murray and whipped them to the tune of 52-28- . iMaybe Homer Is the hoo do that is making Bingham lose. Wi'll! They nearly scared the stu-dent to death when they told them that they were to have a holiday on Lincoln's birthday. We were working very hard and did not even think of the holidays, but were too busy to .have the Idea enter our minds. ! As evidence that the Seniors are not yet grown up, we quote for intitaiice their tendency and their longing for baby pictures. Other Notes Than School. illave you heard of the Ancient Or- - Something New. Dramatic Editor "Have you anj new and especially difficult act In yout circus this year?" Advance Agent-"T- cp, I should say we have. W'e'v jot o cowgirl who shoots at glass balli wlih birdshot and misses em." Judge ' V French Read In South America. Throughout South America Frencl l almost universally read; editions of the classics are In most homes, and book stores are filled with modern French writers tf prose or verse, both In translation and in the .original. HIGHLAND BOY NOTES I Mrs. Geo. Kerry left this week for, Salt Lake, and will later go on to Tdn- - ho for her health. tMrs. Merry is go-- ' Ing for her health. i 'Mrs. Heir, of Kalt llke, Is visiting with her sister, Mrs. Joe Ruttle. j Mr. and Mrs. Moer returned to' camp after having been In Grand Junction, Colo., where they have been visiting Mrs. Mower's mother. j Miss Vera Strom, of St. Mary's !Aca- - demy. Is spending the week end with her parer.ta, j Mrs. Suitor Is visiting with her fr.th-- ' er in Salt Lake this week. iMr. John Cronnin has moved out to the camp this week, where he will re-side with his mother, who came here some time ago. About Constipation. Certain articles of diet tend to check movements of the bowels. The most common of these are cheese, tea and boiled milk. On the other hand raw fruits, especially apples and ba-nanas, also 'graham bread and whole wheat bread promote a movement of the bowels. When the bowels are badly constipated, however, the sure way is to take one or two of Chamber Iain's Tablets immediately after sup-per. . i CHOCOLATE SHOP CHANGES HANDtt j I wish to announce to the public' that I have purchased the Interests of Peter Jlechlim and Gust Pechios In the Chocolate Shop. OKO. CHOaros?, Proprietor, j |