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Show ' ' THE PRES3-BULLHTI- N ;, v.vy ......,., .. , .fiore Catarrh In this section yiintry than all 'Other disease . V ther, and for year It wu sup." V o be Incurable. Doctors prescribed v, remedies, and by constantly falling . trure with local treatment, pronoMnced tt Incurable. Catarrh Is a local disease, v gTeat'y Influenced by constitutional con-ditions and therefore requires constitu-tional treatment. Hull's Catarrh Modi-- ' ' cine, manufactured by F J. Cheney tt Co., Toledo, Ohio, la a constitutional remedy, Is taken Internally and acta thru the Blood oa the Mucous Surfaces . of the System. . One Hundred Dollars re-ward is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Medicine falls to cure. Send (or circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. , Sold by Druggists, 75c. . . Hall's Family Pills for constipation. V1 WANT ADS FOR SALE OR RENT 'Modern up , to date restaurant, good location, ln-- I quire at the iButte. FOR SALE Parley Davis motor-cycle in first class condition; will sell reasonable. Dr. Flynn. FOR SALE OR RENT Three room house. Apply at PressBulletin. - MINING LOCATION NOTICES for I ; talft at the Press-Bulleti- n office. tf I MAUH HELP Wanted: Wide avrake, energetic, temperate man, 25 to 85 years of age to deliver and col- - lect from town and country customers. I First class references and $500 bond required. Permanent position and Sood compensation to right party. Ad-dress I D. Firebaugt, Box 665, Salt Lake City, Utah. SUGAR STOCK FOR 8ALE Will ' sell 50 or 100 shares of Springville-Mapleto- n Sugar stock, below par. Ad-dress, box 275, Provo, Utah. tf LOST ik purse containing several five dollar bills and checks made out to William Rita. Good reward for re-turn to The Pressdiulletln office. I To) fl ' A WWWletV fnl fl flT1T1 1 "Wi i ojiuvluls: U )SIU luj (, y ) . a I These cold nights call for warm coverings. You will si v jj need new quilts and blankets. Now is the time and this j g is the place where you: will find the largest supply to B 1 select from. Many of these blankets were carried over 3 jj from last year and the others were purchase jj in the se in prices, jj , B - H S -- .. , . -- . . 3 2 Wool Blankets 6x86 Pink and Grey, price. . I .'. . . . . ... $8.50 'Maggg. 3 Wool Blankets 70x80 Blue Plain, price. $13.50 ' - 3 11 Wool Blankets 66x80 Blue Plain, price $!2.tQ SfS 3 y ywool Blankets 70x80' White and Gray, Extra" Heavy, price ; . . . $15.00 ' SJ 3 '1 I Wool Blankets 60x7ff Dark Gray and Khaki, Extra Heavy, price .r900 MR S H ; Wool Nap 66x80 Light and Plaid, price. $5.00 Sgjjjjjmjjn v.'(::' : v?- - S Cotton Blankets 72x80, Gray, White and Tan, price '$X5d isff-f'fw- U 8 . Cotton Blankets 45x72 Gray Only, price.... $1.75 f : 3 g Cotton Blankets 54x74, Gray, Tan and White, price V.; $100 .. wi::' rfel 8 Quilts, Full Sizes,..............,......;.. $4.00, $4.50, $4.75 and $5.00 tpt g v S Pillows .. .$1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 g 5 H 5 " S .. M 8 - - - ' " g .. SIBSBBSISBB1SSSSSS- - g . Highest 1 nemg store Lowest j irvizxtxxxxzxxzxzzzzxzxixxxzxxzxxzzxzzzzzxzzzxxzanzsa(tfaiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiilBiiiiiiiiKaiKiiiiiiaii . i The Bingham & Garfield Railway Company k The Popular Route Finest Equipment. Best Train Service Two Trains Daily Between Bingham and Salt Lae City TIME TABLE Effective February 24, 1918 ' - Leave Salt Lake City: ; Arrive Bingham! No. 109 ....'....6:55 a. m. . No. 109 .8:25 a. rri. ' 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. II. W. STOUTENBOROUGH, A.O. P.A. . ", ". F. B. SPENCER, Salt Lake City, Utah. ' Agent, Bingham, Utah. Special Weekly and Monthly I Rates for the Winter Season I I The I Hotel Salt Lake City THE HOTEL FOR RATES, SERVICE AND LOCATION It will not cost you any more to stop at the best place in the I city than it does at inferior places farther out. Call and see I , our rooms. The largest and most pleasant in the city, and 1 i get our rates. I THE KENYON HOTEL, Inc. g fg nmmiwipriT.T-- ttswiti- mitmm sr. nn?m nn ,w rmmmmmmsmmr, itiiihiiaifriisrsttwtTriiitliir rmi ttb mm ' T Where You Get the Best I Bread j The City Bakery, At 52 Main Street, Is Making the Best I Bread In Town. If You Don't Believe It Give It a Trial. . 1 We not only have the best equipment, but we know just what ingredients to use and just how to bake to make a Perfect Bread. . Everybody wants Good 1 Bread as that i3 the most important part of the diet, and we are making just what you want. We have the best and we can prove it.. When you eat Bread from our Bakery you will say so, too. We Make All Kinds of Bread and Make Deliveries to Every I body. If YouWant the Best Bread, Phone Your Order to .382 Bolotas Bros. Proprietors. 1 I City Bakery I Wise and Oiiierwisc ' There Is nothing like teaching a fellow a good lesson at the right time. And one of those lessons were like this. A. very sweet, fascinating, ex-- 1 quiaitely beautiful little girl here had a sweeheart who also lived in this camp. But one Sunday months ago he very unwisely had another girl up here from way down in the valley and had a great time, and his girl here very properly turned him down. Not for a few days, but for a long, long timetwo or three months she would hardly look at him letaylone give him a smile. v They have made up now and she -- says she bets he will not only be good hereafter but that ,he will be very careful. The boys who have gone off to col--) lege this fall would be surprised to know how quickly the girls they left behind them fell in with other fellows. One fellow in particular here has tak-en an absentee's old time sweetheart. Another evidence of the truthfulness of the saying that absence makes the heart grow fondtr fonder for the other fellow. .,- ' The pugilistic argument of the heavyweights here early this week was Indecisive. At least no decision was rendered by the referee and the prevailing opinion is that neither of the aspirants has qualified himself to meet Jack Dempsey. A great number of people In the camp are sneezing and coughing and .running at the nose, but very few of them will confess the corn and say that they have the "flu." ' It's Just a cold! but at that, those who x have colds are scared to say the least and so are their friends. The warning, beware of the man who uneezes, is being observed. I it was pitiful it was, to say the least the fate 'that befell some Bing-ham boys who were In ILehl Sunday night. Yes, the boys were pinched, but what some people here would like to know was what the Bingham boys were doing in ILehl. Deputy Sheriff Ray Kenner was re-leased from quarantine on Tuesday, where he l'ad been in solitary con-finement for twenty-tw- days. And what do you think he said when he got up townT iHe said he did not think he would ever put anyone in jail again, having learned by actual experience what a punishment such confinement really is. Several of the boys In camp lost their heads over the pretty little girl from Springville who was in town last week. She possesses every attribute of beauty and some of the boys think she is far more alluring than the most enticing girl i which has enrolled for this session. j There Is one fellow In town now who is holding down two Jobs. He femylfll at ViH 6 A ft tmm fnmWi of night till eight in the morning and then 'works in Electric avenue from eight In the morning till twelve at night. The belligerent bull dog which has held sway at the corner for some time .and had acquired the habit of Chewing up all dogs that passed by got a dou-ble dose of his own medicine Wednes-day afternoon A stranger passed with a big lAlresdale and the bull dog bounced him. The battle was brief, bloody and deciwive, the bull being overwhelmingly defeated. The Aires-dal- e got a grip on the side of the bull's head including an ear and 'n'rly moppcl up the earth with him. When the owner of tho victor made him release his hold the bull beat a hasty retreat without waiting for the decision of the referee. Gas masks have made their appear-ance in the camp. Quite a number of young ladies are wearing them to ward off the "flu." With the mask it Is difficult to recognize the maids. It is the style now and it is good taste. A pretty Bingham girl says it Is tough to have your soldier sweetheart come to ree you and then wink at the other girls as they go by. What Is a Kazoo? Ask four girls at the !B. II. 8. Did you ever see an Indian with a mustache t If not ybii failed to see the parade Saturday. They say that there is a young man in town who Just cannot make his arm behave when he goes up the street with a girl. The Junior Hoover bunch has mov-ed that every girl seen wearing silk Etocklngs to school regularly be branded as a slacker. iShould this mo-tion go through It will work a hard-ship on girls who possess pretty ankles and also be disappointing to those who are fond of beautiful scen-ery. The glrli say that a well known dig-nified gentleman of the camp has add-ed a new coat of paint to his hair. All the school children and a large number of people of the camp Joined last Saturday in the Columbus Day celebration Music was furnished by H eld's Band and the parade was a success in every way. On account of tho Spanish influenza the big dance had to be called oft, but it was a great occasion anyway. Richard Shaw of Copperfield, aged f.0,;died last Saturday morning of pneumonia. He was employed by the Silver Shield Mine, lie was well known and had many friends in this camp. He is survived by a widow and six children, two of whom are mem-jber- s of the United States "army. TEACHERS CANVAS B1SGH AM ... (Continued from Page 1.) 'TP fective. The only thing that Is at all effective is the gauze mask and peo-ple who want to protect themselves should wear them, even in street care, on the streets and other places where they art likely into contact) with the diseate.' J ''J( you get the disease you do not need a hospital, a physician and a trained nurse. They cannot do any-thing more for you than any other person .who will wait upon you and see that you have what you want No medicine has been found which has any effect upon the disease ,so you don't need medicine. If you get the disease in. the pneumonia stage, What you need is net a hospital with doc-tors and nurses, but a tent out in the frpsll hlf with inmnria h a mask, to see thai you have water to drink and iourishlng food. If the resistance powers of your constitution are sufficient to throw off the poison you will get well. If they ore not you will be dead in about three days. But you stand far better chances for out in the fresh air than in a ' most modern hospital. Fresh air Is the only medicine and the only treat- - . ment that seems to have any effect at all. But experience has demon-- 1 strated that fresh air is effective, therefore It should be used to the i fullest extent." Dr. Hutchinson says that only one person in ten is susceptible to the in-fluenza infection and about mo in 350 in the ordinary run of the disease will die from it. A person who Is not susceptible, he explains, will not contract it, but the. susceptible per-son will contract It if exposed, of what he may do to ward it off. - LIGHTNING KILLS TEAM f (Lightning instantly killed a team of horses driven by Claude Tibbie and William Ferre of the Bingham Mercantile Company in Copperfield at 5 p. m Thursday. The men escap-ed with minor, injuries. DEATH OF MISS DORIS FULLMER Miss Doris Fullmer, daughter of Chief Deputy Sheriff Oscar Fullmer, died Monday mornir.g at the family home at Bluffdale of Spanish influen-za. She was IS years of age and was the oldest of eight children, all of whom are now sick with the disease. Miss Fullmer was a very popular young lady and was highly esteemed by many friends in Bluffdale. Funeral services were held at Bluff-dale, Tuesday afternoon. Fellow offic-ers and friyds of Bingham contribut-ed a beautuul floral offering. Sheriff Fullmer has the sincere sympathy of Cultivated Rubber, i a host of friends in Bingham. British-Malay- a la now firmly1 estab-lished as the leading country In the production of cultivated rubber, and the Industry has added very substan-tially to the prosperity of the Malay peninsula during the lust nine or tea years. , First Market Place. The town records contain allusion to "the market place" n. early as 1C30. Three years before, In 1C33, the gen-eral court hnd ordered that a market should be kept in Boston every Thurs-day, and the place selected wns the widest part of State street (then known interchangeably as Water stret and Market street) where It opened Into tbe inalr street or highway of Ror bury. MBStSSlSSSSiasM DROP A BOMB ON BERLIN For fifty dollars paid on the installment plan you can buy a good businesslike bomb, made in America, charged with high explosive and guaranteed to wreck any German supply train, airdome or dugout that it hits. If you cannot go yourself, buy a bomb and get into the war. , For a thousand dollars paid in easy installments you can help to equip an American airman, who will ask nothing better than a chance to' fly over the Rhine by moonlight If you can't go yourself, equip an ace and get into the war. For ten thousand dollars you can help buy an American air-plane of the latest model, equipped with the improved Liberty motor and all ready for business. If you cannot go yourself, buy a bombing plane and get into the war. For a million dollars you can buy one of those new American ships that Charlie Schwab and the boys working with him in the tidewater yards are turning out for the patriotic trade. If you cannot go yourself, buy a ship and get into the war. Many of us are exempt from the draft for perfectly good reasons, but few of us are exempt from the Liberty Loan for any kind of reason. It gives all Americans a chance to get into the war, side by side, each according to his ability. The million-doll- ar man's ship will carry the ten thousand dollar man's bomb-ing plane to France, where the thousand dollar man's ace will fly over the Rhine with the fifty dollar man's bomb. Bombs, supplies, airplanes and ships are for sale on every street corner in America this week. Drop a bomb on Berlin. You can do it for five dollars down and the balance on installments. ' |