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Show ' THE BINGHAM BULLETIN; BOJGnAM CANYON, UTAH . . ... PAGE SEVEN - OUR COMIC SECTION FINNEY OF THE FORCE Finney Will Put Up With Snoop oM mp. ( the best news r dojn on 16th ' STisee-T- .a1 ESTATE MAN U SNC? 01 GdT I1 AND TMEVLL PAV ME A McGt?UDEI2S . BOr-- S IN COLLEGE A TccO X' ll WAS V0U J ' ll' l AWDTHGEE GlCLS li'k" " V IN HIGW SCHOOL --C f C TfeT? (F) Wes Newspaper Union ONE GLASS CUTTERS UNION WINS SCALE Wage Agreement Reached at Pittsburgh. A Rtrlk of 4'0 cutters and flatten-er- a employed by the American Win-dow Class company, Pittsburgh, wns settled when iiiitmi representatives signed a renewal for one yenr of the Jnmiary 1!L7 wage scale.' The men had demanded hii Increase of about 10 per cent. K. II. Olllot, president of another union which supplies labor to other glass manufacturers throughout the country, said the settlement would have no trfirlnj on a strike of uhout 2,r.(N members of t In 1 oru'iitiizatlnn which began nt tlm mime time with somen hut tilmiliir demands. WITHDRAW FROM AWARDS BOARD Euilding Trades Dissatisfied Over Decisions on Jurisdiction. A break from the national hoard of Jurisdiction award, an organization ullled with the American Federation , of Labor, turn been made by the build-ing trade depart nient of the federa-tion, which only a short time aK flowed a gup of years In It own or-ganisation with the roiillllhillon of the Carpenters' Brotherhood. Tim withdrawal of the building trades from the hoard of awards, whleh acts as an arbitrator In disputes over work, also occurred a few days ago, hut only becanie puhllely known when report of the lireuk were continued by Frank J. Morrison, secretary of the federa-tion. A dispute over nn award of the board was said to have caused the break. It was a similar Intercraft dispute which led to the breaking of the car-penters from the building trades de-partment a few years ago. The with-drawal of the department from the board of awards In no way affects Its federation aflillatlon, It was said. there's onlySVone Wfilfffifc- - Order It By Name! "Cvizsl Flapjack tatv alone above AjVJV other hot cake flours because I A there ii only one flapjack fla-- 1MVi I vor a d fla-- Vnij!ikV vor tlat comes from th way it's blened.Treat yourself to S?T.j" light and tender hot cakes tnade from Flapjack, Mont Cottly "Mike" "Royal Mike" Is the name given by the British puphllc to the special microphone used by King George of England when he broadcasts. This Instrument, reserved for the royal family, la covered wltb silver wire and bears. In gold, the familiar In-signia of the lion and unicorn. It la suld to be the most valuable "mike" In the world from a monetary stsnd-polif- t. I Don't blame the feed or the con-- I dition of your stock if market m men grade you low and custom M ers complain on account of the H color of your butter. You can H keep your butter always that H golden June color which brings D top prices by using Dandelion Butter Color. It's purely vege-table and meets all State and National Pure Food Laws-use- d by all large creameries for years-It- s harmless, tasteless and doesn't color buttermilk. Large bottles, 33c at all drug and gro-cery stores. Write for FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE WtBi A RidurdM Ca., lac fcrfinf (m, Vumnl FARM toe ACREHj FOR 8A I.E. A ma at I4.UU0. Soda spring. Mr. bunt-alow- . 80 aerea whpst. Would, trade, clear town properly. LEVI ALAND, . Idaho. Dont TWt Italil BaldneiM eaalljr cured, un- - . luanl u( reauita, old Indian formula work wondi'ra, eent poatpald on receipt of 11.00. H. Warren. 10 Lakeside So.. BeaUlo. Waia. LKAKN HARBEKINO and alwayl be Ihle to linn fonirulovmrnt. Vril for particular. olibJ ivuauiS, lit Hint k.,ut uu Hit, tut W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 27. Odd Cure for Deaf nest Joe Duree of Des Moines, Iowa, com-pletely deaf, dropped 9,000 feet and was partly cured, but bis dropping was done in an airplane and It was a treat-ment prescribed by several doctors. Duree's hearing was destroyed ten years ago, when he contracted Influ-enza while serving In the army. Doc-tors advised this remedy In the bone thnt his eardrums would be Jolted Into sudden octlvlty by a sudden change of atmospheric pressure. Duree plans another swoop to Improve bis hearing further. . irje SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN- "- genuine ' Unless you see the "Bayer Goss" on tablets, you are hot getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin prescribed by physfc . cians and proved safe by millions over 25 years for Colds Headache1 Neuritis; :'; Lumbago:';; ' Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism" DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART : Cn VS Accept only "Bayer" package iCJLw which contains proven directions. jrand t.Bllyer box,,. cf 2 Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. eaplrtn, la tbe trade nark of Barer Manufacture of MoBoacetlcacldeator of SaUcjUcae fll OurPetPeeve ALLV II i MICE ANPWAli) Tl I ' T f' (ci iriit. w.w. m OTHER LABOR NOTES Unemployment In Norway la In-creasing. At Lexington, Mo., several truck loads of coal miners who went out to begin work under a new and Inde-pendent contract were turned back by other miners. Several hundred men were placed out of employment In Palestine, Texas, on October 1, the date set for closing the International (ireiit North-ern shops for nn Indcltnlte period. At Pittsburg, Kan., 6."0 miners re-sumed work following the signing of four additional mines to go buck to work tinder the 'Jacksonville wage ngreement In the district by United Mine Workers. Locals of the International Long-shoremen's association In the North Atlantic district accepted by a ma-jority vote a new agreement with steamship owners providing a wage Increase of five cents an hour. The constitutional regulation for-bidding the labor of women, end chll- - dren under pixleou, In factories nt night, or In commercial houses after 10 p. m., will be strictly enforced, the Mexican government announces. President Muchado of Cuba, through the executive office, declared that the creation of a department of labor and the establishment of an eight-hou- r working day In Cuba was receiving his "careful and favorable attention." Beginning September 1 the law establishing eight hours ns a day's work In the commercial Institutions of Mexico City went Into effect Em-ployees required to labor longer than the limit stated are to be paid for overtime. Special dispatches from Tuniplco to Excelsior sny thnt the oil com-panies In the Tampleo flplds will dis-miss 75 per cent of their workers within a fortnight as a result of de-creased oil production and had busi-ness conditions. Clerks, freight handlers, and certain other classes of employees on the Canadian National Railway system In western Canada have been granted nn Increase, averaging $5 a month. Ap-proximately 18,000 employees will benefit by the Increase. In spite of the recognized principle that equal v!orh should receive equal pay, the earnings of mnn and woman workers In the manufacturing Indus-tries of the United States show a considerable disparity, according to the national Industrial conference board. John A. Frey, spokesman of the Metal Workers at the A. F. of L. con-vention, voiced the federation's new doctrine of "not only a living wage based on the cost of living, but n wage which returns to the workers a proportion of the wealth they .'' Federal Judge firnhh handed down a degree enjoining the Journeymen Stone Cutters' Association of North America, four nfliliated labor organi-zations and a number of Individuals from preventing the use In New York city district of non-unio- cast stone manufactured oulsjde the district. . Dispatches published by the (Ariz.) Herald reported that officials of the American-owne- d Ln Dura Mining company at La Dura, Sonora, Mexico, had reached an "open rupture" with political leaders of the town and that work on the mining property bad heen suspended. Sev-eral hundred men employed were laid off. An agreement ending the coal strike In Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Oklahoma mid Texas was signed by representatives of (lie United Mine workers and the mine operators. The Illinois go back to work under vir-tually the same wage scale that was In effect before the suspension of work April 1, when the old contract expired. Four cool mines In the Pittsburg (Kan.) district have been leased from the owners by groups of worhers who agree to deliver coal on the cars at the price stipulated In the 1017 scale demanded by the operators. The lessees reopening the mines soon will pay the operating expenses and di-vide the remainder among themselves as wages. The owners have no part In the operation of the mines. A second American trade union del-egation Is being organized to sell for a study of economic and labor condi-tions In Soviet Russia. William Wat-kin- s of St. Paul, Mlnn chairman of the excursion committee, announces. One ' of the purposes. It Is an-nounced, will be to learn "why over 90 per cent of the Russian workers belong to the unions, as against only 10 per cent In America." Watklns ndds that the American Federation of Labor Is not sponsoring the trip. Poetic Idea Evolved in Small Boy't Mind Richard Le fiulllenno, poet, wue talking about poets at a reception: "Poets are children," he said. "I have known all the great poets of our time, and they were all simple-minde-unaffected, childlike. Yes, poets are children, and children are poets. "One summer I visited an encamp-ment of little country weekers slum children who wete enjoying a week-end holiday tn the country. It was evening, the new moon was Betting, and a small country weeker sold as he gazed at the western sky: " 'I wonder what becomes of all the old moons! "'I guess.' said another urchin, who stood beside him, 'I guess they cut 'em up for stars, Hill.'" Can't Collect Fortune Possession of the largest face-valu- e promissory note In the world la claimed by M. F. Rossi, antiquarian of San Jose, Calif. Mr. Rossi has a parch-ment document whose faded Inch con-veys the date, 1480, and a promise to pay 200 gold florins. The note bears 0 per cent Interest. According to Rossi's calculation, he could collect t4 1,172,200,000,000 on the note If the unfortunate Florentine who signed It was financially Sound today. The florin Is valued at $200 In American currency. GENERAL LABOR NEWS Many more mines In Mexico are closing down. Unemployment In France Is report-ed as rapidly declining. Fuctory workers In Soviet Russia receive from $.'55 to $40 a month for a week. Expulsion of foes within and a cru-sade to extend organized labor Into new fields were alms undertaken by the Amerlcun Federation of Labor In Its annual convention. The Corn Products Refining com-pany will add a sugar refinery to Its Kansas City plant. The addition, where corn sugar will be manufac-tured, will furnish employment to 200 additional workers. The United States employees' com-pensation commission ruled that It Is necessary that a longshoreman or other employee be employed on navi-gable waters In order to recover for Injuries under the longshoremen's and harbors' act. The Mine Workers' union Is not sufficiently well organized In the Southern states and In the nonunion fields of Virginia, West Virginia, Ken-tucky and Tennessee for the recent settlements tn affect the situation In those districts. The Iowa coal strike was settled nnd miners who have been out since April 1, last, returned to work. Settlement followed a meeting of the Iowa Coal Operators' association, nt which the operators agreed on a plan similar to the one formulated In Illi-nois. A preliminary , Injunction restrain-ing the United Mine Workers from attempting to retain striking miners In houses owned by the Pittsburgh Terminal Coal corporation was grant-ed In an opinion Died In Federal court nt Pittsburgh by Judge F. P. Schnonmaker. Agreements to continue work at the outset of the bituminous coal sus-pension Inst April 1 and settlements reached by miners and opcratorg af-fect roughly 125,000 union miners, according to computations made at (ho headquarters of the United Mine Workers of America. Negotiations between the employ-ers In the window-cleanin- Industry and representatives of 1.200 workers, who demand recognition of their union and a $3 Increase In weekly wages, have been broken off, nnd there was a complete tie-u- p In the In dustry at New York. Seventy-fiv- union miners of the Upson Mining company, Perry county, Ohio, voted to return to work at rates Raid to be near the Jacksonville f ale. This Is the first group of Ohio union miners to reach an agreement with operators. The Upson company oper-ates one of the largest mines In the county. , Another pledge to nationalize the coal mines of tirent Hrltaln was given on behalf of the Labor party, at Its Ulnckpool conference, Former pre-mier MacDonald said: "If a labor government comes Into office, tt Is go-ing to take on the duty of national-izing the mines. Taking them In hulk, there Is no body of employers In the country who act with more harsh tyranny than the coal owners." British labor laid Its tributes be-fore the Amerlenn Federation of La-bor and pleaded the cause of an In-ternational federation of working-men- . Will Sherwood, one of England's fraternal delegates to the federation's forty-sevent- h annual convention, asked America's hosts of labor to lend support to curtailment of arma-ment and lay the foundation for a brotherhood of nations which would forever prevent war. There Is scarcely a section of the world In which the American Federa-tion of Labor has not hnd some In-terest during the year. It finds itself opposed to the propaganda of two powerful dictatorships those of Rus-sia and Italy; not reconciled with the International Federation of Trade Unions nt Amsterdam; closer to the Spanish-America- n nations, but active-ly leudtng Its voice pro or con all over the world ln connection with all manner of foreign tangles aud prob-lems. Watch Long in Concrete Blasting out some old concrete for s new bridge, O, II. LIghtner, loin, Kan., discovered a watch that used to make the dollur famous Imbedded In It. The crystal was broken and the face disfigured, but on winding It the watch went right on ticking. The concrete was laid twelve years ago. Indianapolis News. Movable Schoolhou$e A rnrul schnolhou.se, perched on runners, was built recently In the heart of a logging camp In the Sierras near Mariposa, Cullf, The novel struc-ture, standing at an altltudu of 0,000 feet, and regarded as one of the lofti-est schools In California, can he moved about from ploce to place wltb ease. What Every Child Learni Retty You mustn't tell a He. ' Jane Why not? P.etty Recnuse It's like smoking; It Isn't right to do until you are grown up. THE FEATHERHEADS fanny Splashes Her Oar lllllllllilll i suppose YOU would thg old geezecs of I7" I W WANT TO GO BACK AND IwW V&jQ OLfcSS WILL SUGPOOWD MU I P'l GAWK AT LITTLE B0V3 bJ f SOME POTATO SALAD AND A II ' jj1 'Ijjl1' 'I'lllj yellow suckers and plivvccs M eas o? and call l! 4 WMO WOWT LlSTfNj TO MXjTELL A04 C5TWEI3 ThE2 Wl?0NO j l ' rfl1 HOW VOu "POT THE COW IK) J K)r NAMES- ,- SING- - TH GLASS SOMG-- - W- - 4h u6 3ee j -- i C. fllW BOOS OMWS BEAUTIFUL GIFT Vl P FR0M toMHENOSMCtX J $ ""I'lllll TbALMA MATtTC OF AWEIO 1 I PABADE TO VOATGr TUB J L& V CHEnLA8.;PATP0NrzE'TMB Mfflffl 7 " II MOST LIKCLV CLfcSS-MAT- e TO J WW IIP 3p;--3 (wELL-- a ' succeed' wuo is teller. m w J ' V V --c ' the vine citv bank which v- -- Xf I TU CLASS 8008 N OvJSp pS S- - l Western NewspapeUni |