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Show FOUR - ' U3"nna-93- 3 MA v . t,. ...... v ,...,. .... .t, , .. Cife IsfE sAve- by wire ."DO IT ELECTRICALLY" MONTH I September is DO IT ELECTRICALLY month all over the United States. Thousands of people are putting aside the ed methods of housekeeping and are install-ing modern, efficient, Electric Appliances, that save so much time, labor and money. Join this great, progressive throng by getting the full value of Electricity in your home! To do this you should first equipyour house with Convenience Service Outlets. These outlets provide handy places for you to plug in your Vacuum Cleaner, Electric Iron, Washing Machine,' etc., without the trouble of unscrewing a light globe. You can have them put in every room at a low Cost and without inconvenience. . . Call us up or drop us ajiiie and we will give' you estimates on complete installation of I service outlets without putting you under, any obligation. - "j.; ; UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. jCljjH' ? ''i "EFFICIENT PUBLIC SERVICE" .'1' U ' 'L: :.'- - a):S'.k!--' rhyO :v ' . You Can't Eat Meat lOOMQes Away Preparing meat is only a part of Swift & Company's usefulness. The finest meat in the world wouldn't do you any good one r hundred miles away from your table. . ' Swift & Company efficiency has made it possible to place complete lines of products in the smallest and most remote communities. To be sure the work is done well I Swift & Company, through its branch III houses and car routes, brings the meat to w the retail dealer for you. II 4 Swift & Company lays out car routes , . ' covering towns big, little, medium size which are not served by a Swift branch house. . Salesmen find out in advance what is wanted by the dealers in every town. ', They are followed by refrigerator cars ' loaded with retailers' orders, which are delivered at each town fresh, clean, and v sweet-K)n- ce or twice each week. j! . Swift & Company operates a large number of car routes like this, from four-- ' teen distributing plants. . This is a necessary and natural part J of the packers Usefulness. It fits into .'. II 4, , .; . , the industry in an orderly, effective way. , It makes better meat cheaper from one' jj ': end of the land to the other. ' I j Swift & Company, U. S. A. ' - -- gMcGall Patterns HsL r vou can be patriotic j PS. Api in the use of r!- - tM dwMu' tty!e' ,f'whenyou VMii m$llWk a new garment, you ijfl x nUWlW' use'a McCa11 Pattern hli I 111 ccrlain lhe fe Iv wilMUlumv 1 comci' k ; t P-l- ! u llP and that il can p wliv not ProPer'y made '' 'wjMVmf-- wilh less mateHaL ' bMM McCall Patterns AM v now on sale ItO DrM THE McCALL COMPANY New York Saa Frnciteo Atlanta Chicago Boston Toronto I' 1071-71- 1 The Bingham & Garfield I Railway Company The Popular Route, Finest Equipment. Best Train Service Two Trains Daily Between Bingham and Salt Lake City T-- TIME TABLE Effective February 24, 1918 Leave Salt Lake City: Arrive Bingham! No. 109 .6:55 a. m. No. 109 8:25 a. rru No 111 2:15 p.m. No. Ill 3:35 p.m. Leave Bingham: Arrive Salt Lake City: No 110 ...8:45 a.m. No. 110 u 10:05 a.m. 4:00 No. 112 5:30 p. m No 112 p. m. TICKET OFFICES CARR FORK AND UPPER STATION g I Take Electric Tram at Carr Fork Station. g H W. STOUTENBOftOUGII, A.O.1P.A. P. B. SPENCER, g . Salt lAke City, Utah. . Agent, Bingham, Utah. Where You Get the Best Bread The City Bakery, At 52 Main Street, Is Making the Hest Bread In Town. If You Don't Believe It Give It a TftaJ- - 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 Bread as that is 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-body. If You Want the Best Bread, Phone Your Order A 382 I Bolotas Bros. Proprietors. I City Bakery eoch iiiliii i THE 6EBII USE LULL IN FIGHTING IN WEST PRELUDE TO HEAVY BLOWS BY THE ALLIES. American 4 Troops Advancing Along Moselle River, While British and French Advance, and Serbian 8prlng Surprise on Bulgars, With .the Army In France. Ameri-can troops on the right wing of Gen-era- l Pershing's army have , reached Vandieres, on the Moselle, a little more than a mile west of the German border and haltjway between and Pagny-Sur-Mosell- While the Serbs and their French allies are wresting from the Bulgars some of the strongest positions they have held in Macedonia for two years, Marshal Foch's forces are nibbling suc-cessfully at the German lines on the western front in the face of more de-termined resistance. The Near Bust furnishes the most sensational news, horrver. The of-fensive which has been launched there seems not only the most successful, but the .most pretentious In many months. It appears probable that a further advance by tue Franco-Serbia- n troops will necessitate the recall of the Bulgarian divisions which hav been loaned to Emperor William to bolster the Teuton ' resistance In France and Flanders. An official Serbian report declares that the reconstructed army of the battered, but not beaten, little king-dom has taken not only 3000 prisoners but an Important purk of cannon. The Bulgars admit having retired, but de-clu- re the attack has been checked to the north of Gradeshltsa. There Is nothing to Indicate, howevtr, that the advance of the Serbs and French has been definitely held up. Lull Thought Prelude to Heavy Blows. The lull In the fighting In the west is regarded "by military critics as merely the prelude to heavy blows at the foe by the Americans, British and French armies. The British advanced their lines slightly at several points. They are making steady progress In the Invest-ment of SL Quentln, a difficult task under most favorable conditions. General Petaln's veterans are forg-ing ahead slowly but surely In their grim and desperate struggle for the St. Gobaln forest which the Germans have been ordered to hold at ail costs. Not only Is the posKlon. a natural cita-del, but the (Teutons (Jiave fortified it in every way their Ingenuity could devise. ' Notwithstanding the difficulty of their task, however, the French are moving on, taking prisoner as, they go. ' '"''' TRAPPED IN CUNNING PLANT. Eleven Perleh In Factory Fire In New Jersey. " Newark, N. J. Trapped In a cloak-room on the top floor, eight girls, a boy and a man perished here Tuesday .n a flre which destroyed the plant of the American Button company. An-other girl' was killed, when, seeking to escape from the flames, she leaped from a window. Nine other girls were Injured, several probably fatally. The girls on the lower floors made their escape. Most of the dead and Injured were working In the carding room at the top of the building. It Is relieved that, when they found escape by means of fire escapes and stairways ciit off, they fled In a panic to the clonk room, where their bodies were found later. CAPTi iG IS II 1HEJLI PEN W'ord has reached Provo that Cap-tain R. P. King is at Camp Kearny in what is termed the ,,lBull Pen' or in other words In the guard house for deserters. This message conies through a captain In the army serv-ice and is reliable information. The captain was at one time with P. Bat-tery and is well known in this coun-ty and state. King was arrested in France, and had in a branch of the U. S. army service and had attained the position of sergeant! when he iu recognized by a former member of his outfit who had trans-- 1 ferred to another branch of the serv-- 1 ice. King In the eastern part of the U. 8. and the company in which he enlisted sailed almost imme-diateel- y for iFrance. iHe was serving under an assumed name and had grown a moustache as a disguise. He is being held for trial as a de-serter, but thus far no hearing for him has been set. If will be recalled that King absconded with some of the battery funds and also having borrowed large sums from his fellow officers and men. The report that he was in the fed-eral prison at Fort Leavenworth is without foundation. FRANCE WILL FIGHT ON. Premier Clemenceau Makes Stirring Reply to Peace Plea. Paris. "Forward ' to victory!" is France's answer to Austria-Hungary'- s peace bid. Premier Clemenceau thun-dered It In the chamber of deputies late Tuesday, winding up one of the most eloquent and inspiring speeches he has ever made. The whole house, which had constantly Interrupted him with cheers as he made his . defiant speech, rose to Its feet and wildly acclaimed the "tiger," resolving unani-mously to have his speech posted throughout France. Mangln's Army Gains Ground. With the Army in France. Creep-ing on all fours over plateaux and up ravines dotted with German quickflr-ers- , the French are seeking hidden mac-hine- gun nests and reducing them with hnnd grenades. Generul Man-gln's troops are making one of the most courageous and most admirable fights of this war south of St. Oobaln forest, against what a high French of-ficer described as "a natural citadel that men have been perfecting for four years." NOTICE TO WATER USERS Notice ifl hereby given that all water users are cautioned, warned and admonished agalnrt sprinkling their lawns and yards before 8 o'clock In the evening, and then for not more than thirty minutes, and all persons having defective taps or toilets which permit of leakage or wastes are noti-fied that the same must be repaired and placed in perfect condition im-mediately or such offending persons will be disconnected. , The available ruppiy of good, pure water is ample providing the people exerclne proper care and discontinue wastage. TOWN OF inxOHAM. William Robbins, Watennaster Bay a Liberty Bond this time clothing, with his telephone helmet, oxygon mark, goggles and gunner's bolt. An aircraft instrument board, a set of buzzers, an aerial bomb, and one of the big propellers that lift the air machines will be shown. PHOTOGRAPHS MADE IN THE AIR ARE SHOWN How the earth appears to the mil-itary aviator as ho soars hundreds or thousands of yards above will be shown in the combined government exhibits at the Utah State Fair by a set of enlargements from photographs taken with a gun camera. The nreial photographs, both day and night, will be part of the displays of the Aircraft Production Hoard. Tim gun camera itself will be shown, with a training camera used by stud-- nt fliers. Ground lover. also will have a chance to see how a binlman looks when he is all dressed up in winter Congress Asked for War Funds. Wanhington. Congress was asked by the wiir department on Tuesday to provide $7.:M7,0Ofi.i'XM la addition to previous estimates for carrying out the enlarged American military pro-gram for the coining year.' Shackling the- Temper. There Is an adage somewhere to the effect that the lighter who lose his temper gladdens his enemy. The ex-txr- ts of the prize ring will tell you this Is a true saying. In further proof we hHve the Solomonic assurance that he who Is slow to anger Is better than the mighty. All of which means that anger Is weakening, nrn ihat the man who permits hln temper to rule him bus tt destructive master. Kind, Not Critical-Thin-as well as you can of every one who is trying In tione hard times to do his duty to b brave, cheerful and useful. I.et ns not b among ' those "who wet their tongue like a sword ami bend their hows to shoot their arrow1, even bIMor wonts." I Kindness help, w here cHticisiu tun- - Lot. Exchange. Rebels Attack Power Plant. El Paso. A report that .rebels tin-der lliginio Agulhir had attacked and damaged the power phiot or power tnoisiiiN-'ifii- i Pno, which furnishes electricity for Mexico City, has been received here from Cliiluiahuit City. 1 |