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Show . THE PRESS-BULLETI- N ' A NntMade Butter Made From Cocoanuts at the Price of ANIMAL FAT-MAD-E Oleomargarine This is to users of oleomargarine. Also to butter users who rebel at butter's cost Some Old-Worl- d scientists have solved the problem of making butter out of cocoanuts. Think of that It is made from that delicious nut-me- at which you use in shredded form on cake. It is churned with milk to give it butter flavor. A capsule of butter color comes in every carton. So it looks and tastes like butter of the finest grade. But this vegetable fat comes from Tropic cocoanuts. Thp NfltVlP Tmm It has the same food value as butter. It looks and tastes like butter. And you rarely find a butter so This product is called Troco. It is made in Mil- - pure and sweet as Troco. waukee by the Troco Nut Butter Company, in a model modern creamery. CZrontot IPmnrkmr We use the identical process which is used in ? JVUUUiny Europe, where this new delicacy was created. Troco costs about the same as high-gra- de Any grocer will supply it to you under this oleomargarine. Its use will save you much, as guarantee: compared with butter at the average price. "If one pound of Troco fails to prove itself You sacrifice nothing whatever. You get no the best article you ever tasted in place of but' lard, no oleo in it. You get nothing but the ter, we will gladly return your money." fat of the cocoanut, churned with milk and " . ." 'Salted. ; ; IVffldp tynm CnmnnniQ For vour own sake, try one pound. It will be fr a revelation. If you are not delighted, get your The usual oleomargarine is made, as you know, money back. from beef fat, hog fat and often cotton seed oil. It is churned with milk, as Troco is, to give it butter Notice: Under the law, all butter substitutes flavor. must be branded Oleomargarine. That law was It is a cleanly, healthful product. But lard and pated Tfs invcnt:d So the Troco oleo seem uninviting spreads. That's why so package is Oleomargarine" though there many cling to butter, despite the butter cost. n?1teo in " out Iroco comes All butter substitutes must also pay an extra tax from the white meat of the c c t . cocoanut. No food in the .world is more appealing. IVPfTTVT XTfYWT" Order a pound or two of Troco JJlLVJllN 1M J VV today. Your dealer has it, or can mmmmm. get it easily. Put Troco to a '..km.- competitive test. Both your palate and your pocketbook will decide in ' "! , ; , favor of Troco. If you arc not pleased, your money back " ", . . , . .:- . Troco Nut Butter Company, Milwaukee, wis. UTAH WHOLESALE GROCERY CO. Distributors 1 TELL YOUR WIFE CORNS LIFT OFF Doesn't hurt a bit to lift corns or calluses off with fingers Not a twinge of pitin or soreness bc(or applying, or afterwards. This -- may sound like a dream to men end women who have been cutting, filing and wearing torturous plasters. Yil Corns lift out and oalluses peel off at if by magic, says this Cincinnati authority. A quarter ounce of freefone costs but a few cents at any drug store. Apply a few drops directly upon your tender corn or callus, and instantly the sore-ness disappears; then shortly the corn or clla will I so loose that it lifts oft". Frcezone dries instantly. It doesn't .eat out the corn or callus, but just shrivels it up so it lifts away without even irritating the surrounding skin. Women should keep itin the dresier and never let a corn or callus ache twice. For entertaining friends for the family witi meals or j?Vk A between meals-'-an- y lime! There's no beverage that qnite pj) jl T' "hits the spot"as does BECCO the true, pure food beterage, A Order From ll I N G. L. RECKEK, MFGR., MNGIIAM, UTAH. jJ Bread ' crumbs ami Male pieecs of jbread are delicious nude into jnnl-jding-or useo! in scalloped di.slies. fill, (IDIfJJl-GIIINE-S, 11 i 11 11 ! How will the war be won? With airplanes, says one man. With big guns, says another. With ships, says a third. With Borne startling new In-- i vention, says a fourth. SjCd all the time everybody knows that if the war is won It will be won by soldiers everyday heros of the r ranks and plenty of them. Of such the United States possesses now 1,360,000. These are the fighters in this total the auxiliary forces are unrepresented. Most of them are still In the training camps. Not all of them as yet are dis-ciplined troops, fully equipped and armed for battlo. . IBut . there they are, 1,360,000 of them, called to the colors and enroll-- . ed. (Already they are one of the big-gest factors Hindenburg is reckoning -- ith for the campaign of 1918. " 'When Great Britain entered the war it was with a much smaller army. The first expeditionary force number--- ed barely a hundred thousand. The kaiser called it a contemptible little army. Yet without Its gallant work f at Mons, Parisi might have been taken by the Germans. One hundred thous-and men, and the encouragement they brought to the hard-presse- d French, were enough to avert defeat in the first year of the war. St is the hope of the allies that an-- ! other new force, ten or twelve times as great, may be enough in the fourth 'f year of the war to assure victory. . Only Two Regular Armies s Of the new American force over 300,000 men are regulars. In all the world only two regular armies re-main the American and the Japanese. The other have all been swept away in the flood of war. When the first American onslaught takes place, Ger-man landwehr and landsturm troops will find themselves opposed to an army of professional soldiers. Behind the regulars are the 400,000 ajoUliers of the national guard. Regu-- r rafis In exper!ence, many of them,' thanks to our neighbors to the south. After the guard came the 600,000 men of the new national army. This is the force that has grown in eight months out of the army that on April 1 numbered only 110,000 men. There will soon be as many commis-sioned officers in the new army as there wt?re privates at the beglning of th)A war. After the first training j filps the number of officers was 80,- - 000. It had been 20,000 at the start of the war. The second training camps I may raise the total to 100,000, and H a third series of camps will begin in January. Altogether, officers and men. the ( land forces of America number not far from a million and a half combatants. ; The huge size of the armies operat ing in Kurope has somewhat dulled t our minds to the meaning of a million nnjl a half of men. It is as if the en-tire" population of South Carolina, or of Nebraska, men, women and cliild-- i ren, were suddenly to be converted into young men clad in olive drab and organized into companys and battal- - ions, - Forces Are Large Crowd this force into passenger coaches, nearly 100 to the coach, and 15,000 coaches would be necessary to transport them. Fifteen hundred ten-ca- r trains would be called into service, As many more trains would be re-- quired to convey their equipment and supplies for a short perold. Yo marshal men in divisions Is a ' late step in the process of preparing them for the front. Army plans call for seventeen divisions of guardsmen, ' and another seventeen of the selected men. The regulars bring, the total lumbers of divisons to upwards of forty. 'A division in the civil war was a comparatively small affair very rare-ly did it exceed 10,000 men. A divis-ion in the new army is comparable to an army corps in the old. It num-bers, at full strength, 27,152 men. In camp it makes a good-size- d city full of men a city nearly as large as Og-de- Utah, or Zanesville or oughkeep-Fie- . or Shreveport Or if all the new army should be brought together in a single camp it would form, with the auxiliary forces that would be Immediately necessary to its support, a city nearly as large, helmets and trench mortars to be Been to. Each of the four infantry regi-ments in a division must have 480 trench knives, 192 automatic rifles, and three cannon. The "68 men of the machine gun battalion and the 5068 men of the field artillery brigade must have machine guns and three-inc- h guns In numbers that would stagger an artillerist even of so recent a period as the war with Spuln. Two hundred and seventy-fiv- e thou-sand troops were made ready to fight Spain in 1898 though only 60,000 of them were actually engaged. There were 2,700,000 enlistments In the federal army in the civil war. Many of this number were The highest total engaged at any one time was reached in the last' year of the war. On March 31, 1865, 980,000 men were fighting for the union. .The confederate army reach-ed the height of its strength in 1863. Something less than 700,000 men were under arms in the south at that time. Both armies in the civil war fought their battles unulded. The new army will fight alongside of a French army of 3.0U,000, and British overm'as forces amounting to another 3,000,(wt0. Mfre Is a united and firmly grand army of 7.360.0O0. Will the victories won by that great force In lie derisive? I If they are not, America lias the 'men and machinery to make a still greater clfurt. and doubtless quite as lively, as Phila-delphia. i To move these divisions, one after another, across the Atlantic, many new ships are being built. To move them up to the front from their port of debarkation, hundreds of miles of heavy railway track must be laid. jgAnd to enable the division to move on Us own feet after the railway has it down, a huge transportation equip-ment is provided. The most mobile . part of an infantry division is In the infantry Itself. Yet the 16,420 men of the four infantry regiments require for their own purposes 1326 draft mules, 168 bicycles, and sixty-fou- r f rolling kitchens. There must also be - 236 riding horses, four motor cars and eight motorcycles with side cars. The I 6,000 field artillerists need a much 5 greater equipment of animals and j vehicles. And there is an ammunl-Z- i tion train of 962 with its scores of Vtrucks, and a sanitary train of 949, with Its dozens of ambulances. Men Well Provisioned The first thing to be done for the new army was to provide the men with shelter and clothing, food and warmth. That large undertaking is all "?,t accomplished. Equally great is the ta-- of providing arms. To arm an infantry division In the civil war meant to provide as many muskets and as many bayonets a there wre uk n in the command. In the present war the job Is more complicated, 'i.re are riries f.nd bayonets to be f,irnihhed now as formerly. Hut there are also grenades and gas masks and Dally Optlmlstlo . Thought. . life is not only more plea r but wor happy than any prtncelj le. Colombia's Share. Colombia Is said to be annexing a large share of the castor oil trade for-merly held by India. How It Generally Works. After snylng, "I don't want to find fault," the average niun proceeds tf pick a flaw. |