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Show f i .UN , , mill mil, ,r - rS ' : ; v THE PRESS-BULLETI- jryjj ; U rl2T SJy, lEV" wtljfl mir hlr- - Jalp to gnrorfug WANT ADSj T FOR SALE OR RENT Modern up to date restaurant, good location, iu-- ' quire at the 'Butte. . FOR SALE Harley Davis motor-cycle In first class condition; will sell reasonable. Dr. Flynn. FOR SALE 4917 Indian motor-- f . cycle with side car and everything in good condition. Electxic headlight and improvements. Apply to Anselmo & .Pezzopane. 7sT ..FOR SALE Vase & Son piano, will ' . sell at a bargain and take Liberty Bonds in payment. Inquire. Press-Bulleti-n office. - ' LOST (Bunch of keys. Finder re-tur- n to PressiBulletin Office fi , r j President Wilson Smokes I The Propagandists Out Ii Of The Grass! & Let Every Utahn Who Loves His, Country L Sj ". , , ; r a Read This Appeal j- - m It is now tynown that former PresidenlRoosevell, the recognized T , spokesman of the Republican party, who has been sending in- - J; j struclions to senators and representatives of congress, interfering . J n with peace negotiations in which eight other nations are vitally f 3 concerned, recently advised Republican Members of 7i V Congress to reject the 14 peace conditions to which , V y .- - k. our Allies have long since agreed! L 3 r q Because of this unwarranted interference 3 with international affairs, at a moment of Ja the most delicate tension in the history of t' u the worldt President Wilson has issued an lj .appeal to every American to stand by the f 5 government, ; '' - "' I Tax . Vftr --fe . ' r S Arp--r x T I y W f fA Thf President calls upon those who have been nagging and U and knocking n rocking the boat to come out in the open and let the world see who I they are and what they mean. He knows who has been hindering the work T of the Government and now he wants the people to know. 5 I was for this reason that he issued his appeal to the people of m 'i U America, knowing it would smoke the propagandists out of the grass! I U And out of the grass they came! T Americans, you know now who has been fighting the President. You I- - fA know now who originated departmental inquiries which placed valuable " J information in the hands of the Kaiser. You know now who it was that I Ta secretly opposed every move the President made since the war began. In W a single stroke, the President has exposed their ambuscade! t" !3 - Fellow Countrymen, don't let the Hun game be played here as it was lii S in Russia. This is no hour to strike at the President! A vote that will , T Tna repudiate the President is a direct blow at the United States of America. I Contemplate for a moment the great joy it would bring in the Kaiser's r m circle! 3 We ardently believe that Utah will not forsake the President in this f TL r?.y.e frM Bather, Utah will stand with him and rebuke the unthinking L Q politicians who have sown discord and distrust! . F i 1 --Jthers, Mothers, as you expect your boy, who tonight is in the mud M I J of Flanders or on the fields of Picardy, to be loyal to his commander, bo CI m you be loyal to your commander-in-chief- ! Match his loyalty with your I own! And let the whole world know that p I Utah Will Not Fail the President Now! 1 STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET ? I 1 n For Congressman, First District For Congressman, Second District f ' I MILTON II. WELLING JAMES II. MAYS h ' t m For Judges Of The Supreme Court M k I S. R.THURMAN VALENTINE GIDEON A. J. WEBER - h DEMOCRATIC STATE COMMITTEE ll j W. R. WALLACE, Chairman. IL li. THURMAN, Secretary. fl j '"A ' (Political Advertisement) . ' Li 1 J . - ' m i a 1 : y i gat4ggi fesg gg ess pgi psaehcrygea ss yg i-- .- ' ' ' f, No Mystery 1 y ? 4 in Meat;". -- t . Some things are so simple I ijlj that they have to be explained ' j j again and again. When things ' I ti' are obvious, people keep looking J N jj for mysteries behind them. ll So it is with the packing bus- - jj Ijj iness. The mere size of Swift j & Company confuses many. Because their imaginations are ' J j ilj not geared up to scale, they be- - i j si lieve there must be. magic in it I somewhere some weird power. jl I I Swift & Company is just like any ' '; other manufacturing business run by !j , human beings like yourself; it takes in ! raw material on the one hand and turns 'I out a finished product on the other. j I Swift & Company keeps down the j I' "spread," or the expense absorbed be-- jj j nil' iween raw and finished material, to as .' j I low a figure as possible. (Kit didn't ' it would be put out of business by ji II others who do.) . ' ill! I- - ' '1 jijj How much Swift & Company pays 'M for the raw material, and how much . j! , jl: it gets forme finished product, depends j upon conditions which Swift & Company does not control. w It depends entirely upon how much j f people want the finished product, and . jl r how much raw material there is avail- - ! . able to make it from. . j, ' ' i 'l,; The profits of Swift & Company amount to less than one cent per pound on all meats and by-produ- cts less than one-four- th of a cent on bef. ' ' ;i ' K;ep Your Pledge Mmk Good for Our , Fighting Man it.BUY WAR STAMPS -- SAVINGS illi hlr J i Swift & Company, U.S. A. In 'if il'' nn. ' .Jfi.. il.' r. l:....,.uw: ...Li die have been III with the influenaa. j They are all getting along very nice-- J ly according to the latest reports. I " ' I T, 3, Trammel with his wife and little daughter, Virginia, returned from Salt Q,ake City on Monday after-noon's train. Mrs. E. A. Miller received news Saturday that her father William Erickaon, former resident of Bingham now an employe of the U. S. S. & R. Co., and living in Midvale, was in a very critical condition with the influ-enza. iLater reports say that he is getting along very nicely. E. A. Miller, manager of the 'Bing-ham branch of the Gibson Commer-cial Co., went to Salt Lake City last Saturday on business for the comi-pany- . E. O. Locke spent Tuesday in Salt Lake City on business. H. EJ. Hastings, manager of the Bingham Colition IMines , Co., with his wife and two daughters, ISarah And Barbara spent the week end in Salt Lake City. W. H, Middaugh of the Citizens I State Bank was a Salt hake visitor Tuesday evening. ' i BINGHAM BRIEFS Your coal goes a long way wften burned in Cole's (Hot Blast Heaters. They are fuel savers. Most heaters waste half your fueL Cole's (Hot Blast (Heaters save and use that wasted portion. . (Lawrence West motored to Salt Lake City on Tuesday. George Mclntire's two children have pneumonia. '.-- The Copperfield Red Cross have collected four boxes of old clothing tor the ibelgiums and made three more quilts. - Eric Klopenstine has come home from a training camp in Florida with the influenza. Mrs. McNab and her daughter Wini-fred who have been visiting William and Guy Mc'Nsb in Copperfield have returned to their home in Missouri. The John Stubs family in Copper-fiel-d have influenaa. Chloe Dean of Salt (Lake City is a Bingham visitor this week. Arnold Glffin had two fingers f crushed In a cement mixer, although his hand is very painful, he still keeps smiling. Otto Kappele of ILedd Mine, was a Salt (Lake visitor Wednesday. Mr. Orson Wasdon enlisted In the U. S. marines, Wednesday. Mr. Harry (Freeze has left to work for the government In Nitro, and Mrs. Freeze has moved to Salt Lake to stay. Mrs. Olivia Appolonia died at the iFrico mine, Wednesday, of pneumo-nia. The funeral was held Thursday at Mounjt Calvary with Rev. Father Deisa officiating. Rlna Aimorette, seven-month-ol- d daughter of (Mr. and Mrs. Aimonetti of Phoenix, who died Thursday, was burled in the Bingham cemetery. (Mr. (Harold Wolpert, age 28, who Mrs. Caroline Huebner of Eureka, Nevada, is in Bingham visiting her laughter, Mrs. A. Anderson. James Hyland is a Salt Lake visit-or this week., Clarence Watkins and Fred Hon-king motored to Salt Lake, Tuesday. The quarantine has been lifted at Clays in Markham. . , IMargaret Tennant, who has been attending school at (Logan ,has re-turned home because of the "flu." C D. McNeely of the Ureas Bulle-tin staff spent Tuesday In Salt Lake. H. N. Standish went to Salt Lake City, Sunday to attend the funeral of his son-in-la- George Moore. Lucy Tappers is now an operator at tb telephone exchange. Henry Williams and Marjorie Od- - nii following influenza was buried on October 29. Wilbur' Howard, eighteen-year-old- , died at the local hoapital, October 28. His mother, who HveaMn Roseburg, Oregon has been notified and until she arrive no funeral arrangements will be made. C. H, Brown, who has resided in 'Bingham for a number of years and who was the Democratic candidate for mayor last year, left yeeterday for Nitro, West Virginia, where he, will work for the government. Joseph Mayer, son of Andrew Mayer left last Saturday for Fortress Mon-roe, Virginia, where he will enter the officers training school. .Mr. May-er was at the state university and of twenty boys who took the examina-tion for the course, only eight paused, and he was one of the successful ones. i II. B. Aven, manager of the Miners Mercantile, has been selected a mem-ber of, the board of directors of the Copper State Bank to fill the vacan-- ' cy caused by the resignation of John M. .Hayes. The Commercial Club refused to al-low Republican advertising matter posted on the walls of the club rooms a few days ago on the ground that the club was not a partisan organiza-tion and that its membership was composed of both parties. In fact it' does not permit the bulletins of any political organizations to be playcard-e- d in the building. In other words, the Club does not take part in partisan politics. At a meeting of the town board on Wednesday night, the important mat-ters taken up were methods of deal-- ' ing with the influenza. And it seems that much apprehension has been caused by conditions just outside the city limits. In Highland (Boy there are 35 cases, and quite a number at Copperfield, but there is no county health officer here now and has not been for some time and it is feared that by reason of the fact that quar-antine matters are neglected at these places that the disease will be widely spread in the camp. The town board decided to ask the county authorities to take action to afford relief In this matter. I Policeman Phil Culleton left yester-day for Butte, Montana, to attend the funeral of his broher-in-law- , James S. Jjowney, who died In that city Wed-nesday. He will return home Monday. .... ' Harry Ooldsworthy who has been connected with the Consolidated state line for some time, has resigned and taken a position with the U. S. mines. Born to Mr. and 'Mrs. H. R. Gust October, a daughter, . Ross Bruner, of Princeton, Indiana, Is here visiting his aunt, Mrs. W. V, Paul. " ,Miss Laura Muir, who spent sever-al months here visiting her sister, IMrs. Harry J, iHerr, returned to her home at Rock Springs, Wyoming, last week to attend the funeral of her brother. William 'Muir, whose death occurred at Nitro, West Virginia. Mrs. T. J. Tramel was taken to Salt Lake this Week to undergo an operation. jj Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Matthews snd I children will leave in a few days for I southern California, where they will 1 spend two months in the semi tropics, f They will make the trip in their au- - i! tomobila. ' , (Continued on page 8) RESOLUTIONS Whereas it has pleased the AM mighty to take from the home of our sister, iMaud Connors, her dear hua-- ; " band, be it resolved that, We, the Ladies of Highland Re-i-, ' view, No. 7, W. (B. A. O. T. M. extend W our deepest sympathy to her and all ? ' the members of the immediate fam ily in her great sorrow. iBe it further resolved that a copy of these resolutions be printed in the , Press Bulletin, one copy presented to the bereaved family and a third copy entered on the records of Highland Review. Ethel Gronning, Comm. ' ' Elnora Nellsen, 'Lieut Comm. Vina Ball, R. K. Highland Review, No. 7. , W. B. A, 0. T. 1M. Mrs. Roy Loveridge entertained at dinner, Sunday, the following guests: Mrs. I VV. Davis, Mrs. Oliver Kirk- - ham, 'Mrs. Tom Shatter, iMrs. Ray Curey,' and Mrs. Ethel Bowlden. |