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Show PAGE TWO. THE PRESS-BULLETI- . " CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bean 10 tmm signature of Wirf. f iZcuAit wsssssssssssssasamssssssssss 1 USE STANDARD AND SCOFIELD COAL . IT MAKES THE BEST OF FIRES Quick Service. Order Today and the Coal will be delivered i Tomorrow. Try it. I Coppcriicld Coal Co: PHONE 38 II Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you do eat! U l a One or two tfoet I r'rVv ARMY & NAVY 'T I A -- DYSPEPSIA TABLETS -3 jf will make you feel ten year younger. Best II known remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach II and Dyspepsia. II 25 cents a package at all Druggists, or U sent to any address postpaid, by the I U. S. ARMY & NAVY TABLET CO. 260 West Broadway, N.Y. 11 1. I obtained through the old established 3 f'D. SWIFT 4. CO." ar being quickly ' I bought by Manufacture. , I Sand a model or cketche and denrriptfon f) I of your inventiou for FREE SEARCH and report on patentability. We (ret pat- - t ant or no fee. Write for our free book I needed inventions. I Id. swift & co. H Patent Lawyers. Krtab. 1889. I I OXFORD 1 ' I (Formerly Budweiser) Pocket Billiards ; v First Class Cafe, Modern Rooms in Connection. : ' I - Tobaccos, Cigars, Drinks, 499 MAIN STREET I J. W. MATTHEWS," Manager. A visit to Salt Lake City is not complete unless you have a Big Swim AT THE 52 Waat Braaaway Twa hot sulphur wafer pools. Lady and Can tlamen attendanta. RHEUMATISM VANISHES .TURKISH (SI BATH AND BED Qf JL DB.P.S. HAGEMAN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bingham Canyon, Utah. Office: Above Woodring's Drug Store. - Residence: Eckman Aparmtents. Telephone 35. Office hours: 1 3; 7-- 8. M. E. WADDOUPS I Attorney and Counselor I Suite 610 Judge Building, I Salt Lake City, Utah. I The Bingham & Garfield Railway Company r- - The Popular Route - Finest Equipment. Best Train Service Two Trains Daily Between Bingham and Salt Lake City TIMETABLE 'f ?p Effective February 24, 1918 Leave Salt Lake City: Arrive Bingham: No. 109 6:55 a. m. Nof 109 8-2- 5 a m No. 111... 2:15 p.m. No. Ill 3 :35 p! rn! ' 6 BmgILam.: Arrive Salt Lake City No. 110 8:45 a. m. No. 110 10:05 &. m. No. 112 4:00 p. m. No. 112 ..... 5-4- 0 n m TICKET OFFICES CARR FORK AND ' UPPER STATION I Take Electric Tram at Carr Fork Station. T H. W. STOUTBNBOROUGH, A.O.P.A. P. B SPBNOBR j Salt Lake City. Utah. ,Agent, Bingham, Utah. I The Double Standard Oil & Gas Co. is the owner of j valuable oil leases in Kansas, Oklahoma and Wyoming, and j has recently added a valuable lease in the new Electra-Burk- - ' ! burnettvjii field, Texas, with 8 producing wells, together with pumping plant, tanks and full equipment, connected with the pipe line, and selling oil. Price was $2.00, now $2.50, and expect soon to be getting $3.00 per barrel for this ? high grade oil. The Company is pushing drilling operations in this new field, as rapidly as possible. Stock is now selling at 10c a share. You can join us in an exceedingly profitable business 1 enterprise, and in doing so, help increase the oil output, f which means, help win the war. Write us for free map and further particulars. i Special inducements to live, active salesmen. ; I DOUBLE SWARD OIL AND HAS COMPANY Boston Uldg Phone Main 3937. Denver, Colo. , The Press-Bullet- in I. H. MA8TERS, General Manager. C D. McNEELEY, Editor and tetee. tubacrlptlon 12.00 a Year In Advance ; 12.60 an Tlma. Entered, m aaooad-claa- a matter Jan II, 1915, at the poatottica at Ptoto, 7Uh, under th act of March 3d. 1879 laaued Friday af Each Week at Prove, - Utah. ;:' . CONSERVE SUGAR ... v, In this dav of sacrifice, "a great responsibility rests on our noble housewives as well as on our brave fathers and sons. , An urgent request Is made that sugar be conserved. The serious shortage of ships has made it Impossible for us to Import Cuban Ugar which has heretofore supplied a large percentage of our require- - menu. . In the present crisis, all Bug- - ar producing states or com- - munities will necessarily di- - vide their product with "our boys over there," our valiant allies and other non-suga- r producing states. Conservation In the real sense of the word must be started by th housewife. This Is the logic?! starting point. This is our opportunity of reaping the Joy of sacrifice, self denial. Sugar bowls should be tem- - porarily abandoned and placed among the old relics, until the sugar conditions materially Improve. e We appeal to you as patriot-- lo citizens of our great Unit-- ed States. Please do not let our appeal be in vain. . EDITORIALS (By C. D. McNeeley) J SUGAR FOR PRESERVING Now that the regulation regarding the. use of sugar has gone into effect it is quite likely that in many sections of this state that preserving fruits and putting up jam and jelly will be-come very popular. Very likely many people who have never be-fore interested themselves in this line of industry will undertake the preserving work on a large scale. The use of sugar here is now to be reduced. That is the peo-ple will be limited in the matter of making purchases to very small quantities except where the sugar is to be used for preserv-ing fruits and preparing other articles of food. This being the case a great many people it appears have decided on preserving are now buying sugar by the hundred pounds for that purpose. ; But in case there is a large increase in the amount of pre-serving the average family cannot use very much sugar for this work because it does not require so much sugar for preserving. There are doubtless many people who will now engage in preserv-in-g who have never done so before and they might have the opin-ion that they would have to use large quantities of sugar. A lady who has had much experience in preserving and knows much of the requirements of the average family along this line writes us as follows: "One hundred pounds of sugar will put up the following, making all much richer than what is bought at the stores: 100 glasses of jelly, 30 pounds; 25 quarts of jam, 25 pounds; 200 quarts of canned fruit, 45 pounds. Where will they get jars and where will they put the fruit when it is put up? And what in heaven's name will a family of two or three do with so much fruit? Therefore, it will not take a great quantity of sugar to do the canning and preserving. But it is possible that there may be a few who will get sugar for canning and preserving and use the iwectening for other purposes and this feature will have to be 'ooked after. Everyone will be allowed enough sugar for the or-Oin-family use, but will not be allowed to make purchases only in small quantities. This is intended to conserve the sugar supply and prevent waste. Many people eat too much sugar and this new regulation will be beneficial to their health as well as their bank account. ' !LiiJ.iL 4 i. REVISING THE SOCIALIST PLATFORM It is reported from New York that a revision of the Socialist anti-wa- r platform adopted at the St. Louis convention is being Agitated by Socialist leaders. One of these in particular, A. W. Ricker, former publisher of the Appeal To Reason, expounded his views recently at a "family gathering" of New York Socialists. ' Mr. Ricker's remarks indicate so clearly the kind of repudi-ation the majority Socialists are receiving at the hands of the public that they are of .more than passing interest. The conse-quences of the St. Louis platform, Mr. Ricker said, have .been threefold: , "First Ve did not succeed at all in stopping the war. "Second The American government, being fully determined to prosecute the war with all vigor enacted censorship laws which have in their enforcement resulted in suppressing the So-- " f 'alist press. 'Third Our hostile attitude toward the government almost 'mmediately linked us up with the anarchists, the I. W. W., and the s." Mr. Ricker goes on to say that no government, "not even a Tocialist government," could afford to tolerate internal propa-ganda calculated to promote discord and rebellion when the en- tire nation was making colossal sacrifices, both of money and of men, in the prosecution of a great war. And Mr. Ricker adds that he has now come to believe that "the supreme task of the world outside of Germany is to bend every energy and to make every conceivable sacrifice to the end that the German dream of conquest be brought to naught." Loyal Americans will welcome support in our great under-taking from all elements of the community, no matter what their political faith. But we shall be unwise if we do not keep on our guard against all varieties of eleventh hour repentance. . It is obvious that the Socialists would have something to gam ay making at least an ostensible recantation. They could hope that protection would again be given to their speakers and . magazines. That there is a tendency in this direction is indicat- - ea oy ine revival oi mat rabid magazine, the Masses, under a mew title with the old anti-w- ar utterances expunged. But Americans will not forget that these same Socialists "subscribed to the St. Louis platform. By their acquiescence in that platform, which still remains the official statement of the : parry position, they align themselves with every enemy of our , government and with every- - friend of the German cau?e. Some - of them now profess to see that they were mistaken. But even if we grant that they are sin-e- re what shall wo say of their judg- ment? Having made a blunder of the gravest consequences, can we tr jst them not to blunder again! Is it conceivable that Amer-icans should ever want to turn over any function of government to men who admit they could not see any reason why we should . defeat Germany? ' The St. Louis platform is one of the most disastrous blows that Socialism has received anywhere in the world and it will be ; surprising if within any brief period of years the Socialist party in America can recover the ground it has lost. . r '! I. W. W. LITERATURE One day last week the whole time of the court at Chicago which is trying the indicted I. W. W. members, was taken up in reading extracts from the literature circulated by that organiza-tion, much of it in foreign languages, and the revelation of their principles and propaganda was somewhat startliifg. Mucb of it was from their periodical publications. The following is from the Alarm: "Is it harder to kiss a German flag than an American flag? Is it harder to slave under a German regime than an American? "Curses will rest on the heads that in cowardly submission go out to murder people and bring destruction over a prosperous land and its innocent people." One' of them, the editor of another magazine called The - Bulpar, prints a dictionary of military terms over the signature Alexander Berkman. The difinitions given are as follows: "Allies, Nymphs of Democracy; Barbarians, Nations not the Allies; uns, Devoted patriots of central Europe; Humanity, Treachery of the Government; Kaiser, The Ambition of the President; Loyal Citizens, A deaf, dumb and blind subject; Reg-istration, Funeral procession of liberty; Independ-ent opinion; Victory, Ten million men killed." The government captured thousands of copies of this litera-ture. Much of it was in pamphlet form, some bound books and the remainder their current publications. How wide the circula-tion was is shown by the fact that it was found in the headquar-ters of the organization all over the country and the money it cost to publish it must have run up into very high figures. As he members of this organization were known for their poverty the question arises: Who furnished that money? GOD SAVE OUR SPLEJID MEN In Canada a new stanza has been added to the national anthem. It la now used all over the Dominion and has a peculiar power which at times Is so intense that it is almost more than can be borne. A writer in the Boston Transcript points to this stan-- a as an evidence ot the growth of democracy. He says: "In all the long years and genera- tions that Britishers have been sing-ing God Save The King, It never oc-curred to a? body to add a prayer for the men who serve the King. Now it is done instinctively and fervently, with no thought of disloyalty to' iris Majesty, but only in the natural as-sumption that the welfare of the sol-diers ranks equal to that of the king Lady Alkins, in closing a service of Canada's leading women, said: 'Now we will pray for our gracious King and for our splendid men.' The na-tional anthem was sung, and hand-kerchiefs went to many eyes as the added stanza followed. What a heart throb in the closing couplet! The stanza will be sung throughout the United States, for we, too, have splendid men and they are in equal danger. "God save our splendid men. Send them safe home again; God save our men. Keep them victorious, ' Patient and chivalrous, They ara so dear to us, God save our men." 00 NOT DEBASE THE STARS AND STRIPES i During the past week I have read of many instances in various towns of the United States, whire people, carried away by mistaken patriotic zeal, have forced aliens of German birth who have made n re-marks, kiss th flag of the United States: and I would like to voice my opinion of this matter, and perhaps some one will be inclined to take the same view that I do. In the first place no one will fail to admit that such a procedure accomplishes no good. The only thing that can be said is that an alien has been forced to kiss the flag and let me ask ot all thinking people, if such a kiss would not be contamination and not loyal-ty? Judas kfesed Christ in the gar-den. He did It to betray not to love, end let me ask, will not any man who has b&m forced to kiss our banner against hia will be doubly likely to betray that banner In revenge? Mob work is generally , mistaken zeal, and It Is done In strong emotion-al excitement If these who force this Indignity on our flag would pause to consider, they would find some other method to secure loyalty. Our Hag is valuable .tor what has been invested in It for the lives that have been given to make it stand for the great principles of truth and lib-erty which we loyal Americans ven-erate. The touch of unfriendly lips cannot honor that flag. No man is made a better man by doing under the force of fear what he is unwilling to do in calm reason. After all the situation ia sad enough, ind thoe who make unpa-triotic remarks should be properly punished, but compelling a man to kiss the flag for which our brave young men are offering their lives, when the act is under the compul- - yion of fright and force, does not lion or but contaminate. Mrs. B S. Dart, in Grit. ' So Insistent I becoming tba demand for a more complete mobilization of America's man power that extension of the draft age limits probably will not be postponed until the winter ses-sion of congress. Provost Martha! General Crowder srges that the law be amended Immediately to take In all between the ages of eighteen and forty-fiv- e years, and Secretary of War Baker says he will recommend each an amendment If submitted by the senate or house. General Crowder told the military affairs committees that the legislation Is needed at once If we Intend to do anything this year. He mt only wants more fighting men, tat also he denlres to extend the "work or fight" order no that there will b virtual conscription of labor for war Industries. His pinna would asure the registration of four or five million men qualified for military service. SPRlNGViLLE CANNING FACT-ORY WILL START IN A FEW DATS The new canning factory of the Springville Company is ready for ser-vice, and work will begin In a few days on this season's pack of bjana. The outlook for the boan and tomato crops in this vicinity this season Is good, and the cannery expects to put up a larger pack than In any preced-ing year. The cannery is one of the uioBt modern in the state. PROVO WATER SUIT CONTIN-UED UNTIL SEPTEMLEII TERM Of COURT j tlenre as to the source of the wnter-work- s water on which no evidence was introduced at the trial, and whe-ther the farm lot land should be clas-sified with city lots or with farm In the f'rovo Reservoir Co., vs Pro-v- o City, et al. hearing Thursday after-noon. K. A. AVedgewood. for the plain-tiff stated that if there is any mis-take or lack of evidence as to thj area of the city lots that could he Kone over ami corrected The court also expressed a desire to hear cvi- - i lauds. On these three points the plaintiff expressed a willingness that Invetti gallon be made and that an adjourn-ment of the hearing be had for this purpose. The hearing was adjourned until September 3, when other iVflttPrs of the motion will aUo bo taken ip. Just "Substitution." 'j ITero is n "substitution" story that will tnke a lot of beating. It concerns t n fanner who was given a shopwalker .. I us a farm laborer. The first morning be said to his new bund: "Take a horse and go to the station for a load . of polatoos." When he arrived the la- - 1 I tln agent si.1,1: A r,shti but ,low re you poing to take them without a . ? enrt? -- Iienrme!" said the man, "I've i : forgotten the tait."-Argo- naut. ' j Initial Step to Independence. The fact that well-to-d- o people are alrhost Invariably "close" and "saving" nnd usually have that reputation, should be a niinhiy good pointer-fo- r tliose who nrc always hard up. It Isn't luck, It Isn't robbery that starts young people on the road to Independ-ence. It Is common sense and moral coiiraee to deny themselves that does the business. ' |