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Show ' ' . . ... - OTV" " ' '-- ' ' , r HE PRESS-BULLETI-BUY'a" FOURTH LIBERTY BONO By H. V. Neal. Hark, tt voice to you appealing, ' Men of Freedom, Thought and Feeling, Innocent implore you kneeling, "IJuy a Bond." . tj Hoite of Hell are Right defying, Sparing not the elcV or dying; Broken heart to you are crying, "Buy a Bond." For our boye who, in the fight, Stand for U.S., for God and Right, Keep their home firea burning bright. Buy a Bond. In the name of Liberty, Strike the blow to make men Free, Help to win the Victory, ...... Buy a Bondl In Flanders Fields the Popples Bloom But if we are going to back up our fighting men by putting over the Fourth Liberty Loan with an oversub-scription we will have no time to pause and worship those poppies, nor to admire the poppies in our own fields. - "We were shelled without warning at 1 o'clock In the morning In our rest billets, and three -- of my lieutenants were killed instantly In the Inky dark-ness- ." This is the simple letter of a captain on the battle line in France. Do you count the dollars of you Fourth Liberty Loan subscription when every retaliatory shell from a 155 millimeter howitzer costs nearly $1001 "Your limit la your duty In the Fourth Llblrty Loan." "Back up Pershing and he will back the Kaiser over the Rhine." Buy Fourth Liberty Bonds. "If you can't work, buy; If yoir can't fight, buy; If you have bought buy," Fourth Liberty Bonds. "Liberty Bonds speak a languag the Kaiser understands. Talk to him today." Put your dollara In uniform. HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS Be Better LookingTake Olive Tablets If your skin is yellow complexion pallid tongue coated appetite poor you have a bad taste la your mouth a lazy, d feeling you 6hould take Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards' Clive Tablets a substitute forcalomel werepreparedbyDrEdwards after 17 years of study with his patients. Dr. Edwards'Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil You will know them by their olive color. To bave a clear, pink skin, bright eyes, no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy like childhood days you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act on the liver and bowels like calomel yet bave tio dangerous after effects. They start the bile and overcome const!-Ratio- n, That's why millions of boxes are sold annually at 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. Take one or two nightly and note the pleasing results. (- - IP)A:M11 A frf Contents l5Fluid Dracltn JjjM' J JjyM 111 fpF 'IH. For Infants and Children. r-- BPaSfK Mothers Know That li Genuine Castoria f m&SSSBS&j Always Bears the $ ThcreotinwMg Signature If , Ir ,fr tSr nclttcrOpidm,Mcrphlnen p l .IT 3&';': j-- IVY nr-,- : Mxsnu i I If :f. i ci1 I li lit ?s - - 2.--- - IX T II $&? 1 Alt UOU Con?tipatioiiandDiarrtioc. ! I I iindWishricssjKUl VAT - trrom-- : ji ror uvBr pill! x& I Thirty Years Exact Copy of Wrapper. cgMTull comnHy, ntm yen e . W 1 y ! " ; '. : - , ...... r visit to Salt Lake City is not complete unleea you have a Big Swim .' AT TUB "SARI" 52 Wert BroaJway Tw big natural hot sulphur water pool. Lady and Gan-tlam- an attendant. RHEUMATISM VANISHES TURKISH l. BATH AND BED U JEL VS J) Jbtoinwi through tha old estubllchwl i'D. SWIFT A CO." ara being (ii.icU bouht by MuniiiV-tLrc-- r, t Bnd a model ur skotchr" nnd d,"cr!rt!o-.'- of your Invention for FREE CEAffCH and report on patentability. W'c ft?i ents or no fea. Writ for our tree boob k of auOneodod inventions. D. SWIFT & CO, Patent Lawyers. Eub.i839. 307 Seventh St., Washington, D. C. . IIZZIllIIIIIIIIlllllIBiriKlZSIBBlIIIiaillEll I :No Red Tape to f Liberty Bonds La M S A $100 Liberly Bond is no less than m S a $100 bill. It is made by the United g S States Government on the ; same kind 5 of silk-pap- er used in making a $100 n bill. It bears the same guarantee -- r S . 5 written on a $100 bill except it guaran-- h S tees interest and names a definite date h on which the face value of it plus ac- - SJ S crued interest will be paid on demand. m 3 S The man, woman or child who buys one S S Liberty Bond will buy more. A holder H S of a Liberty Bond realizes it is money S and becomes anxious to get more. SS H g Buy Liberty Bonds Today S g Any Bank Will Help You I BltiGHAM STATE BANK I g EARL RANDALL, President. B S S. J. HAYS, Vice-Preside- S S R. P. UNANDER, Cashier. S g ISADORE GAUCIIAT. Asst Cashier. S 'laisiiiSEixiisaisiiiizzszaEaBisiiisiasiixiBiiKssiSM Bingham People Stop at THE BEST LITTLE HOTEL IN SALT LAKE The New Salt Lake l 372 South Main Street. Just South of Post Office. I 50 ROOMS Telephone, Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Running Water in Every Room. Accommodations with Private Bath if desired Rates 75c to $2.00 per day. No higher. Special by Week or Month. Centrally Located. All Depot Cars Pass the Door. mi, SUBSCRIBER it Fa5) i J f. . v y This w a reproducer of the win-dow poster to xvh'ch mbscribcrs to the Fourth Liber tM Loan are entitled. So AMERICAN Hne should be without it. raawwr r imiiiniiiiii r.-.-rii rmvaimcaarari umttnimiw' Carter's Little Liver Pills You Cannot be A Remedy That Constipated MAesLifej and Happy Worth Living 1 SZZ BARTER'S IRON PILLS frxany a. y.J,r.l '. .iC but wi'l ica'.ly help most pale-face- d people IT ECHOES IH BERUH v Every steel steamship turred ont In our hundred and mora shipyards has more than a million rivets, and the rat-tat-t- at of the riveters' "guns" swells in chorus with the clicking of the machine guns in France to drown the dying German cheers over their submarine exploits. The clinking dollars of the Fourth Liberty Loan will add a shriller voice to that chorus and further lower German morale. It's easy to cheer for our boys in France. Make your dol-lars shout in the Fourth Liberty Loan. Germany will under ' stand their voice without translation. KAISER PLANNED TO RULE WORLD AFTER OMpNTMRFARE : Thouaht Theft of Iron and Coal From France, Land From -- ' - n Russia, Would Pay Bill v , Planning world trade domination, If not actual world rule, as the outcome of a short s' campaign in ' Europe, Germany now finds herself outcast from among civilized nations, her people Impoverished, her honor Irrevocably stained by the blood of Belgium, and facing a future of fathomless Ignominy and disgrace. "I will make room for my growing people by taking some more of France and a few thousand square miles of Russia," said the Kaiser. "We will get tha Iron and coal In Northern ftgnce for manufactures which we will sell the conquered population of Russia, and this, besides Indemnities, . will more than pay for the war. . Eng-land will not dare come in, and our merchant fleets will soon crowd her from the world trade routes. ' , , "If. the. United States does not acquiesce, her manufacturers will get no more of our dyes and chemicals, '." her farmers no more of our fertl-- . " ' 5 Users. And we will also take away from her . all South American com-merce.' GERMAN GRAVES GRIM ANSWER Now, across the graves of a mil- - lion of his young men, the Kaiser is - beginning to see the sun set on the smallest of his ambitions. "Poch will , never cross the Rhine,' Is now the German watohword. German cities, Shrieking beneath the visitation of allied and American airplane bombers cry ont: No more of this barbarity." Suoh cites are echoed In the ghostly laughs of thousands of Gotha. and Zeppelin victims in London and Paris. The Rhine will be crossed, and Cologne and Berlin will wince be-neath the shells of . Allied guns, "Five million men In France," cries America. "Remember Belgium and and the war In 1919." To America and ber five million fighting nen In France will cpme the greater glory of the world war. But that end will not be achieved with-out the saorlfloe of thousands of those men, nor without the most earnest and united support of those of us at home. Where we have given valiant efforts to war work here-- t totore, we must thrust our sholders desperately against the wheel of war preparations from now on. To no one person or class is it given to do a greater share in this war tnan any other person or class. Each must do his utmost WEIGHT RESTS ON AMERICAN FARMER Upon no one class rests a greater responsibility than upon the Ameri-can farmer, who with his wives and sons and daughters constitutes one-thir-d of our population. He has the first and great responsibility of prc--' riding food for the nation at home, food for the fighting mer abroad, and food for our allies in the battle line and their civilian population. England, with millions of acres of parks and hunting grounds converted jpto farms can only raise crops to feed her people half the year. France, with every man in uniform, and nsarly half her fields overrun by w With Te grain fields extended by amnions of acres of new land, Ameri-ca is responding to the calljmd aJed hunger will never be an ally to Ger-many. Billions of dollars of Ameri-ca's huge wsr loans are coming back to the farmer In payment for his grain and stock. The farmer, for his future honor and standing In the natloft, must see that every penny of this sum he can spare is reinvested In war loans. The Fourth Liberty Loan, now upon as, calls for but a portion of whst America must spend In wsr efforts In the next few months. It must be sub-scribed promptly and overwhelmingly. That "the man who Is not for us Is against us" is as true now as when it was written centuries ago. If YOU buy a fifty dollar bond when you COULD BUY a five hun-dred dollar bond, you are not doing your full duty as an American. WHEN A WOMAN SINS When In your veins the blood tiurns in a raging uuuu, And you long for love, and happiness, and mirth You may snatch love, it is true, But your pleasure you will rue By the laws that rule us creatures of the earth. For the world Is harsh and rude, And vile Blander is its food, And It punishes and flays in ruthless wrath; Tou may flaunt it and defy it, While your passions run red riot, But the world Insists you tread the narrow path. But Poppea, foolish girl, Chose the white lights gayest whirl, And ran the road of pleasure and of sin; : .! 'it,.,. Her wild heart knew no law" Though at times 'twas bleeding raw-- Till one day real Love arrived and entered in, ,i ti i.1 .i "" Then her past rose like a wraith And shattered all her faith, And led her to the brink of black despair; Till at last her loved one's heart Was pierced by true love's dart And the wanton found a peace both true and fair. MINNEHAHA MINE LOOKING FINE A. V. Robison, Dr. George E. Robl-so- n. Proctor and Albert Robison have returned from a trip to the Minnehaha Mining property in the Deep Creep mining district, a copper property which has been owned by the Robi-son family for many yenrs. They found activities very promising and made arrancemtnts for resuming work, which has been suRpendsd lor some time at an early date. war more brutal. They, did not orlg-- ; inate the gas attack, for instance, Athenians and Spartans used gas in their warfare between 421 and 404 B. .C. Toe early Greeks burned the sulphur in hugo caldrons and the wind carried the fumes to the ene-my's territory. Crude bellows wer3 also employed to blow the sulphur dioxide gas over walled cities. "Those of ycu who make gas masks are just as much a part of the Unit-ed States army as the men at the front. I went, therefore, to urge upon you absolute Uactness in manufac-ture. Let's have every mask perfect, and so perfect that were you going to the fr mt tomorrow, you would feel as now, that you need not hesitate one second choosing your mask at ratidQM from any Goodrich consign-ment. It s Imperative that you have this confidence jn your work. Thus far your skill has proven Itself. W'e com-mend you." GOODRICH GAS MASKS HAVE STOOD THE TEST. Our American soldier boys are qu'ri'ed with absolutely perfect gas masks. If you were going to the front toriorrow you mav be certain thut no him gas could possibly pine trate your mask, so long as vou take reasonably good care of it. This means the mabk will serve you for an Indefinite period. The finest thought in American science and skill has labored for its perfection. in these wi-I- j Pr. W. C. Greer, oond lee president in charge of developn ont ff the Goodrich Com-pnny- . assures the American people that the gas muhka are Invulnerable, Invuln 'ale. because they have been trh d snd found good. Like the Goodrich tiros, they have boor, test-ed, and have proven themselves effi-cient to the utmott degree. In a re-cent address to the workers In the gas mask department of the Good-rich organiat mi Dr. Greer nnld: "There is no gas yet produced that our masks will not afford perfect pro-tection against. Our soldiers can li v Willi safety for Kurs, days posslidy, in gases of different concentrations as long as th. y have on tlu-i- r xas inassks and mainta'n order and dis-cipline" Dr. Greer told how Colonel I'.radley Uewey. of t lit" I'nited States Gas IV-fen- S'TvWv, mid" a hasty trip to Gocdrich av.d laid down a new type of g:m masks, raying that he wanted TV11"; similar o;u-- within ten days j Goodrich filled the order. ''German war makers d'd not In their frightfulm ss originate an) thing" fcaid Dr. Gn-er- , "They merely imule HOOVERIZING FOR HEALTH Have you noticed the brightness of eye, the uprightness of carriage and the springing step of the American these days? Have you wondered at i the change from the florid faced bus-- . iness man to the firm, clear skinned Individual who is so much more effi-cient than before? The American wears a .smile today because he is being fed on war rations, and they are agreeing with him. His heart no longer cries out In distress because of the strain of pumping excess blood to his heretorore much abused stom-ach. In other words, he is Hooveriz-iu-for health. He is eating less sweets, for sugar mUHt be saved for the boys over there. His breakfast food Is un-sweetened, and he appreciates at last the deliclo'ia natural flavor of the remtl. In his coffoe he 13 using one lump of sugar Instead of the two he was accustomed to having. As a re-- ) ward for his "sacrifice" his head Is clearer, for now he Is not clogging his system with too much sugar, as he did before Hoover held up a warn-ing hand. .Ills toeth were tmt on the road to decay, but the timely inter-cession will perhaps nave them. Su-gar to a certa'n extent Is as neces-sary to the system as coal is to an engine. But if an engine Is over-stoke- d with coal its boilers will burst; if the human engine is over-stoke- d the extra heat stays Jn the system and poisons the blood. Oste-opathic Magazine: SERVICE One of the strong words of our language Is "Service." It has a deeper meaning today than ever before in the memory of any of us. To us, be-cause we Americans with 5,000,000 of our best under arms and the entire loyal population enlisted; to us be-cause we represent a minor school of medicine, highly approved and appre-ciated by the civil population, but denied by fiat of medical bureaucracy the right to be useful to the army: to us because we are men and women who are conscious of our power and are moved by a sense of duty to use it. the word Service now means some-thing. Just now patriotism is ahead of miy other temporary consideration. To win the war Is the first duty of all. There are hundreds of ways in which each one can contribute to tills end. The sum total of the attitude of our hundred million is America In this wot Id war. Kach of us Is, or should be, a leader of thought, a molder of Kentin ent, in his community, hence we have an influence and consequent-ly a responsibility far beyond the av-erage citizen. W:o hope every one of us is using that Influence for the best. The profession has a great oppor-tunity open to it now, and wr urge all to make the most of it. In this way, no loss than in a therapeautic sense, cim we Justify the classification Gen-era! Crowdcr has given us ;is n useful occupation to the gowrnment in time of war. Jo'irnxl of Ani"rkan Osteop-athic Association. I , Truly Remarkable Record. A wonderful matrimonial record was that of a certain John Watson of San Francisco. This 'Muggier of henrts" became acquainted with the eight y daughters of a brewer resident in 'Frls ' co. Within a yer.r he bar gone through a form of nmrriairo wltti each of the ' eight sisters, and had succeeded in de-- j camping with their dowries. Done at RadcHffe. Daily theme 1 n RaddllTe student: "Some nien are born with flti Insight-Int- o the soul fmln!ne, some men mar-ry and n hleve thl-- i '.nslht. and some men correct girls' themes mid hnv this Insight thrnst upon them." Admiring comment by a Harvard student strug-gling widi his own (hilly: "Gosh! but It takes n girl to ivrlte that sort of thing. d:u't it?" Christian Humid. Said by a Cynic. There are two literary rnnladle, writer's cramp and swelled head. The worst of writer's cramp that It Is never cured, tile Worst of swelled head h that It never kills. (.'oulsun Kernn-ban- . |