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Show TWO THE PRESS-BULLETI- N - EDITORIALS HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS ' Es Better LookinffTake Olive Tablets If your skin is yellow1 complexion pallid . tongue coated appetite poor you have a bad taste Li vzz? " r.-- alazy, d feeling ycj d:ouid take Olivs Tablets. Dr. Edr;3rd3 Clivs TsSleia ? i'ctitute for calomel were prcoa.'i'.HT-- rewards after 17 years cf study with bis patients. Dr. Edwcria'CUve Tablets are a purely vegetable compound tazzci wiih ohve oil You will know them by t.c:f dive color. To have a clear, pink skin, bright eyes, no pimples, a feeling of busyaacy like childhood (273 you must get at the cause. , Dr. EdwardaT Clive Tcblets act en the liver and bowels like calomel yet have ' j ;:ouiii2T effects. ... They:. ' l"iir.4overcomeconsti .Jan. That's why rnT is of boxes are :old annually at 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. Take one or two nightr ana bote the pleasing results. I kills I Ifcey NgU j -ii SSI & ag , 9o 0W 1 The Government of the United States asks you for a h j ; Loan all you can spare to make up a total of Six 4 '4 Billion Dollars. . j This money is necessary to keep those boys fighting ' $ $ , in France to keep them well fed, well armed' and fully supplied with ammunition. ' '4 s :: If you lend as they fight, victory will come, and if you fc g lend as willingly victory will come quickly. '" - BE GENEROUS WITH YOUR LIMIT 8 V u 9 '"f ' ''.-.- . v. SJJ ' " :i fc Any Bank Will Help You jj 1 Illl ! I - - - I . .. I 9 This Advertisement Contributed Through the I Patriotic on Of jjj ! The Slovenian ! I,..-- --; Store I OREGON FARMER GAINS 28P0UfJDS "I Simply Feel Like A New Man," Says William Welch, j After Taking Tanlac j "To look at me now you would hardly think that Just a little while ago my life was despaired of and I was told to make my plans accord-ingly phut Tanlac has fixed me up bo I am out In the fields every day fork- - ing hay, and that's a strong man's Job I can tell you." - This . remarkable statement was made the other day by William Welch I a well known farmer who has lived all his life about a mile northeast of Beaverton, Oregon, on Route 4, Box 34, In telling of his wonderful recov-er- y through the use of Tanlac. "I had always enjoyed pretty good health up to the first of last March," he continued, "when something seem-ed to go wrong and I got into such a rundown condition, that I fell off from a hundred and fifty-fiv- e to a hundred and thirty-tw- o pounds, ' a loss of twenty-thre- e pounds, I was terribly weak, and, my heart would beat and thump so fast that I could hardly rest at night. I had to be very careful about what I would eat and for three months I lived on the very lightest kind of diet. 'My skin had a yellowish, sallow look like I did not have any blood in my veins, and I was not able to do a lick of work on the farm, I got mighty discouraged, tor none of the medicine I took did me any good and I really thought my time had come. "I was in this awful fix when I read about the wonderful way Tanlac was helping others, so I got me a bottle. Well, I began to feel better soon after starting on it and kept on improving right along as I kept on taking it. I have just finished my second bottle, and I have not only gotten back all rny lost weight feat am actually , five pounds heavier than I was before I was sick at all, that is, I have gained twenty-eigh- t pounds since I began taking Tanlac. I don't have a bit of trouble now and simply feel like a.new man." Tanlac Is" sold in Bingham Canyon by W, II. Woodrlng, In Magna by R K. Zftraglas Drag Co., In Midvale by J." M. A visit to Salt Lake City is not complete unless ', . you hare a EBig SvMii AT TUB 02 Wt BmJwsr ' . Tw btf natwral Mt aulphur water Latfy an Caa- - . tiaman attandanta. . RHEUMATISM VANISHES TURKISH H BATH AND BED U JUL 1 JJ lfS t attained through tha aU wrtsbHshed I M taught by Manufacturer. and a raadd r ketches and deaerlptloa affnur Invention for MKiSIARCH and report on petentabtlitj. We iret Mt-- '"' anta at aa fee. . Write lor mm faaa Mok ' fWaeeded inventions,. ,.., .. , D.S17IFT&C0. Patent Lawyers. tb.88S. V 307 Seventh St, Washington, D. G.J watson In Sandy by Mrs. S. J Scfimldt, la Garfield by Garfield Trad-ing: Co., tn Riverton by the Page-Hanso- n Co., fa lark by the iLark Drug Ca, fa Gale by the Jordan Mere. Co, to Draper by the Draper Commercial Co., in ffllurnry by the Murray City Pharmwr. it, :f-lT&- l ti fa's g?:v M'lVi v ft. ? it Ar-y- : .V S&x '11 o v'SAyW.V' &:ti:-S-:is',- . V xn i f i'A - i.'i "O K' ?W'5,VW- .- . '.'4 tii $ $ i WW " ' . i , ''The German army can be beaten; y the German army will be beaten; ! the German army mul be beaten." f ' Pershing: counted on every man, woman and child in America to back him tip when he said that back him up with their souls, their flesh, tieir f pockctbooks to the last drop of blood, to the last dollar. 1 1 Our young men are backing him with their blood. Every one of us at home must ' back him with our dollars our last dollars our future dollars. BUY Fourth Liberty Bonds. Any Bank Will Help You. rmia uonmnmsirT covtxxsvtbd tkbouox rum VATaiOTIO COOrXATXOX QT ftA adilv byzi l --ys a V Liii, Vr O rlr'T7"--T- ? T1"--rT rrT" vrr-- ""1 r-r-- T r' - ? (By C. D. McNeeley) . NO PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY Nothing is more evident at this time than the fact that the allies are determined that there shall be no peace without vic-tory. The terms of peace are to be dictated, not compromised. The German armies are still quartered in France, Belgium and Serbia and until these forces are vanquished the door to peace is closed. The objects for which we are fighting must be accom-- , plished and this cannot be done until the armies of Germany are crushed. . ' The lights of St. Helena are now shining on the palace of the Hohenzollerns and the autocrats can plainly see the writing on the wall. No wonder they are penitent now. That is the way with the hangman when it comes to him. It is only a question of time until the German armies will be beaten to a frazzle and the German leaders know it. They started out to conquer the world. They have failed and they must pay. the price. . The war makers are now tired of war because they know they are soon to be beaten. After inflicting untold punishment on the weak and the helpless they, would now like to call it off without making atonement for the crimes they have committed. But are they ready for unconditional surrender? We think, not, and until such a time when they will be thoroughly converted to this idea the war must go on. The peace offensive which was turned loose Saturday night it appears was designed for the purpose of depressing the sales of Liberty Bonds. At the time many people thought Germany had actually capitulated, but next morning it was seen that there was nothing to it whatever. The only thing that it shows is that Germany realizes that from now on the war is going against her. So there must be no let up. We must fight on. When our armies are quartered on German territory it will then I be time enough to talk peace. This is no time to compromise. .Victory is now dawning and we must have the fruits. To the j victors belong the spoils. After four years of war we must not I quit empty handed. , . j The Salt Lake Herald last Sunday morning voiced the senti-ment of America with the following editorial: "As militarism calls out for mercy of humanity, let us not t forget the feindish delight displayed by Prussianism when the same humanity staggered helplessly before the Hun hordes. Let j us not forget the agonizing cries emitted by the Belgians as the I Prussians crushed forward in drunken frenzy, bayoneting ba- - bies, raping womanhood and violating every right of humanity. ."Let us not forget the pillage and plunder that have marked the history of Belgium and northern France in the bloodiest ' four years of the world's history. Let us remember the German i code that might makes right and under --the "pressing demands of ' military necessity therecattbtid crime. Several weeks ago we pointed to the daggers of a pretended acceptance of President Wilson a peace ' terms, and we repeat that warning today, when Germany seeks to save her soil from the terrors and horrors - -i- rhich have delighted her hordes on foreign territory for the last four years. . "Let 'On To Berlin, be the rallying cry of the allies and. our answer to the last evidence of German guile. We can talk peace terms on German soil and we can talk with an insistence that wi'l insure acceptance tha terms we .wish, to impose. Belgium and France and England, who have stood against the Prussians in gloomier days than the Germans now face, must have a voice in the terms of peace. They must say what Germany will do to redeem herself before the eyes of the decent world. We can make no quartjr with the enemy at this stage of the conflict. Germany must pay the penalty and that penalty must be meas-ured with a cool, realization of the crime, and it is not to forget the newer acts of ruthlessness in the recent retreats. On to Ber-lin, and let there be, no serious consideration of peace with the brute until the flag of humanity is hung over Germany." Coal bfllB are a large part of your living expenses reduce them by us-ln- g Cole Hoc Elart Heaters. Not only are the boy over there making a kst of history, but they are making considerate geography as welt If the government taxed some of the outgo it would certainly obtain more revenue than it does by taxing the income. , m, M aa The German press hastens to admit that there i'$ an Ameri-can army in France, lest the? German army beat the? news by admitting the Americans to Germany. (aa Jaj M Austro Hungarian reinforcements have arrived off fhe west-ern front Just In time to help Fritz take the back trail Tar n aa Foch is fixing 'em, Pershing is chasing 'em, Haig is1 handing it to 'em, and Byng is beating-th- e German Devil out of'em. .. Tat laj Make the ballot back up the ballet when you go fo- the poles. . MANY WOMEN ARE t GOING OVERSEAS The increased number of American' women going; oversea with relief or-ganizations tern made ft necessary for the Amerfcjan T. W. C. A. to take over a large House, one bloet from Hotel Petrogmd, the T. W. C. A. Hostess House in Paris, for addition-al housing spane. Croups of forty and fifty Jled Cross nurses; canteen and social workers T have hail to ba turned away from the hotel almost daily for thw lack of space during the past two awnths. Hotel Petrograd. which ws opened In Decmber for the purpose of car-ing for these American women while they were waiting orders to their posts, has accommodations for 200 ' women,, aaid has become the America center in Paris. The new annex wllk be Just a rooming house. There will)Nr also be as tta room. ' J-French people are no longeT allow-ed to get any meal, save tea, at the Petrogra as the dining room is not large eno'jfh to accommodate all of the American men and women who throng tfiere tor Americans cooked meals. Frequently the line extends from the dining room door through the lobby of th hotel. i Concerts and lectures hy famous musicians, authors and writers of the allied countries are daily events at the Petrograd. Miss Mary George White of Baltimore, is director of the hotel. PI H P iJll1--: ... THE VOTER'S DUTY, The Republican party will not find it easy to convince the people that it would have done better had it been in power or that it would do better if it could be placed in power now. Yet more difficult would be the task of convincing a sober judgment that anything would be gained by handing over to the Republican party that partial power which at the utmost would consist in l.epubhcan supremacy in congress backed by Republican adminis trations m states electing governors and legislators. American experience of divided political responsibility has nev- -' er been happy. A Democratic president contending with a Re-publican congress, or a Republican president contending with a Democratic congress, has never been, even in times of peace, an effective disposition of political forces. Waste and inefficiency have usually resulted from it, and it is not possible to imagine that a great war in its critical stages could be more effectively waged if energies and responsibilities should be so distributed. We yield to no one in profound respect for the wisdom and the patriotism of men like Colonel Roosevelt, Mr. Taft and Mr. Root. But when they say that the voters of America ought this fall to return a Republican congress, and argue that the time has --come to impose upon Mr. Wilson's administration the fearless in-quisition and the practical legislative check of an opposition po- litical majority, we are unconvinced. Irresponsible power is in-deed a serious matter and no human being is infallible. But a congressional minority is .quite competent to ask questions, to bring mistakes into the light of publicity and to register protests. It is necessary for the preservation of our liberties to create the certainty that Republican congress would itself make lamentable - and possibly well nigh fatal errors in its desire to play a decisive part in the conduct of the war at a time and under circumstances when it could not be, as the Democratic party is now, wholly re-sponsible for success or failure. In our judgment, hard-headed-ne- ss demands that this responsibility should not be destroyed. Ilswe think, the plain dictate of common sense that the people hu"i return a Democratic majority to congress and assure to President Wilson the support of a Democratic law-maki-ng power. The Independent, New York. CREDIT OF THE NATION MUST BE CONSERVED Not only Bhould the goods and la-bor of (he nation be conserved tor the prosecution of the wnr; the cred-it of tlse nation must be cmserved for the same purpose. This is being impresses! upon the banks,, and It should be impressed upon the people, too the borrowers from banks, . f All of the hanks of the country are being urged by the Federal Reserve Board to curtail their loans. They are urged to loan money only where the borower is going to use it In some way. that will aid In or contribute to winning the war; This policy is not aimed at hamper-ing legitimate business. It aims to help win the war, which Is the best tfling possible for business. It simply means that money wanted for purposes should be refused. Let the wait until the waf is finished. The government needs the money to carry on the war. The farmers, the men and the indus-tries engaged in war work or engaged in producing things needed for the efficiency both of our soldiers and of our home people, need the credit to carry on their enterprises. , Merchants should not borrow the money to stock up on luxuries or on things, that the people should not buy at this time. No one should borrow money now to spend needlessly or extravagantly. Unnecessary building, unneeded articles, unessential enter- - . 1 prises should all. await the ending of the war. The Federal Reserve (Board points out that in the interest of successful government financing it would be much bolter for the hanks to hold the credit within reasonable bound. by intelligent cooperation rather than to discourage borrowing by dlsrhitrging hlKh interest rules. The people nhonld cooperate .with the government and the banka In this policy of conserving 'relit find' crntaSM'ns borrowing where die money, directly or belt.., 'n the war, helps our "''h'!er v.h, :in. rL-klp- thc-i-r Ihei for our country'. ' u! l ) t '' " " Wm TOO MANY OFFICIALS Our constitution and laws elenrly prescribe the manner in which the state shall submit a proposed constitutional amend-ment for the consideration of the voters. We do not find any pro-vision which makes it any part of the duty of public officials to use their offices and the public's time for propaganda in behalf of a proposition submitted to the voters. We are well aware of the fact that the subordinates who are becoming so active in the matter of the proposed tax amend-ment have distinguished examples, if not. indeed, instructions, from further up the line. This does not in the least alter the principle' involved. Rather, it makes it all the more pertinent to inquire what justification in law or ethics exists for such em-ployment of the public's time and facilities. If, us their recent activities suggest, the public duties of these officials are not sufficient to occupy their time, it would seem entirely appropriate to reduce the personnel, leaving on the pub-li- e payrolls only enough of them to do the necessary public work. The others could then, with entire propriety, devote themselves to the instruction qf voters at their own expense Instead oC at the expense of the taxpayers. Tribune, |