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Show ' PAGE EIGHT. ., ,w ... the press-bulleti- n - . .. 4 ,' - 1 WANT ADS TWO-tROO- HIOUS3 FUiR iiwT--Coo- d location. Call at 408 Ma 4. Telephone 304, FURXI9HEID ROOM for rent. 353 ' i Main. FOR SAflUEl Kerosene stove, three burners with oven. Inquire B. E. Wll-- . Ha. at J. C. Penney company. ' ' MINING x LOCATION NOTICES for eali at the Press-Bulleti- n office. if FOR SAXlK-jAutomo- blle. A new . Maxwell Roadster with Goodyear er tread tires. In fine condition. A bargain. Dr. O, W. Richards, Cop-perfiel-tf HERE'S A REAL BARGAIN ' Owner will sell a 6x12 rod building , ? lot In Provo City, with some lmprove-- ments, consisting of a good cement cellar and fruit trees, for $300.00 if taken within the next three days. Located one block off Main street. Address H., care Provo .Herald, Provo. ' ; FOR SAlIJB OR TRADE Two cars, Oakland 8, oil easy payments, or will trade for town property. Inquire at ' the IButte. ' WILL SELL 1000 Rye (Patch, bid. . ,1000 John Clark Tire, 12c. . ' 1000 Iron Co. Coal, 15c. V 48 IBIg Indian Oil, 50c. , ' 1000 Big Bear Oil, 3Vo. . k ILet mo send you Information about - f Dugway Smelting Co. and the Dug--. way Bertha Mining Co. The Dugway ' Smelting Co. Is now building a srael-- . ter at Dugway to handle the ore from the Dugway district. Stock now selling at 10c, but will advance socrt to. 25c. m , J Mapanee Kitchenettes Arrive II fjS fe i I Our spring shipments af Napanee Kitchenettes, j I jj P ; ly have arrived and are now on display. Every woman ; - iKlj 1 jpffiijj y'.U I I ' j Typ-- 4 "jij should have one for her kitchen. They save time, ' jjp'P : Jj jp .1 ' jj I'l j'w" j money and labor. ..They have a place for everything. 3 ' AAS .'1 I , ' " No waste or loss of food if you have a Napanee. y 'Sv2 H JK . Easy Terms c 1' mJ0 jj Makes Food fl VlSS Prices$32.50 to $55.00 1 yhoIesome I j I ' y more f I 1 MMI!jr . S meats or fish,, wilted p! II y I fruits or vegetables or & U I - . : I mingled, musty odors f 1 I "" ; ; 1 j when, you own an R ' You will need Linoleum when . x n ; J doing your spring, cleaning. We NOW IS the tlTfie tO AlASI(A 11 m have a big variety of patterns, I V . 5 I ' at $1.75 to $3.75 . SelCCt tkat Refrig-- ; I Constant cold, dry air clr. ;l ki culation, perfect non-co- n- y II - ' " U ducting insulation of car-- fli H Baby Carriages a'nd Push Carts. eVatOY. We haVe .S&Sl& I Get one of these and take the , ' . HSSffiS R baby out these nice sunshiny fjg Alaska Olid 1 I ' days. Prices $4.00 to. . $20.00 Jf North Palp I over I Wall Paper, Paint. "Varnishes y and everything you may require None Better I The Alaska is for house cleaning. You will find ri (h ' best on earth our Furniture Department quite Prices $12.50 . to $30 I . 1 complete. -- - ' . ; ; : , The Big Store 'IZ a C. E. ADDERLEY, Mgr. C. S. GODDARO 204 Atlas Block Phone W. 2254 TWO ROOMS FOR RENT; good lo-cation. Call at 408 Main. Telephone ' No. 304. , ' iMAiIJH JtHLiP Wanted: Wide awake, energetic, temperate man, 25 to 35 years of age to deliver and col-lect from town and country customers. First class references and $000 bond required. Permanent position and good com pen wat Ion tr right, narty. Ad- - THE BUTTE CAFE, now under new management, offers you excellent ser-vice Newly painted and papered. Among new specialties will put up lunches for miners. Courteous treat-- ; ment to all patrons. dress U D, Firebaugt Box C85, Salt ' Lake 'C!tv. ITtnb. . . MQRt THAN HALF OF OUR POWER IS HITCHED TO URGLf SAM'S WAR MACHINE The other half - of our power permits every individual to attain wartime efficiency, saving time, food, labor and money. COAL IS A blU F ACTOR ' , Water power is a faithful ally of the United btates at this time when great demands are being umue upon tlie coal supply. Elec-tric energy provided by Che water power plants of tne Utah Power t liight company saved the people of Utuh l.oou.uuo tons of coal last year. ' tveu greater savings are to De effected in 1518, forming a big contribution to national eifl-citiic- .besides conserving the available supply . our energy is stimulating the output, of the mines, coal mines have 6,j7 horsepower connected to our lines, in addition 11,000 horsepower is represented In connections used ior cooking. MUNITIONS ARE VITAL In the successful conduct of war, munitions are Indispensable, In Ltaa and Southern Idaho electrio . power equivalent to 04,020 horses is engaged In this industry, power from our lines Is producing pow-der for use on the battle fields of Europe. It is increasing the output of metal mines and con-verting it in the mills and smelt-ers, to tangible weapons against the enemy. ' FOOD WILL WIN ' Factories producing food have exactly 6,031 horsepower con-nected to our transmission system. Power from our lines is speeding the production of sugar cured meats,, canned goods, flour and cereals as well as otner products necessary to the welfare of the fighting men. CLOTHING IS NEEDED Our fighting men m Europe as well as thfc foicea at , home must have clothes. Utah has not reacheo the height of her possi-bilities In the manufacture of clothing. Nevertheless the woolen mills of the stale have connected 85 horsepower to the lines of this company.' GREATEH LAND PRODUCTION To keep the. factories supplied with products to meet the demands of war, agricul-tural production musi De increas-ed. The power of 6,229 horses has btien put to work cn the farms of Utah and Idaho. Power from our lines is used in Irrigation cs well as in the manufacture of farm im-plements. TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS In war, transportation systems must move like clockwork, and electric energy is doing its bit in efficient operutlon. (Electric en- - frev nf 9i!n7 h gaged in the transportation so1 necessary to the successful con-- ' duet of war. RAPID COMMUNICATION As necessary at home as It is at the front, communication must be rapid and uninterrupted. Electric enrt-g- Is the'life of it. Our power is linked to the national system. f 125,493 HORSEPOWER Western industries directly re-- " lated to the war have 125.493, horsepewer connected to our lines, while 106,300 horsepower furthers the efficiency of the forces at home. Yours For Efficient Public Service, when you wake .1 up drink glass - of hot water Wash the polaons and toxlna from ' system before putting more food Into stomach, j ; 1 Says Inside-bathin- makes any- - j one look and feel clean, sweet and refreshed. .. i Wasn yourself on the Inside before breakfast like you do on the outside This Is vastly more Important because t lie skin pores do not absorb impuri-ties Into the blood, causing illness, while the bowel pores do. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the stomach, nearly an ounce of waste material must be carrred out of the' body. If this waste material is not eliminated day by day it quickly ferments and generates poisons, gases and toxins which fire nbBorbed or sucked Into the blood stream, through the lymph ducts which should suck only nourishment to sus-tain the body. A splendid health measure ts to drink, before breakfast each day, a glass of real hot water with a of limestone phosphate in It, which is a harmless way to wash these poisons, gases and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels; thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary cnnal befor putting more food Into the stomach. A quarter pound of limestone phos-phate costs but very little at tbe drug store but is sufficient to make anyone bq enthusiast on Inside-bathing- . Men and women who are accustomed to wake up with a dull, aching bead or have furred tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, sallow complexion, others who have bilious a'taeks, acid stomach or exmstipatton are assured of 'pron-ounced improvement In both bealth and ai pearuuce shortly. FLAVOR OF MINT - .,.(.' Slaatc What do you think of "Th Female of the Specie?" Callantoi-Sh- e's a pouch. The fel-low who designed our silver coin knew pippin when he saw one. " THE WAR, THE FARM AND THE FARMER By Herbert Quick Member Federal Farm Loan Board N What the Imperial German govern-ment offered the farmers of America In Its ruthless submarine warfare was not the loss of profits, but slavery to the saber-rattle- r of Potsdam. He pur-posed to make us slaves by murder-ing the people who took our products to market. By all the laws of civil-ized warfare, commerce under a neu-tral flag was free from any hindrance except the legal interference Justified by war. But the Germans not only stopped merchant vessels, they sank them. Sank them without warning, without trace the most devilish thing war has seen since the savages scalped our ancestors and threw screaming babies into the flames of burning cabins. The German plan of sinking mer-chant ' vessels without trace Is based en the murderer's maxim that "dead men tell no tales." It was exe-cuted by the massacre df men, wom-en and children, who, having com-mitted' themselves to small boats in the open sea after their ships wve torpedoed, were mercilessly . raked with gunfire, and exterminated to the last unprotected, unpitied soul! These are the murders that stain the bands sf the Kaiser, his advltsrs and min-ions. These outrages were perpetrated on neutral vessels when all that civ-ilized warfare gave the Germans a right to do even with the merchant vessel under a hostile flag, was to stop it at sea and make it a prize of war. . To kill the civilians on board, even under a hostile flag, was nothing hut unmitigated murder. And these mur ders were committed In order that we might be enslaved! Having the right to take the aea with his fleet, but being afraid to do so for' fear he might lose It, and being unable by fair means to stop the selling of our products to bis enemies, the Kaiser declared that be would do it by the foulest methods ever resorted to In war. He declared tbe sea closed, and that he would keep It closed, not by war, but by murder. ' To have submitted would have cost us dear in prosperity but that would have been the least of our loss. We (should have bad to grovel be-fore the German government. We should have had to accept rour-(Thl- s is the second of three articles. Tr der as a thing against which we could not defend ourselves. We should have allowed this new horror to become a part of all future wars, and have been responsible for its Incorporation into International law. , We should have proved that be-cause the fire which burns up our farms' usefulness is beyond the hori-zon, we would submit to the kindling of 1L ' We, might have accepted the sev-enty cents for wheat and the six cents for cotton, but we could not have done It merely because we were commanded to do It By so doing we should have accepted degrada-tion. We should have begun, after winning our freedom In our own revolution and establishing a union on the foundation of liberty In tbe blood and tears of our war between tbe states, to knuckle under to autoc-racy! We should have barely yielded up our birthright as Americans. Such a thought is intolerable. Peace at such a. price would not be peace, but only preparation for a future revolt against subjugation. Better any sort of war; better war forever, that that. Whenever the time comes for new sacrifices, let us remember that we fight, not for our liberties tomorrow, or next year or twenty years from now, but for our freedom today. Not for the right to live in the future, but for the right to make a living this year. German oppression bad begun to pinch us before we entered the war. If we had not declared war, but bad accepted the conditions of life ordered for ua by tbe Kaiser, we should today be a poverty-stricke- n people. Our factories would be shut down, our. workmen unemployed, our people' starving,' our farmers ruined by the poverty of those for whose consump-tion they grow their crops. There ! loss and sacilflce In the war, but' there would have been far more of loss and sacrifice In accepting the German terms. We should have lost more In money than we have spent in tbe war, but we should have lost something far more precious. We should have lost our souls. ie third to be published next week.) : C. 0. D. illss Gossip They say she bas a , husband. Wlss Gasslp Yes. He always payi cash, j ' ELECTRICITY PLAYS IMPORI-A- NT ROLE IN CGhDL'CT OF VV4 ' Electricity Is playing an Important role In the conduct of the war. (Besides , exerting a great influence In the con-duct of the battle, and in the operation, of the national communication and transportations systems, it is a great lorce in strengthening the forces at home. These facts are strikingly shown in a statement issued by the Utah Power & Light Company, show-ing the relation of its lines to the war program. The statement deals with the of electric current to the forces back of the armies in Europe. It shows that electric energy aids both the conservation and the increased production movements of the. govern-ment. Narly every industry essential to war-tim- e efficiency derives Increased force and speed from electric current. ' Factories producing food, munitions and clothing attain maximum produe- - ' lion by the aid of electric power. Mines, mills and smelters are enabled to increase their output according to government demands as electric power speeds the work of production. AgffT cultural production ts stimulated as electric energy enables pumping plants to bring new lands under irri-gation. Electric current developed from water power conserves coal. The ftatement of the Utah company shows ; that that company alcne saved the peo- - . pie of Utah 1,000,000 tons of coal last year. Even greater savings are prom-ised for 1918. The following figures show. In horse power, to what extent the industries of Utah and Idnhc are connected to thj. ; lines of the Utah Power & iLight CoiST " fcany. . Coal mining, 68.'7; metal mining, 24.891; metal milts and smelters $:!, 475; grain mills. 1239; sugar mills, 1488; food manufacturing, 1097; pack-ing companies, 1031; cold storage, 184; canning factories, 864; Irrigation, 6310; other electric utilities, 2310; electric railways, 22,828; phone com-pany (S. L. C.), 74; steam railroad (shops), 1592; stael una iron foun-dries, 20G1; machine shops, 483; pow-der manufacturing, 6P3; oxygen manu-facturing, 130;. woolen mills, 85; rjjr water supplies, 230; plai.ing mills, Ha;" dairies, 68; farm implements (mfg.), c9; electric vehicle charging stations, IS"; service commercial buildings, 2X19; construction companies, 3CJ25; school bjildings, 210; miscellaneous, 2.W5; residential lighting, f.9,100; com-mercial lighting, 16,800; street lighV ing, iCOO; fuel, 11,000. Graveyard Talk ! Again It might be said that politics makes strange bedfellows. Since the diplomatic break between the town and the county there has teen an unrestricted use of poisonous gas, and dumdum may be brought into play later. So bitter 13 the feeling between the county and town administrations the county now refuses to place Its pris-oners of war In the town Jail or allow their causes heard in the town hall. All persons desiring the position as deputy sheriff at iBingham should apply for same without delay. . There is quite a little talk in town about the election next fall, but only a few possible candidates have been mentioned. One of the local politicians who cuts quite a figure In shaping elections says that Ben Harris will be the next sheriff. The Park Records man who writes "Stroller Notices" seems to be falling from grace. His paragraphs in the past hae made very good Teading, but now that he is trying to adopt the newfangled ways of the Suit Lake Popgun they are hardly worth read-ing at all. In fact it's a rhame to make people read such stuff and we hope he'll quit it. This Item Is borrowed from the Venial Expresr: "It would give the Express great pleasure if thote people who are zealously devoted to increas-ing their families would kindly and promptly report the additions as they occur, no matter how frequently that may be. iAIho and again, at this sea-son of the year, a great many reck-less and inexperienced youths and maidens perpetrate matrimony, utterly heedless of the sad experiences of their parents, and the sorrowful rav-tge- s of matrimony on every hand." The following extract from the Salt Lake Tribune of last Sunday would indicate that the county officers are planning a drive to regain control of the town hall: "Coincident with the raid last night came the announce-ment that the county attorney and sheriff had Istued an order to the effect that the 'Bingham police could issue no more complaints or have anything to dc with the town hall." Evidently the county attorney and the sheriff, were Joking the Tribune as they would no doubt find it difficutt to eject the town administration from its own building A 'Binghamite visiting in a distant state and wishing his friends here to understand how well he was being cared for, wrote, "the fatted bovine has ben executed and I am living off the adipose of the land." Most Dangerous Poisons. The most dangerous of all polsone are tbe toxins of Infectious disease; the next most dangerous are the toxins --o( fatlgne. Work, Ahether of mus-cles or nerves, produces waste prod-ucts, "ashes" which are poisonous, the fatigue toxins. When these toxins have piled up In our blood to a certain pitch we feel tired, so that fatigue Is a form of self poisoning. When we quit work or sleep or take food these poisons are neutralized or burnt up In the system or washed and breathed out of it Use of Fetters Ancient. The use of fetters goes back to an-cient times. Fetters were usually mndi of brass and a'so In pnirs, the wort being In the dual number. Iron wai nccflsionnlly employed for the pur pose. (Psalms 105 :18 ; 140 :8.) -- -' Darty Thought His conversation does not show the minute hand; but he strikes tbe hour very correctly. Samuel Johnson. |