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Show TUB BINGHAM NEWS. BINGHAM, UTAH - - J I INSURANCE MAN IS ENTHUSED OVER IT Qalns 14 Pounds Taking Tanlac and la Restored to Finest Health. "Tanlac has restored my health and built mo up fourteen pounds In weight," said H. YV. Morrison, 4768 Thrush Ave., St. Louis, Mo agent for the National Life Insurance Co. "Two years ago my stomach went wrong and I could nut eat anything without suffering agony afterwards from heart palpitation and shortness of breath. Some nights I was In so much misery my wife had to get up and try to get me some relief. My health got to be so poor I had to stay in bwd for weeks at a time. "What Tanlac has done for me Is nothing short of wonderful. I now eat anything I want, sleep fine, and am working full time every day ; In fact, I'm In splendid health. I can't praise Tanlac too highly." Tanlac Is Bold by all good druggists. i - a ,. .. Had Your Iron Todajzfg ' The Delicious Bread I --of Energy and Iron " raisin bread twice weekly on you SERVE three reasons: i . 1. Flavor; 2. Energy; 3. Iron You remember how good a generously filled, full-fruit-ed raisin bread can be. Your grocer or baker can supply a loaf like jhis. . F Insistif he hasn't one fee can get it for you. . . Full-fruite- d bread is full of luscious seeded Sun-Ma- id raisins rich in energizing nitfri ' jnent in practically predigested form. Raisins also furnish fatigue-resistin- g iron I for the blood. Serve plain raisin bread at dinner or as , fcasty fruited breakfast toast with coffee. Make delicious bread pudding with left ' ; over slices. No need to waste. a crumb of.. ? raisin bread. " Begin this week the habit of raisin bread , . twice weekly injrour home, for raisin bread is both good and..... good for you. f . . 7 Sun-Mai- d ,. IMJI Seeef Raisins j i'Wr Make delicious bread, pies, pudding, I Jm't 7 caket, etc. Ask your grocer for them. Send j r' k00"0 rec'PM- - iljjjltrjt I? S4rj?r 'lil Sun-Mai- d Raisin Grower hi , "V; , Pept Fresno, Calif. f: ' 'I - : I Free for Our Reader. We have made arrangements where-by every housewife who reads thbi paper can obtain a copy of "Reliable Recipes" absolutely free of charge by simply writing the Home Economics Department of the Calumet Baking Powder Co., 4100-2- 8 Fillmore Street, Chicago. Ill "Reliable Recipes" contains 76 pages of recipes and other Information ap-preciated by every housewife. It Is Illustrated in colors and will prove quite helpful in preparing the dally menu. ' . . We have also made arrangements with the Calumet Baking Powder Co. whereby their Home Economics De-partment will cheerfully answer all questions pertaining to cooking, kitchen equipment, etc. There Is ab-solutely no charge for this service. Write the Home Economics Depart-ment of the" Calumet Baking Powder Co.. 4100-2- 8 Fillmore St., Chicago, EL, today for a copy of "Reliable Recipes." Advertisement. :nWMW answer to i' --Sftw" "How do you do?" i lttefei Think it over carefully and then answer I &'CfiP& il ; frankly. Face the facts. Do your nerves and I jSmIPN i ' ' d'gesti0" stand the jolting of the coffee drug? i j irffifO Can they go on standing it? j j M,f j There's charm and complete satisfaction in ' -- - Postum-a- nd freedom from any harm to health. i Poeturn comes in two format Thousands of sensible people who have I STSSi seriously looked for the answer to "How do addition of boiling w.t.r. youclo? have tumedfromcoffeetoPcstum.and KSfhrS fleng 80 VfH' inu .s?tisIaction and health, i f.r to make the drink while they t think of turning back. the meal is being prepared) made by boiling for fully 20 You can begin today, with an order to miD"" your grocer. postuVin, Postum for Health Battle Creel. Mich. ... "There's a Reason" .'. - ' " , WORKERS OPEN FIVE BANKS Financial Institutions Art Organized by Unipns, the Latest Being In Chicago. Five labor banks are being organized In the United States, and one was recently opened In Chi-cago, according to the Locomotive Engineers Journal. Another, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers National bank, has been In existence a year and a half, and Its reported resources ore near $15,000,-00- 0. The Brotherhood of Locomotive En-gineers Holding company has bought control of the Nottingham Savings and Banking company of Cleveland, which Is capitalized at $75,000 with reported resources of $525,000 and has one of the -- oldest savings bank charters In northern Ohio. The Brotherhood of Hallway and Steamship Clerks has In-structed Its grand officers to organize a bank with a probable capital of $r00,000. The executive board of the Order of Railroad Telegraphers has obtained a charter for a bank cap-italized at $500,000 plus $100,000 sur-plus. Workers of Birmingham, Ala., are organizing there the Federated Bank and Trust company, with a cap-ital stock of $500,000. Representa-tives of the four transportation broth-erhoods in Minneapolis, Minn., have applied for a charter for a national bank to be capitalized at $200,000 In the twin cities. The new Chicago bank Is that of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, capitalized at $.'$00,000. Casanova Exposed. The greatest lover and the greatest adventurer In history Casanova Is fake, according to Gustav OugltJ, whose work la reviewed In a recent issue of The Dial. "He freshens up the ladles he con-quers, to make them more command--, ing. He Invents various fatherhoods for himself. And some of the greatest women whom he claims to have sub-dued have existed purely In his fancy," says Julius von Ludassy, and shows that even the famous escape from the Leads is a fabrication. WOVE STARTED TO ORGANIZE STEEL J Executive Council of Federation ; Laying Plans to Unionize Workers. . TO BEGIN WITH ORE MINERS i ii. Campaign Work, Say Leaders, Will Be Constructive and Conservative, and Radical Element Will Not Be Permitted to Control. . The first step in the new campaign of the American Federation of Labor to unionize the Iron and steel mills of the country will be the launching of a ., movement to organize the more than 250,000 metal miners who produce the . . basic materials for the industry. . Proposed plans for the new offen-sive against the United States Steel .. corporation and Its subsidiaries and .he large nonunion independent com-anle- s practically were decided upon t a meeting of the executive council - f national and International orgunizn-- . ions In the steel Industry utllllated i vtth the A. P. of L. This body was organized more than a year ago, re-placing the national committee, headed by William Z. Foster, that conducted the unsuccessful strike of 1910. Because of present Industrial condi-tions and the threatened strike, the council has decided not to open the campaign to organize the metal miners ; for several months or more, although some propaganda work may be launched within the next few weeks. The committee, it Is stated, has at least $70,0(K) to finance Its Immediate ' needs, and with the of its " affiliated organizations, which have a combined membership of mure than (500,000, ran raise additional funds. Officials of the council declare that the campaign work will be "eonstrue- - ; live and conservative," and assert that :' the radical element will be prevented from getting control. Kspeelal otten-tlo- n, It Is stated, will be given to the Industrial Workers of the World, who have been active among the ore miners of Michigan, Minnesota und Montana. Michael F. Tlghe, president of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel ond Tin Workeis and chairman t the executive council, said that be-cause of the unemployment ond Indus-trial situation it probably would bo some time before active unionization of the steel workers themselves would le attempted. "We are determined to proceed on conservative and constructive lines, " he said, "and have eome to the con-clusion that the better plan would be to devote our effort first to the ore miners who furnish the basic products needed In the Iron and steel Industry. We will te with the mine, mill and smelter workers' union, which has now become a part of our committee. "It has been proposed thnt we start the campaign In the Lake Superior and Lake Michigan region, then tackle the dock looders and other classes of men ' that handle the ore en route to the steel mllbv It will probably take a long time and be a. hard fight, but this looks to be the most logical and sure method of capturing the steel Industry for the American lubor movement." William O'llannnn of the Machinists' union, secretary of the council, said that a complete canvass of the steel situation had been made and pluns ' were being mode to take advantage of any condition that might arise. The proposed campaign, he explained, would cover the metal miners em- - ployed In Michigan, Montana, Minne-sota, Colorado and Arizona, with spe- - . rial attention to the Mesubl and Goge-bic range regions, owned and con-trolled by the United States Steel and the big Independents. the Oliver Interests of l'ltts-urg- h. ... News Happenings ofthtGmt j ""Seattle " Wash Roamed amidships by the freighter narry LuckeObaca la a heavy pall of forest fire smoke and fog, the steamer schcotoer Henry T. Smott went to the bottom with four of its crew shortly after 6 o'clock Sua-da- y morning in the Strait of Jwaa 4a f'uca about sight miles west of Head bay. Seattle. So. menacing has the for. est fire situation in thq state of Waaty lngton becorns that state foreatan Sunday afternoon issued orders (or the fire-fighti- crews to ignore mailer blazes and concentrate their efforts to those menacing property. Salt Lake. The new Warm ftprtega municipal bath house, constructed at a cost of 1330,000, will be opened to the public sometime between July to and 24, according to present plana aC the city administration. The actaat date of opening is, however, dependent upon the arrival of further equipment Washington. A hous bill authoris-ing the sale of surplus power devel-oped in the Salt river project in Ar-izona was passed Saturday by tas senate and now goes to the president The sale would be under 60-yea-r eop-tra-ot and the ' proceeds would fea, placed to the credit of the Salt rtrar project. Seattle. Mrs. Frances O. AxteQ of Belllngham, Wash., indorsed by the Bute Federation of Labor, KbaPartfaJ an league and the railway's political club, will be a candidate for the Re-publican nomination for United States senator at the primary elections la tte fall. Port Angeles, Wash. Eaploding steam pipes on the battleship New York scalded one man, rendered twarre others unconscious and nearly caused a collision between the flagship and the destroyer McDermut as the fleet was returning to this port front man-euvers Tuesday. Boise, Ida. Approximately 2000 acres of grain in Power county, Idaho, have been destroyed by grasshoppers, and many more fanners are threat-ened according to reports received at the flnlverslty extension division from the bounty agent there. This has been one of the worst years for grasshop-pers In the history of the state, offi-cials say, and farmers everywhere, re-ports indicate, have been taken en-tirely unawares by the pest. Tacoma. John 0'81iaughny, 80 ears old, resident of Cowlits Wash., Is a full fudged citizen t the United States following his natarsMsa-tio- a .before the superior court. P'. Shaughnessy has lived in the United States for more han seventy-fiv- e years oa an alien. "Now I can die happy," said 0'Shaughnetsy, commenting upon his experience at the county seat Be was born in Ireland. Ogden. One of the largest bank mergers in the west since the first of the year was announced by the Utah National, First National and Ogden Savings banks, with a combined cap-ital and surplus of 11,000,000 and re-sources of more than J8.0O0.000. The men closely identified in the merger are active In the banking, sugar and Industrial affairs of the city and state. West Yellowstone, Moat. By the spot fourteen miles east of the park entrance, where a group of the in- - trepld explorers eround their old-tim- e campfires conceived the Idea of a aa. tlonal park, America has Just cele-brated the golden anniversary of the fulfillment of their dream. The place was the junction of the Blbbon and Flrehole rivers at the point where the Washburn expedition encamped in 1S70 on the night when Cornelius Hedge made the suggestion to his fel-low explorers and the ocaaion was the official celebration of the fiftieth birthday of the Yellowstono National l ark, tlie crcat! mi f re"lted. Calgary, Alb. AiVr covering 000 miles in the southern portion of Al-berta, J. M. Cameron, general super-intendent of the Alberta division of the Canadian Padfie railway, declares that the crop conditions in these dla- - tricts nre very satisfactory. This la the most promising year for the dry land fanners In the south since 191C Cody, Wyo. An equestrian figure of William F. (Buffalo Bill) Cody, larg- - er thnn his life size, to be done in bronze wiih a base of pink nntlve rranlte, will be unveiled two yara henre at the annual Cody stamped, It wf.s announced here by the Bnffalo KM Memorial vnmtalttee. Austin, Mln.i.--Jo- hn Wagner, a wealthy retlret farmer, was found bro- - j tally slain with an axe discovered by his body. His wifs was seriously In-jured and probably will not recover. Eureka, Calif. Lee Smith, a station aeil here, engaging In an argument ith bis parents Mr. and Mrs. M. Klinra.ins, owr a divorce actkm his. wife hod sUrie'l. shot them dead with a rifle. As the police arrived, Hmith turned the weapon on hmlself. inflicting a wound from which ho d'ed. A Spelling Lesson. Once upon a time there wus a stub-born student who refused to learn to spell. But always the teacher pleaded with the student and often said: "You will suffer some great incon-venience, If not actual tragedy, some-- time, by reason of this refusal of yours to study orthography t' Yet still the student was obdurate, and sntd "blah." One day, after the obdurate student had grown to manhood, he poisoned himself eating oysters in "Orgust." And when the teacher, who had now grown old and toothless teaching or-thography, heard this, she said: "Uh, huh! I told him sol" From Life. Social Calls. "Thomas Hardy," said an English lecturer, "Is a serious enough individ-ual today, but there was a time In London when he was the gayest of the day." "At a Bohemian club one evening! Hardy rang up one after another thir-ty or forty of the most distinguished people in town dukes,'blshops, actor-manager- s, society queens, stage beau-ties, and so on. He told all these peo-ple to call up '625 Chlswlck' at once. "'You're wanted there badly," he explained to them, and the celebrities all thanked him hurriedily and rang off. "Well, when Hardy got through his telephoning we looked up '625 Chls-wlck' In the telephone directory. It was Wormwood Scrubs prison I" BRIGHT IDEA NOT PATENTED Generous Marine Willing All Should Have the Benefit of His Really . Brilliant Thought. The marine and his best girl were seeing the sights of. New York. The temptation to steal a kiss was strong, but he knew that people do not stop to kiss on the street In broad day-light, even if it Is one of those rare occasions when a marine has a chance to parade Broadway with his lady friend Suddenly the leatherneck had a bright Idea. He knew It looked all right to kiss a person good by on the street "Lissen, Lucille," he suggested. "What do you say if we shake hands, kiss each other good-b- y then walk around opposite blocks and meet again T" "You're on," said his lady love. the scheme turned out to be such a success that several blocks were ne-gotiated in the same manner, and the entire trip np town was a series of meetings and partings Now the leatherneck is wondering why he was so dumb he never thought of it before. The Leatherneck. --" Naval Testing Ground. 1 The long-fe- lt need f the Navy de ; partment for a place where new in- - ; ventlons that "looked good" might be I tried out is being met with an expert- - mental research laboratory, down the ' I Potomac river, seven miles from the) 1 Washington navy yard, on the grounds m of the Bellevue magazine, which is ex-- 1 pected to be in operation this sum- - j mer. The new plant, which is primarily if for research purposes and particularly B as a development laboratory, will H probably devote a great deal of at-- i tenrlon to radio work. H Hot Stuff. Some of the corn liquor being made nowadays has a potency all Its own. They tell this story In Illustration. In the North Carolina mountains two darkies opened a Jug, and in do-ing so spilled a little. One drop fell on a tumble bug, who Immediately dropped his ball, clicked his heels to-gether, threw back his shoulders and, backing up to a bale of cotton the two negroes had been carrying, snorted : "All right, big boy. Let's go!" American Legion Weekly. OTHER LABOR NOTES Forty men were re employed In the freight department r.t the M., K. & T. shops at Sedalla, Vo. They were laid off January 19. In the oplniou of President nard-Ing- , a consistent effort Is being made to abolish the twelve-hou- r day In the steel Industry. It was said at the White House that the committee ap-pointed by Elbert H. Gary Is making a ciinvoHS of the situation. At present the New England cotton piJIls are not making much efforj to tlniulate production because the price of cotton Is so much higher thun the price of cotton goods that It Is actual-ly more profitable for the mills to be closed down than to run at present cloth prices. Organized labor should answer re-.ce-decisions of the Supreme court with a campaign to obtain the enact-ment of a law which will protect It from suits for damages by employers. Instead of denouncing the laws, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers stated In a bulletin.' The police at Cherbourg, France, are Insisting that passport regulations must be observed and state that France does not want striking coal miners from America to remain In that country. A number of men were refused admission from the Majestic and were described s miners. With the avowed purpose of meeting all legal attacks aimed at labor unions, the American Federation of Lubor added to its program for curbing the powers exercised by the courts by di-recting the establishment at Washing-ton of a lubor defense council, com-posed of lawyers selected by the fed-eration's officers. .The council prima-rily will defend the unions against any suits that may be filed under recent Supreme court decisions adverse to labor. Due to. sharp advances In the cost of living, there has been of late con-siderable agitation for Increased wages in Poland. The textile workers In Lodz have made a general demand for 50 per cent Increase In wages and mill owners have recognized the neces-sity of granting some advance. A compromise probably will be arrived at without stoppage in the mills, al-though there bus been a recent tend-ency for orders to slacken, says Acting Commercial Attache Smith, Warsaw. The "Help Wanted" sign, which was In obscurity for so many months, now makes Its belated appeurunce, only to find that the worker In many States has been absorbed In agriculture or some other Industry. In fact, points out the Christian Science Monitor of Boston, "whereas within recent months there was much unemployment throughout the United States, it la shown today that virtually all work-ers who arc noi v!nrily Wl or on strike can find profitable employment." In two states, Kentucky and New Mex-ico, according to reports to 'the Depart-ment of Labor, the unemployment problem has virtually solved Itself. "In almost every line of business," notes the Washington Star, "there Is a steady, If slow, Increase in employ-ment. There Is no boom, Just as there hns been no panic; the reaction Is gradual. Just as the decline was grad-ual, and this Is more wholesome than a spasmodic revival would be." In more than twenty states, says the of Labor, there Is already a hortugo of workers In some Industry. In a large number of agricultural states the reports tell us that there Is a shortage of farm help. Three nonunion mines near Knox-vill- Ind., were cloned following a visit of a large group of union sympa-thizers from Pershing. The nonunion workers were ordered to leave the mines, which they did. There were no disorders. Employees of the United Hallways of Havana, Cuba, went on strike. A few passenger trains, manned by In-spectors, were running, but no freight traffic was reported. The strike is a protest against 0 rearrangement Of wages and hours and nffuct about 10 I 000 inch. ' One of the joys of going way for the surrner is coming back for the winter . GENERAL LABOR NEWS Open-heart- h furnaces In the Youngs-tow- n district are on a 00 per cent basis of operation, ripe mill opera-tions are at 82 per cent, as against 77 per cent last week, and sheet mills have Jumped from 90 to 04 per cent. lvhiie liie other textile iiiilis arc working full force, the silk mills at t Altoona, Pa., are not employing their - normal forces, although they are work-ing those employed full time. Slack conditions In the silk mills of rt and Scranton also are re-ported. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe rnilroml announced before the Ituil-roa- d labor board in the bearing of complaints of labor unions against the practice of contracting out railroad work, that It bad canceled all such out-side contracts for shop work. Counsel for t lie road had agreed with the jtinlons that no more work would be to outside contractors and that Iftven who bad been discharged tvouhl be reinstated. '' As a testimonial of Appreciation of Ids .(! jears of active work performed in heliali of working people, Kllxuheth (N. ,1.) Central, Labor Union has pre-ente- d " to John Keyes a check for 1,000. The recent decision of the United Itates Supreme court, declaring the Jilld labor law of 1917 unconstitution-al. Is 'said1 to have proved unpopular .with women's organizations and the jl.ongim of Women Voters will strive jduring the next session of the con-gress to have acceptable legislation piwvd. . |