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Show THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH -JiT' A"g' ? : , .. p . my. ' : r NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Angelo CouUnUno L'sai. Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at The Bankers Trust Company, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 22nd day of September A. D. 1928. BANKERS TRUST COMPANY, Administrator of the estate of Angelo Costantino Ueai, Deceased. Date of first publication, July 26, 1928. HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE REDUCE-I- T AT LAST A COMPOUND DHAS BEEN PROPERLY PRE-PARED FOR REDUCING HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE. Prevent apoplexy, paralysis, bright's disease, rheumat-ism, eczema, boils, pimples, and many other diseases caused from high blood pressure and impure blood. Reducit is a compound properly put up for the purpose of reducing high blood pressure and purifying the Wood. Money Back Guarantee With Every Order. For advertising purposes we are offering this compound for a short time only at the reduced price of $2.75 a box, postpaid to any address in the United States. Upon request without cost or obligation we will gladly send you a scale showing what normal blood pressure should be at ages from 20 to 70 years. DENVER RESEARCH LABORATORY, Empire Building, Denver, Colorado. Box 836. U. S. A. v. HOUSES FOR SALE. 13,800.00 5 room modern home except furn-ace In Sandy on good corner near school. Has full eeraeat abeeraent and Is well arranged with fsonch doors and mantle. Will take car or lot as first payment and balance like rert. 3,5OO.0v. Just finished a new well construct-ed home In Mldvale. Large lot, sewer, water, electric fixtures right up to the minute. Jaaa piaster, hardwaod floors, breakfast Book. Built-i- n feat-ures. WW take ear or lot as flint payment or what have you and tho balance ike rcat EmuIt Taylor Brothers , No. 615 Yeroxmt Bldg., Sah lake, Telephone Was. 1111. COLD MEATS With a Finer Flavor The extra care in the selection of ingredients, the special mixing and curing, give to our ready to serve cold meats an added measure of flavor that will prove distinctly pieasing.. Ideal for serving this warm weather. Ed. Johnson's Meat Market r Highland Boy Phone 93 Cowiithud. I'M If it's a question of ,a, oil, tires or repairs ."-- Let us help you. Carr Fork Garage Phone 19 10 Carr Fork : JreYm MM ' CMe ill MS - jHSr wi Then $L1 ijwiieslbiiii Tire quality and Miller value are an invitation MILLER "Man from Missouri." We welcome the buyer who is seeking quality. Miller Tire's have it abundantly. We also welcome the buyer who wants the best for the least money. We have it. Through thousands of miles of service, with America's First Scientifically Correct Balloon Tires you will smile at those who complain of the troubles common to many tires. We invite yes, we challenge the "close-buyer- " to leam these things about Miller Tires. CANYON GARAGE PHONE 333 ! SSEI51L DBB1L1LS8 j j Get the Boys ready for j School sI . I SHIRTS f SWEATERS CAPS f f SHOES . s . . jl Everything for the Boys at moderate prices. 1 Strilich Merc. Co. j S Highland Boy Phone 45 "The money actually appropriated for flood relief is too small to mak even a start," Governor Smith assert-ed. "Too much time has been spent in squabbling over who shall pay the bill." Governor Smith pledged himself "to a progressive, liberal conservation policy based upon the same principles to which I have given my support in the State of New York," and to fight against selfish aggression "wherever It appears and Irrespective of whom it may involve." "The sources oi water power must remain forever under public owner-ship and control," be said. Benefits growing from the develop-ment of water power as an incident to the regulation of the Colorado Riv-er should be "equitably distributed among the states having right of own-ership," Governor Smith declared. It would be the policy of his admin- -' lstration to develop a method of oper-ation for Muscle Shoals which would reclaim for the government some fair revenue from the enormous expendi-ture already made, be said. Red tape and autocratic bureaucra-cy should be brushed aside in caring for veterans in distress, Governor Smith said. Likewise, he said he would continue his sympathetic inter-est in the advancement of progressive legislation tor working men and wo-men, the proper care of maternity, infancy and childhood, and the en-couragement of activities which ad-vance public health. His Labor Policy Turning to the labor question, Got-ern- or Smith said: "The reasonable contentment ot 'hose who toll with the conditions un-der which they live and work Is an essential basis of the nation's well-bein- g. The welfare of our country, therefore, demands governmental con-cern for the legitimate Interest of labor." In conclusion the governor'sald in part: "I pledge a complete devotion to the welfare of our country and our peo-ple. I place that welfare above every other consideration and I am satis-fle- d that our party is In a position to promote it To that end I here and now declare to my fellow coun-trymen, from one end of the United States to the other, that I will dedi-cate myself with all the power and energy that I possess, to the service of our great republic." j "Our Canadian neighbors," he said, I "have gone far in this manner to solve ' this problem by the method of sale I made by the state itself and not by ' private individuals. ( Saloon Won't Return i "There is no question here of the re-- , tu; n of tho saloon. When I stated that the saloon Ms and ought to be a de-funct institution In this country' I meant It. I mean it today. I will nev-er advocate or approve any law which I directly or Indirectly permits the re-turn of the saloon." "This country cannot be a healthy, strong, economic body if one of its members, so fundamentally Important as agriculture, Is sl::k almost to the , point of economic death," said Gov-ernor Smith, taking up the subject of farm relief. The Republican administration has made many promises of legislation to aid the farmer, but has kept none of them, he continued. "The tariff is Ineffective on com-modities of which there Is exportable surplus without controlled sale of the . surplus," eaid Governor Smith. "Our platform points the way to make the tariff effective for crops of which we produce a surplus. market-ing and warehousing of surplus farm products is essential Just as control ot the flow ot capital wat found necessary to the regulation ot our country's finances. "Our platform declares for the de-velopment of marketing and an earnest endeavor to solve the problem ot the distribution of the cost of dealing with crop surpluses over ' the marketed unit of the crop whose producers are benefited by such as-sistance. Only the mechanics remain to be devised. I propose to substitute . action for InacUon and friendliness for hostility. In my administration ot the government of my state, whenever I was confronted with a problem ot this character, I called Into conference those best equipped on the particular subject in band. I shall follow that course with regard to agriculture. Farmers and farm leaders with such constructive aid as will oome from sound economists and fair-minde-d leader of finance and business must work out the details. There are vary-ing plans for the attainment ot the end which is to be accomplished. Such plans should be subjected at once to searching, able and fair-minde-d analy-sis, because the Interests ot all re-quire that the solution shall be eco-nomically sound." Will Call Conference Governor Smith then promised to summon an agricultural conference to work out the solution, saying: "If I am elected, I shall immediate-ly after election ask lW.g 0 tQ"9 type I h mefl( Irrespective of par--I ty," to Center upon this task. I shall - join with them in the discharge of their duties during the coming winter and present to OongTcss immediately upon its convening the solution rec-ommended by the body ot men best fitted to render this signal service to i the nation. I shall support the ac tivities of this body until a satisfac-tory law is placed upon the statute booku." On the subject of transportation Governor Smith said he believed In the construction and use of modern highways to carry the short haul of small bulk commodities and to aid in marketing farm products. Also of great importance, he said, is the development of transportation by our waterways, which are still in a highly undeveloped state. Linked with waterways develop-ment Is the control ot floods, the gov-ernor said. He declared that the two Republican administrations had wait-ed for the Mississippi flood of last year Instead of tnklng leadership in this important work. SMITH SPEECH (Continued from page 1) there" we7eTctually 124,000,000 more federal taxes collected last year than in the first year of the Coolldge It Is not economy to refuse so make necessary expenditures to provide fa-cilities for the transaction of govern-ment business, he said, pointing out that scarcely a city in the country has adequate quarters for federal business it the present time. Anticipating Republican misrepre-sentation of the Democratic party's position on the tariff, Governor Smith declared : No Busincu Upheaval "The Democratic party does not and under my leadership will not advocate any sudden or drastic revolution in our economic system which would cause business upheaval or popular distress. "The Democratic party stands squarely for the maintenance of leglti mate business and a high standard ol - wages for American labor. "Pay no attention to the Republican propaganda and accept my assurance as the leader of our party that Demo-cratic tariff legislation will be honest," he declared. "It will play no favorites. It will do Justice to every element In the nation." Ho said foreign policy has Its roots In the approval ot the majority of the people and that he regarded it as a paramount duty to keep alive the In-terest ot the people In questions ot foreign policy and to advise the elec- - torate as to tacts. He promised to stress the necessity for restoration of cordial relations with Latin-Americ- The Republican administration hat signally failed In its endeavor to re move the causes of war, he continued. ' "I pledge myself to a resumption ot real endeavor to make the outlawry of war effecUve by removing 1U causes and to substitute the methods' of con-ciliation, conference, arbitration, and Judicial determination," he declared. The President has two duties with respect to the prohibition question, he said. "The first is embodied in his oath of office," he went on. "If with one hand on the Bible and the other hand reaching up to Heaven, I promise the people of this country that 'I will faithfully execute the office, of Presi-dent of the United States and to the best of my ability preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States,' you, may be sure that ajmll live up to that oath to the last degree. "I shall to the very limit execute the pledg of our platform 'to make an bones ndeMI 12 VtfW. the iith amendment and all other provi-sions of the Federal Constitution ' 'felt laws "enaclea pursuant thereto.'" ' the Governor promised "ruthlessly to stamp out" the present corruption in prohibition enforcement "Such conditions cannot and will not exist under any administration presid-ed over by me," he asserted. Continuing, he said: "The second constitutional duty Im-posed upon the President Is 'to recom-mend to the Congress such measures as he shall Judge necessary and expe-dient.' "I shall advise the Congress in ac-cordance with my constitutional duty ot whatever changes I deem 'necessary or expedient.' It will then be for the people and the representatives in the national and state legislature to deter-mine whether these changes shall be made." "I believe In temperance," he con-tinued. "We have not achieved tern-peran-under the present system. The mothers and fathers of young men and women throughout this land know the anxiety and worry which has been brought to them by their children's use of liquor in a way which was un-known before prohibition. I believe In reverence for law. Today disre-gard ot the prohibition laws is in-sidiously sapping respect for all law. I raise, therefore, what I profoundly believe to be a great moral lssub In-volving the righteousness ot our na-tional conduct and the protection of our children's morals." The remedy Is to be found in the fearless application of Jeffersonlan principles, he continued, to allow for different habits and customs of differ-ent parts of the country. "Some immediate relief would come from an amendment to the Volstead law giving a scientific definition of the alcoholic coutent ot an Intoxicating beverage," he said. "The preseut defi-nition Is admittedly Inaccurate and un-scientific. Each state would then be allowed to fix its own standard ot al-coholic content, subject always to the proviso that that staudard could not exceed, the maximum fixed by the Con-- w ' r'.T:2- - "l believe, moreover, that there should be submitted to the people the question of some change in the provi-sions of the 18th amendment. Certain-ly- , no one foresaw when the amend-ment was ratified the conditions which exist today of bootlegging, corruption and open violation ot the law in all parts of the country. The people themselves should, after thla eight years of trial, be permitted to say whether, existing conditions should be rectified! I personally believe in an amendment to the 18th amendment which would give to each individual ttate itself only after approval by a referendum popular vote of Its peo-ple the right wholly within its borders to Import, manufacture or cause to be manufactured and sell alcoholic bev-erages, the sale to be made only by the state itself and not for consump-tion in any public place' Mr. and Mrs. Mark Jones left Mon-day for a two weeks trip In California. r Mi's. Cofrle Simmons and children left1 .Wednesday to spend a month in Lehi with Mrs. Simmons' parents. Mr .and Mrs. Alfred Ilenkel an. nlunce the marriage of their daugh-ter Gladys Alnieda to Leo v Durton Thorn Friday, Aug. 24, in the Salt Lake Temple. On Saturday eVeniug a reception for the young couple will be given at the home of David Thorn , in rieasant Grove. Afler a shot I honeymoon Mr. and Mrs. Thorn will make their home in Bingham. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. King left Thurs-day evening for their home in Cleve-land, Ohio, aftr a week's vist at the home of Mr. and Mns. A. C- - Larrck. About 60 members were present. Mns. Paul Richards and family are spending two weeks at Plnecrest Inn. |