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Show GET YOUR PHOTOS IN BINGHAM i There la a splendid photograph gal lery Id Bingham under the manage ment of J. E. Carlson at 467 Main St Mr. Carlson la successor to Mr. Ga brlelson. Day or night plcturea. E. WADDOUPS I and Counselor I IM.610 Judge Building, I Lake City, Utah. CASTORI A For Infants and Children In Use For Ovpr 30Years Signature of lafCOCJU4, The Press-Bullet- in I. H. MASTERS, General Manager. CD. McNEELEY, Editor and Lecee. Subscription $2.00 a Year In Advance. 12.60 en Time. Entered a second-clas- s matter Jaa IS, 1815. at the poatoftlce at Ptoto, Utah, nnder the act of March U, 1879. leeued Friday ef Each Week at Prove, ' UUh. THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Bingham Canyon, Utah. ' THOS. J. TRAMEL, Pastor, Phone 302. Res. Apt No. 8, Vienna. Phone 302. MORNING SERVICE 1st and 3rd Sunday at Bingham, 11:30 a. m. 2nd and 4th Sunday at Highland Boy, 11:30 a. m. AFTERNOON SERVICE 1st and 3rd Sunday at Lark, 2:30 p. m. 2nd and 4th Sunday at Copperfleld, 2:30 p. m. EVENING SERVICE AT BINGHAM 6:30 p. m., Young People's Service; 7:30, Preaching. IBINGHAM HOSPITAL Dr. F. E. Straup Office hour- s- 9 A. M. to 10 A. M., From 1 P. M. to 5 P. M. and 7 to 8 evenings PHONE No. 4 Mil. Obtained through the old established 'O. SWIFT OO." are being quickly bought by Manufacturer. Send a model or aketches and dencriptloti of your Invention for FREE 88 ARCH , and report on patentability. We (rot pat- - r enta or no fee. Write for our froe book K of 300 needed Inventions. fe IK SWIFT-- CO. Patent lawyers. Ettas, teas, f 1307 Seventh St., Washington, D. C. DB.P.S. HAGEMAN ' PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON' Bingham Canyon, Utah. Office: Above Woodring's Drug Store. . Residence: Eckman Aparmtents. Telephone 35. Office hours: 0; 7-- 8. i I SULfSr visit to im not complete unlem you hare a EMg Svim AT THE U Weal Breaawiy Twe bit natural hot sulphur water peels. Laa aaaj Gan tlemaa attendant. RHEUMATISM VANISHES TURKISH (J T vBATH AND BED fiL . y ' Chronic Constipation . Perhaps you have never thought of It but this disorder Is due to a lack of moisture In the residual matter of V the food. If you will drink an abund-anc- e of water, eat raw fruits and take lota of outdoor exercise, you may be able eventually to overcome It entire-ly. In the meantime use the most v, mild and gentle laxatives. Strong and '' harsh cathartics take too much water . out of the system and make a bad matter worse. Chamberlain's Tablets are easy and pleasant to take, and moet agreeable In effect. Give them' a trial. fJMany a towering j business success owe its first strides to the little modest Want ad, timidly bidding fot customers. Your little business niay be helped to suc-cess in the same way, 3 Mail ads are the "Bargain Counter" of newspaper space, and -- you should have youf share of the benefits. SiHBHAMS DIVIDHiD Fflfl-DUCE-R'S HISTORY AND WORTH 1 Report of Charles A, Stoneman & Co., of New N ota, Gives Data on Many 'Bingham Mines. (This is cop.ed from their mining stock report.) ' Utah Copper Company, Incorporated In New Jersey In 1903. Authorized capitalization 2,500,000 shares; out-standing, &24.490; par value $10; an-nual dividend $14 per share; Presi-dent, C, M. McNeill; secretary, K. R. iBabbitt. Office, 25 Groad .Street New York City, New York. Thia company owns 71 acres of mineral .land, and 9,162 acres of non-miner- lands In (Bingham Canyon, Utah.- - The chief property is a mountain of copper ore, estimated to contain 370,000.000 tons, jm mined by steam shovels. Owns two mills with the combined capacity of 40,000 tons dally, also controls the Bingham & 'Garfield Railway, and the majority owner&hip of the Nevada Consolidated Copper Company at Ely Nevada, Produces about 200,000,000' pounds of copper annually. The earn-ings In 1917 estimated $35,000,000. Utah Consolidated Mining Company, incorporated in New Jersey in 1903. Authorized capitalization 300,000 shares. Outstanding stcck 300,000 shares. Par value $5. President, R. H. Channing; secretary, lA. Ji; Melen. Of-fice 42 Broadway, New York. This company owna 404 acres In IBlngham f" Canyon, Utah. It Is opened by shafts and tunnels. Company produces about 18,000,000 pounds lead, H2,00O,009 pounds- - copper; 600,000 ounces of sil-ver, and 20,000 ounces of gold annual-ly. Gross value of ore reserves esti-mated at $5,000,000. Utah lApex Mining Company was in-corporated in Maine, 1902. Author-ized capitalization 120,000 shares. Out-standing, 105,604 shares. Par value $25. President, . F. Haffenriffer; secretary, N. DuVally. Office 10 Post Office Square iBoston. Owns about 254 acres at Bingham Canyon, Utah Equipped with mill of .400 tons dally capacity. Company , produces about 40,000,000 pounds lead; 2,500.000 pounds of copper; 600,000 ounces of silver; , and 6000 ounces of gold an-nually. . ' Utah Metal atd Tunnel Company, Incorporated In Maine In U914. Author-ized capitalization 735,000 shares. Outstanding 685,238 at par value of $1. Funded debt $326,600. Owns 4,039 acres at Bingham Canyon. Utah Equipped with mill of 400 tons capa-city daily. Properties are extensively developed. 'Produces about 7,000,000 ' pounds lead and 2,000,000 copper 'an-nually. Bingham Mines Company, Incorpor-ated in Main, 1908. Capitalization 130,000 shares. Outstanding., 141,110, at par value of $10. Funded debt, $271,000. Dividend rate $2 annually. Company owns 430 acres mineral lands and 596 acres non-mlifer- lands In. Bin xham Canyon, Utah. Also owns the control Of Uie JEagle & Blue Bell ' Wining Compan, in the TIntic mining district, of Utah. Estimated earnings In lftl7 were $850,000. I Eingham-Ne- w Haven Copper nff Gold Mining Company. Incorporated in Utah, 1602. Authorized capitaliza- tion 400,000 shares. Outstanding 228,-68- 9, par valua at $5.. Office in Salt Lake City, Utah. Owns 500 acres in Bingham Canyon, Utah. Developed by shafts and tunnels to a doptb of 1200 -- feet Equipped ith 175-to- n mill. Pro-- f duces about 2.500,000 pounds copper, 6,000,000 pound3 lead, 350,000 ounces silver and 7,000 ounces of gold an-nually. . Silver Shield Mining A Milling Com-pany. Incorporated in Utah. Author-ized capitalization 300,000 shares. Out-standing. 225,000. iPar value $1. Of-fice at Salt Lake City, Utah. Owns 320 acres at Bingham Canyon. Utah. Opened by tunnels. High grade ore ex-posed In 11 and 1917 and moderate shipments made. Property is now under development. . j L. D. DEAL DIED IBIS WIG Former Mayor of Springvllle Passes Away Early This Morning of Heart TroublePioneer Builder of Spring-vllle and One of First Children Born In Our Sister City. - Springville, June 16 This morning at 112:45, after suffer-ing poor health for a number of years L. D. Deal passed away. He leaves two children living and two dead. He was general manager of the Deal Brothers and Mendenhall store at the time of his death and was one of the leading factors in prganlr-in- the Springvllle (Bank, the Springville opera house and the company which bears his name. He was twice elected mayor of Springvllle without opposi-tion. Ho helped organize the Utah Wholesale Grocery Company, which later became the Utah Wholesale Gro-cery Co. with headquarters in Provo and a branch in Salt 'Lake. 'Mr. Deal was born July 27, 1858, in Springville. At this date there were very few living in that city, it having been settled but two years previous. In 1879 he was married to Ruth Eliza-beth Coats and to this union four chil-dren were born. The two living are Ella Deal and (Mrs. Naoma Gaffney, the other two are iLucian D. and Mrs. Dottie MerrllL The Deal brothers have always been interested and engaged In railroad con-struction work and in 1S79 Mr. L. D. Deal went to Colorado with a construc-tion gang and built one of the first and most difficult canyon roads in that state. In 1888 he organized the Deal Brothers and IMendenhall store, and was until 1904 vice president and rec-retar- On this date he became gen-eral manager, and has held this posi-tion until his death. Mr, Deal was a great builder for Springvllle, and at great sacrifice or-ganized the company which erected the Rpringvllle opera house. This had long been a dream of the people of that commonwealth. Funeral arrangements have not been made at this tine, but it will be held either Saturday or Sunday. Tb army .ordnance dfntsrfrcvt tv negotiated approximately 12,000 con-tract- s since tills coum 17 m. . s ., war, involving within $175,000,000. the total funds directly available- for the department, for the present ftfc:;I year $3,383,280,015. Additional con-tracts totaling $1,503,703,741 have bwi' entered Into on the authority of con gress pending appropriation of 1111 amount aggregating $1,671,460,750. The magnitude of the task of the ordnance department financially Is evi-denced by the disbursement recently In a single day of more than $25,000,000 on ordinary contract vouchers. Dis-bursements for the month of April, 1918, ran to $356,884,803, an Interesting amount as compared with the $5.05,-26-4 disbursed by the ordnance depart-ment in April, 1917. These disburse-ments were made at the ordnance of-fice, in Washington. , Amounts dis-bursed at government arsenals are not Included. One check recently drawn by the ord-nance disbursing officer for ordnance material was for $18,750,000. One re-quisition made recently by this samp officer on the treasury was for $109,-000,00- This is the largest single requi-sition ever made by any United States disbursing officer. . Prior to two months ago, before the ordnance department established Its 11 district offices which zoned the country to expedite payments to contractors and relieve the strain upon the main office In Washington, the disbursing officer at Washington signed from 500 to 3,000 checks a day. Because of the instruction1 of gas of-ficers who have been at the various camps for the last six months, the troops which are going forward to France are well posted on methods of combating gas attacks, says a state-ment authorized by the war depart-ment A group of British gas officers has been in this country since lust summer. One of these, men has been At each of the training camps, advising and Assisting the division gas officer. . All the men going overseas are sup-plied with gas helmets. Under the di-vision gas officers and their assistants, the men are drilled la the use of masks, taught how to detect ,Jlw pres-ence of gas, and given actual experi-ence with different sorts of gases. Mimic gas shells and cloud attacks, used often at night In connection with high explosives, help to make the train-ing realistic. The United States has been able to build on the experience of the British and French, to whom gas attacks were unknown when they entered the war. No American troops have been sent to the front without practlcul experience In iVefldjnjhemseJves jigalnst gas. fense Incudes a course of 'abouTone month. Most of the gas officers arr commissioned first lieutenants. ' One of the interesting developments of the war, according to a statement authorized by the war' department, Is the rapid expansion of the various bu-reaus of the war department At the outbreak of the war there were less than 3,000 employees on duty. The number now Is approximately 25,000, an Increase of S00 per cent While this represents a tremendou expansion, the Increase In the army Itself has been more than 1,500 per cent Only four out of every 100 officers In the service were In the army at the , time the war began, BROWNING GUN FOR AIRCRAFTJS 0. it RATE OF FIRE SYNCHRONIZED WITH REVOLUTIONS OF THE ' TRACTOR, PROPELLER. BASEBALL CAPTURES LONDON American Army .and Navy Teams Draw Big Crowds British Officers In U. 8. Give Instruction In Qas Defense. The Browning machine gun has suc-cessfully undergone a test to deter-mine Its value for use with aircraft This is one of three types of machine guns with which the rate of fire can be so synchronized with the revolu-tions of the propeller of a tractor air-plane that the gun can be fired by the pilot of a combat plane through the revolving blades. " ' ' Airplane propellers revolve at from 800 to 2,000 revolutions per minute. The machine gun Is connected with the airplane engine by a mechanical or hydraulic device, and impulses from the crank shaft are transmuted to the machine gun. .. The rate of fire of the machine gun is constant and Its fire Is synchronized with the revolving pro-peller blades by "wasting" a certain percentage of the impulses it receives from the airplane engine ami by hav-ing the remaining impulses trip or pull the trigger so that the gun fires Just at the fraction of the second when the propeller blades are clear of the line of Are. . . - The pilot operates the gun by means of a lever which controls the circuit nd allows the Impulses to trip the trigger. "As the latest wonder of the world London has taken to baseball," says "a committee on public Information representative in London. "The Eng-lish never before had much use for our great game. They called it an ex-aggerated form of rounders and won-dered what the noise was all about, but the American and Canadian sol-diers in England have been educating them. . "A regular league of eight teams has started a summer schedule, and the English public Is learning what It has missed. Big crowds witness the game the sport bids lair "to !Fe'coT!$aYi&IAJ popular. .Here Is the way Thomas Burke, the short-stor- y writer, reports s game In the London Star of May 27. .I;' "'Last week I discovered baseball. The match between the Army and Navy teams was my first glimpse of a pastime that has captivated a cont-inent and I can well understand Its ap-peal to a modern temperament Be-lieve me, it's good goods. And the crowd I I had heard and read much of baseball fans and. their method of root-ing, but my conceptions were nothing near the real thing. The grandstands, crowded with army and navy : fans, bristling with megaphones and tossing hats and demoniac faces, would have made a superb subject for a lithograph by 8lr Frank Bragwyn. The gas defense service Is now manu-facturing about K.000 horse gas masks per day. These are being sent to France, and It Is expected that within a short time every horse connected with the American expeditionary forces will be equipped with the new masks. The gas defense service has a com-pletely equipped fuctory for the manu-facture of the masks. In less than three weeks a building was selected and the factory was producing masks. The Introduction of riveting machinery has done away with the heavy hand sewing of the frame which supports the masks on the face of the horses. The masks are so constructed that no metal or chemically Impregnated parts can chafe the horse. ' In Bavaria the monthly meat ration has been cut 20 per cent from l.(XX) to SO0 gram according to German newspapers. The monthly meat ration In Saxony has been reduced from 800 to 700 grams, public officials are In the Pninninn press as discus sing the poHslblllty of a further redue-tlo- n of the bread ration In Prussia. ' A Munich paper reports that from ' the bediming of the war to March 1. 1(118, Bavarian hog stocks have de- - creased from 2.100.312 to 700.301 bend. The Danish boir census shows a de-crease from 1,051,000 hogs July 12, 1!)17, to 7S0.OM December 5, WW, or a dfcreHse of oiic ililrd the number at the beginning of the war. j The restriction on the Importation of crude rubber has been followed by re- -' strtctlons on Importation of four coin- - modltles possessing some of the char- - ncteristles of rubber, and capable un- - iler some cln iiinsliinees of being Used .is substitutes for until nil rubber. ; Actitf on 11 su'etslon of General j l'ersbiiiu iiti order bus been Issued In- - erensiiii; enc h regiment's bund from 2S to ,'.0 members, l'.ntid leaders having ' 'i:id more tluiti live yearn' military ex- -' ;erlence as band lenders will be mudo , irst lieutenants; liaise with less than live years' experience sviil be made sec 'lid lieutenants. ' liesble eiilurinir 'tie bands n bucle lie no! drum corps will ,e added to each r flue nt. Kadi enrps will include tho ouipuny bu.rl.-i- ei' its retrltnent, and uot more than 1.'! driiuiiuers. "The game got hold of me before the first pitched ball. The players In their hybrid costumes and huge gloves', the catcher In his gas mask, and the uiovc-i.uut-s of the teams as they prac-ticed runs shook roe with excitement Then the gume began and the rooting began. Ia past years I have attended various footbnM matches In mining dis-tricts whore the players came In for a certain amount of ragging, but they were church services rompared with the furious abuse and hating hn titled to any unfortunate who failed to play ball. " 'There was, for example, uu explo-sive, reverberating "A-- h li whlh I have been practicing In my hack yard ever since, lint without once catching Its true quality. You should hiivu heard Admiral Sims, as college yell lender, when the Navy made a home-ru- n hit, with his "Atta hoy; oh, ntta-wa- y to play ball," and when they got an error he sure handed the Navy theirs. , " 'Yes ; I've got It. From now on I'm a fan.' I'm going to see every baseball match played anywhere near I shall never be able to watch with ex-citement a cricket or football match after this; tt'd be like a tortoise nice. Come along with me to the next match mid Join me in rooting and In killing the umpire.'" In March mid April the secretary of agriculture, yi recommendation of the otllce of public roads, und rural engi-neering, approved 'Jl'J state road-build-la-projects Involving more than miles of highways under the federal aid road act. The estimated cost of these Improvements to the states is about ?i:.hhi,uki. The federal uld al-lowed is more than $5,000,000. Bottlers of soft drinks In the United States may nave approximately 0O.1KK) tons of sugar annually by using other sweetening materials, according to In-vestigations by Hjieclalists 01' the u of chemistry, 1'nltcd States de-partment of agriculture. The bureau of chemistry in preparing in furiiih bottlers with sweetening formulas that will allow the actual sugar content in soft drinks to be cut to 50 per cent or less and at the same time w ill preserve the customary taste of the level-uses- . Starch sugar, starch simp, maltose f'r-u- p and hom y are the substitutes usud. .'. DIVIDEND NOTICE Dividend No.- - 5 JBIngham Mines Company Notice Is hereby given to the stock-holders of the Bingham Mines Company a corporation of the state of Maine, that Dividend No. 5, of fifty cents (50c) per shade, out of 1918 earnings, has been declared by the Board of Directors, upon the - out-standing capital stock of the corpora-tion, payable July 1st, 1918, to stock-holders of record June 20th. Books do not close. (Signed) JALMES P. GRAVE'S. President, THOMAS S. WOODS, Treasurer Dnted June 4, 1918. UTAH NOW IMPORTING NEAR-LY 12,000,000 WORTH OF POULTRY Help In Production of Animal Food ' to Feed the Nation and Our Allies . Our national government in this j gigantic struggle of the world in its endeavor to feed ourselves and our allies has found that it is necessary to increase greatly, poultry and egg pro- -' ttuectlon. The shortage is ro large and necessity so grtat that congress .de a large emergency appropriation to be used by the bureau of animal In-dustry of the Department of Agricu- lture in connection with the state ex-tension service . in - each state to acquaint our people with the condi-tions and obtain through them t e necessary incrtaae in poultry produc- tion. Thia work is being token up in each state of the union, and it be- comes absolutely imperative to obtain as large an increase In poultr and ergs as possible. The production of poultry and pcrs is capable of tl.e greatest and mo-i- t rapid increase of aar animal products uur country and our allies are depend- ent upon Uieso for our greatest in- crease in airimal foods for the coming years. I wish to call the attention of farm-era- , poultrymen, and all others who w.rultry I wh0 are sltu"ted o to .Vh.ey .ca.B do BO' to tbi t and fact that poUurjr culture offers the greatest opportanly for a greater and XmI of i' e"P'aUy women the farm and of the cities and villages, to take part In the animal food supply .$,1I,0J00i,n00t0hatot $C2,t0a0h0,01090 Importing worth of pouT-tr-y product annually This fact brought to your attention that poultry products can be here and sold in your own 'J should be sufficient assurance that cup'aSn. " Tery Prmab,e " Consumption of poultry products will, if they are obtainable, materially. This will make thTde mand or these more Insistent and the necessity for largely Increased produC. than at Present The Department of Agriculture a 1st of farmers' bulletins for d?s ributlon which may be obtained ing to the Department of Agriculture VVaHhlnBton. D C. for them, or o H . Sanborn. Lxtenslon Poultry Hus hwndm.in. Tognn. Vtnh. SUMMONS In the Juhtice's Court, in and for the Tenth Precinct, City of Bingham, Peace. " ' " . . r (Brunno Perri, plaintiff, vs. Guglielmo Pfeci, defendant. : The State of Utah to the Defendant : You are hereby summoned to appear before the above entitled court within ten days after the service of this sum- mons upon you. if served within the county in which this-actio- 1b brought otherwise within twenty days after this service, and defend the above en- titled action brought against you to recover the aum of thirty-fiv- e dollars legal interest at the rate of 8 per cent from Sept. 1st 1918, and costs of suit-o- n account of board and lodging sun-Plie- d by the plaintiff to the defendant, and in case of your failure to do so Judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the com-plain- t. Given' under my hand this Uth day of June, 1948. t , JN'O. C. GRREN, . Justice of the Peace. Evidati he Vas Annoyed. A girl who wws rnnnlns a London Boa was making out bet 0rst report Under the heading "Accidents" ah stated: "Bumped into an old gent" Under the heading "Remarks" sht laid: "Simply awfuL" Lame Back Relieved For a lame back apply Chamber-Iain'-s Liniment twice a day and mas sage the muscles of the back over the seal of pain thoroughly at each appli-cation. Force of Habit Bank Cashier "Ton owe na con-s- i del able overdraft madam. What - shall we do about Itr She "Tou may Charge It please." Judge. 4 To Prevent Belching Make a regular habit of eating slow-ly, masticate your food thoroughly, and you may have no further trouble. If you should, take one of Chamber-lain's Tablets Immediately after sup-per. president wilson indorses child Labor stakoaros The following letter defining Prml-der- .t Wilson's stand on the malntii-anc- e of labor standards during the war has .'ust been received by the National Child Labor Ctmmlttee: "As the labor situation created br the war Uev lops, I am more Interested than .ver if that wre possible. In throwing all the safeguards possible around the labor of women and chil-dren in order that no Intolerable or In-jurious burden may be placed upon them. I am. therefore, very glad In-deed that the National Child Labor Committee is diligently continuing its labors and extending its vigilance in this important matter. By doing so it is contributing to efficiency and econ-omy of production, as well as to the preservation of life and health." "WOODROW WILSON " Although President Wilson has Indi-cated in a number of his speeches that he does not believe in the relaxation of laws protecting women and chll dren, his letter to the National Child Labor Commltte Is his first direct utterance on the subject. "We expect that President Wilaon's letter will be cne of the greatest fic-tor-s In preventing further relaxation of child labor Ihvs," sulci Owen R Lovejov or the National Child Labor Committee. "Last spring before the administration had time to state its position on th? question of labor standards a number of Mates author-ized the suspension of their lavs Since then there has been constant pressure In other states on officials charged with the enforcement of hiror laws to permit violations of the labor laws on the ground of war necessity Hut the president's letter, and a simi-lar one received by the National Child Labor Coinm!tt"e from Secretary of W'nrk Iiaker, pIiowb clearly what the fttitude of these officials and the nt large should he toward nnv pro pos.'ils that would "plare intolerable or Injurious liurd-.'ii.s- upon the women and children. "The National Child Labor Commit- - tee plans to use Child Ubor day Jan- uary 27 (January 2B for synB,KueS and January 28) for schools, o u g the preservation of labor standards in accordance with tho president's tate legislatures will be convening about that time and the I hopes through the medium of schools churches. Y. M. C. A. and V. W V women's clubs and other organization's to so awaken the public to the need of continuing the protection of war time that any legislation tend"r to brca, down standards may he for" Special pamphlets outlining Kro. pear, experience-- and the sep alr(lfulv aken In America have been pren.red by the National Child l,aho, tee or use on Child Labor a,-- . of tucse Topic, pamphlets may be obtainel urmJ . r,ommi," hoad.pmrH rs at renty.Hecond street.-Ne- w. 1 ork City. Rusty Door fastenings. The best door fastenings sometime fall to catch without a special turning f the' knob, the latch seeming slug-gish and slow In action. This annoy-anc-e may be remedied by a few drops Of kerosene, which dissolves the accu-mulated rust Apply with nn oil can having a long tube, so that the oil may be thrown far into the Interior of the latch Marvelous Cure. "And you sny that Brownley wa cured of u bud attack of Insomnia by suggestion?" "Yes purely by sugges-tion. Mis wife suggested that since he culd not sleep he ni'ght as well sit up , , and amuse the baby. It worked Ilka a charm 1" The Doctor Away from Home Wrun Most Needed People are often very much disap-pointed to find that their family physician is away from home when they most need his services. Diseases like puin in the ftomaeh nnd bowls, colic and diarrhoea require prompt treatment, and have in many Instance!-- : proven fatal before medicine could be procured or a p!iysi Im summoned. The right way is to keep at hand a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic and I"iHrrlioea lieinedy. No physician can prescribe a better medicine for these diseases. Hy having It in the house you escape much pain and suffering and all r!k Buy it now; It may save life. ' 8hare Your Pleasures. It has been snhl that happiness which has not been shared has no taste. If the pleasant things which eoi:e to you, somehow seem to have no taste, if they serin rather ftuvor-h'Sf- l, perhaps this Is the explanation. Put gladness Into another's life, divide 0P the pleasures you have been selflsh-- r cnjoyirnt, t f ;i t It will help two 04, 'Jiroe, and your happiness will have fleuty of flavor. |