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Show THE BINGHAM NEWS, BINGHAM, UTAH plR COMIC SECTION 1 1 II R 'member " The Economy B&HlMQn PGDWIUDEIR That's What Millions oS Housewives Do s&sM33 They know that Good ( g rfT Baking Powder can't be sold for less; that "More for the Money" means bake -- day failures, waste 5 of time and money; that , best bv test Calumet is pure and sure, TheWorld's Greatest Baking Powder No heatth this summer meal if DISH of crisp, delicious Grape-Nut- s, with cream fff A. or milk (some berries or fresh fruit, too, if you Vj fjl like) is cooling to serve, cooling to eat and cooling Vj to digest with a charm of flavor and goodness that u nl rouses appetite enthusiasm. No preparation, no It I Ml cooking no heating of the body afterward, as heavy, v I I 6tarchy meals do but well-rounde- d nourishment b I I for every bodily need. I I There's a noticeable feeling of lightness and com- - l l fort after such a meal. Try this way out of the heat, bother and uncertainty hj vA tiiat usually goes with the midsummer food problem. V Order GrapC'INutS from your grocer today. t03Zff "There's a Reason" W$t Mde by Pottura Cereal Compny, Ino. & Battle Creek, Mitbitaa cnl "PnJ - "TFoOD HOW BOOKS ARE DISINFECTED Method Employed in France Is Said to Be the Most Successful Yet Devised. The danger of contagion from books that have been In the bunds of per-Ho-suffering from various diseases has led to the Invention of methods of disinfecting, of which none appears to be more effective than thut devised by a member of the municipal council of Paris. This process consists of two fea-tures. In the first place, the books are placed In a "beater," . where a strong current of air opens every leaf, and an aspirator sucks out the dust and deposits It In aseptic water. Then they are suspended In a dlslnfector, the covers being bent back and held by clips, so that the leaves are widely opened, and placed over a heater, which for a long time subjects them to a temperature of 167 degrees Fah-renheit. The paper Is not damaged, and the efficiency of the process Is said to be well demonstrated. DECLARED HIMSELF AT ONCE New Yorker Saw Fearsome Possibility of Near Future and Gave Wife Due Warning. Visitors to Central park the othet day saw a new angle of the family pet out for an airing, reports the New . York correspondent of the Pittsburgh J Dispatch. A young woman wtfi out i with her variegated parrot. The bird ! stalked majestically about the lawn ' but quickly came back and perched on. , the young woman's finger whenever she called. Ills comings and going ' to and from the finger gave the parrot. Us prescribed exercise, whether it wanted It or not ' The young woman didn't seem to mind the crowd that gathered about to watch. In fact she seemed rather' proud of the attention she and toe-blr- d were attracting. Jiggers, whose family pet Is a dog, happened along: with bis wife and stopped to look. "I suppose the next thing," he re-marked to his wife, "will be that I'm to take the canary up to the park for a, walk. Right here I announce the) answer: Nothing doing!" ( ' Safety FirstJezzel f verfM Go pmw --xbcM! ouevo. J OVJW s w A vjan FoaSooSuk J Nfc A.TTUVf W AW OP UOP&W J - S KftOTBttV- L ' - A ' 0f ' rococo e "n clipO y HAD STUDIED HIS SUBJECT Little Bobby's Essay Showed He Knew Practically All There Was to Know About Doors. Little Bobby Jones was told to write nn essay on "Door," and the effort which he sent In was as follows : "Most houses have all the doors that they need, and no house Is com-plete without at least one. The two main differences between a door and a gate Is : first, their opposite loca-tion ; and, second, that people have much less respect for a gate, and would rather kick It than knock on It. "But a gate Is more useful than a door because it does everything that a door can do, and, besides that, It can be climbed over, and often Is. "The door handle Is a small but lm- - portant part of the door which peo-ple never appreciate until It comes off. Most people never notice the door handle unless It Is brought to their notice on account of having Jam spread all over It. "Doors are great things to give peo-ple privacy, and would give them still more if It wasn't for the keyholea." Exchange. At the Women's Club. "That was an awfully good speech Mrs. Blakeley made." "Still, my dear, a woman who so obviously makes her own huts could never convince me of anything." Life. Roll Butter. The young housekeeper who told the fishman that she wanted some eels and when he asked her how much, replied "About two yards and a half," has a rival In a Baltimore woman. "I wish to get some butter, please," she said to the dealer. "Boll butter, ma'am?" he asked, po-litely. "No; we wish to eat It on toast. We seldom have rolls." In Generous Mood. First Workltigman What sort of a Job have you got now? Second Worklngman Oh, I collect elms on the Putreaux bridge, between midnight and 1 o'clock In the morning. First Worklngman Are the people particularly generous there at that hour? Second Worklngman Yes. Thejr generally give me everything they have on them. Paris Le Balonnette. Taking life too seriously Is a be. lief that others shouldn't be allowed to guide their own souls. fanny's Generosity Is Wonderful GEE.FAHNl, 1 WH I MAV&E YOU CAM " I HAH ! NO OM ONE. ' I HAD A LITTLE HAVE ONE. J YOU WOULDN'T CONDITION I ; SHUTZ ROADSTER. J L 0 MIND ) J Q fMftT.TrtAT VOL) BUN ME A NBU AND ALSO ' ( AVU, WHAT WKATSAT. "IbUJN. CAC;30M NEVU DRESSED I Th USE AND THAT PEAGL NECU' 0 V ( J 7"" LACE. I 5AVU I V |