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Show THE BULLETIN Man Struck to Ground by PAINT BUGLER AND Unhurt Lightning Bolt; THROW HIM IN POOL. JPJTh London. Capt.A. V.West of the motor tanker Stourgate has probably the most watchful personal guardian angel In His Reveille Call Resented by) the world at least he declared he has !. Fellow Workers. ample reason for that belief. During a recent electrical sterm the skipper Chicago. Robert J. Vsnasek does-nwas standing In the doorway of an Inn like to be painted green. j at Ramsgate when a flash of lightning a he a has of matter As fact, was to lie the him struck ground, prejupicked up dazed, but absolutely un- dice against being painted blue or anyj' hurt, and It was discovered that the other color; but green was the hue over lightning had burned the celluloid which he brooded as he sat In his bunkj back of hli collar button, burned a sponging himself off with a turpentine-- j hole In his shirt, burned the elastic soaked cloth. Mr. Vanosek has the misfortune of his suspenders In two, and melted bugler of the G07tb company of thai th metal hncfclea of his suspenders HOUSE FROCKS N?w Spring Prints Clever Styles - Chic Models $149 $1.C9 $1.98 ot WMnHaBMMMMMn ladies e; COMERS .'.11 and PANTIES sizes 22 Ladies BIAS CUT SLIPS Pink and Tearose, SV?s 3H to tl - J?. tot-b- Shows Her Winning Smile a? Civilian Conservation corps, encamped! near Harms road and Glenview road.' Early one evening Mr. Vanasek was strolling about the camp, thinking; what a great thing outdoor life can be.! Being palmed green never entered his! head. Ho did not know Hint a dozen or sot members of company U07 were him; that they were thinking!' of his luglah about the sound from them sleeps. up waking Consequently It was a great tori prise to Mr. Vanasek when, on thgj outskirts of the camp, a number of!' Indignant CCCers lad violent hands!-upohim and dragged him away laid t bitter!-agains- U 1045 East 21st South i Hy. 3346 SUGARHOUSE Programs Invitations Booklets 2044 South 11th East In Sugarhouse the woods. aeavily furred denizens of the Far Sorth, often seem swimming between leep Ice crevices In the wild state, the olar bears, show themselves .very to plunge Into the ponds provided for them In zoos In In this latter connection Doctor declares that the polar bears irobahly suffer less from Hie Intense than some of the teat In tnlmals Imported from tropic climes, rhe reason Tor this Is that the bears tan quickly get relief from the heat then they do find It unbearable by Bunging Into their own private ponds. re-acta-nt r. Dlt-na- rs FOR SALE AUTOMOBILE A Good Buy 1932 FORD V-- 8 Coupe $365.00 Cash Run only 17000 miles Like New Call G. S. Young of 1012 Boston Bldg., Was. Res. Hy. 2326-R- . 2079 Despite Mr. Yanascks plaintive!-- ' cries he was stripped of his clothing! with the exception of his shoes and, socks. The most artistic of his cap-- ; tors then wielded brushes saturated In Zoo Animola Acqolro Complexes Among curious characteristics of animals confined In soos noted by Dr. Raymond L. Dltmnrs. curator of mam mals and reptiles at the New York soo, Is the apparent lore of snow shown by California sea Ilona which are accustomed In their native habitat to warm ocean currents and sunny On the other hand those beaches. mid-winte- mid-summ- er ' green paint was a sight; Vanasek Presently Sir. nt to beheld. He did not admire hls Job and did not even want to bei slmonized. So the CCC boys threw him Into a; nearby pond and went away. Ungrateful1 about summed up thelri - new-pai- Miss Jean Bacer of Providence, R. with the Grace Doherty trophy attitude. But Mr. Vanasek had recognized a) which she won at the third annual many of hls assailants and re-- , good Miami Itlltmore Women's golf cham ported to his commanding officer. Tliej plonship over the links of ilie Miami result was that eight of the CCC work- BUtmore country club in Miami. erg languished In the Jail house of thej Many Kind of Sauisgos connty highway police at Uortouj While the number of kinds of sau- Grove. Officials of the cigup opined that not sages In common use In the United States may not be more than .TO. at a charges would be pressed, hut that thej fair lu Germany a few years ago there culprits would be discharged and sent! were 1,783 distinct varieties entered. home. Meanwhile Mr. Vanasek wielded hlsj-- f : . Speediest of Birds Can turpentined cloth. 1 J 1 Fly 100 Miles Per Hour ; Ancient Shorthand The art of condensed writing Is no The Egyptians Modern Invention. ised shorthand more than 1,700 yean I go, according to evidence collected ! of the British London. The language of the lliorthand was not Egyptian, but by H. J. M. Milne mu-leu- 5 reek, and Milne recently announced the discovery of a key to the ancient Creek shorthand, opening up to archeologists and historians many pricebut hitherto Indecipherable less, tcripta. Literary Digest No Man Needed In Europe women alone operate several women's prisons; In Chile, they unit comprise the official of one large municipality; and In Russia, they form the entire crew of several sizable commercial ships running these vessels successfully without the aid of a single' man.FrelIng Foster, In .Colliers Weekly. "No kid wants to wash every Urns he gets a dirty look." Game birds, such ss the quail, prairie chicken, ruffed grouse, snipe, mallard, black duck, spoonbill, pintail, wood duck, and pigeon, fly GO feet a second, or at the rate of 40 miles an hour. Geese and brunt in flight do 70 feet a second, or at the rate of 47 miles an hour. Redhead ducks and hluehllls fly 83 feet a second, which Is a rate of G7 miles an hour. Canvashnck ducks attain a speed of G1 miles an hour In fly-- i and Ing 00 feet a second. teal are capable of 100 feet a second, a speed of CS miles an hour. Rapid as are the rates of flight of the above mentioned birds, says the Chicago Tribune, they are by no means the greatest for feathered flyers. Speediest of birds are credited with flying as fast as or faster than 100 miles an hour. The duck hawk, for Instance, according to apparently authentic records collected by the American Museum of Natural History of New York, does well over 100 miles an hour, or more than 146 feet a second. The rate of speed of birds on the wing depends a great deal on whether they are flying with or against the wind and on the velocity of the wind at the time. It Is recalled that In a famous pigeon race In Europe In 1876 the winning birds flew 270 miles In 8 VI hours, flying at the rate of 83 miles an hour. All conditions were favorable for record speed. In the race of 1877 It took the pigeons 30 hours to fly the same 270 miles. Rlue-wlnge- , i Christianity as National Religion The Armenians, not the Homans, were the first people to adopt Christianity as a national religion. The Armenian king, Tirldates, established the Georgian Armenian (Christian) church In 301, which was S3 years before Constantine proclaimed Christianity aa tho State religion of the Roman empire. Collier's Weekly. fire-fightin-g e green-winge- d d Marries Nurse After 27 Years on Prison Island Paris. A simple marriage ceremony! , attended only by a limited few will bej, held shortly, probably In Paris, and; will mark the first fight lost by thej world's most hated prison Island fori the conquest of a man's soul. The bridegroom. It was learned to- day, will he Benjamin Ullmo, almost fifteen years In Isolation ' on a tiny, dreary convict Island off the coast of French Gulctin, and then a dozen more years condemned to thej t mainland of the prison colony. The bride will be Miss Madeleine! Poirier, who Is a private nurse and who 12 years ago became interested in Ullmo's tragic fate. She started a i correspondence which Inspired him to fight the Jungle heat and loneliness, and which finally la the nearest 'future) , is to lead to the altar. Hie past Is forgotten ; Im going to work now, were Ullmos simple words on hls arrival back In Paris. Ullmo . was sentenced to French Guiana as a! t traitor. In actual fact he was not' . suspected 'of. dealing with any foreign . country, but simply of trying. to black-- ! 1 mall the French navy Into paying a i high price for lts .codo hook which hoj t ' ' bad stolen. He was doing It, he 84 Id, for a beali- -j tiful woman named Llson Welch- Whot-threatened to qpit him unless he talned more money. whoj-spen- t . 1 1 , . ! b-- M 1 |