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Show THE RIJLLETIN. BINGHAM, UTAH IF if J WM il IF ' ! run ror. the Whole IramsSy t territorialeJ 117 covered tf "'l! cldd in he nM FrV, Luxel V ItaIf- - RumaentvfS stem, Monaco, T14, ania. U?H IfQ. Palestine, LI and Morocco, a" the i,land,X;. ranean sea, th. ean. the "4 seas. iotZlai and the Origin of Magyars The Jews, like, the Arabs, Syr-ians and other Semitic peoples, are included in the Caucasian or white race, says a writer in the Detroit News. .The Magyars of Hungary are included in the Mongolian race. They conquered that country under the leadership of Arpad, about the year 896 A. D. The chief occupants of the territory before this were various Slavic tribes, together with the V4llachians, Bulgarians and Germans. The Magyars or Hungar-ians, a warlike people of Turanian race, had made various migrations and long dwelt in the vicinity of the Caucasus mountains and after-ward in the region between the Doa and the Dniester. ' THE FEATHERHEADS . . A Man of Action iKl THE MORWUG-- NELL,Vod BETTER 1 1 . II " 1 f , MnoTi-- l I BED-CL- OSE lAS?ri7Sp I 'T PoLF FU&HTi HECK ssaysaz &n --J jfe - (.gnsX-- --w BRAClMfr AIR I J M ' ' V - VJiuL STIR ME rr7 I Iwjw 7yHr ' j IIalt,yoB what D, we call Indian called Halcyon Day '7 g this time, the king'asn Halcyon in classic q ?!' Posed to forego his2 voice and to sing it"1 the mariners that Rj no storms. The though most ofits origin. Jj Cause of Blood Rains '' Blood rains are rains which have a pinkish tinge, as though actually diluted blood. When allowed to stand in a container, such rain de-posits a reddish mud. Every few years blood rains occur in Italy. Their cause is reddish dust from the Sahara, as was first proved by the German biologist Christian Ehren-ber- g in 1847. Storms lift the red-dish dust from the desert and blow it northward across the Mediterran-ean to be washed down by rains in Europe. Meaning of Word DM As an adjective, wh! means "printed J, languages"; as, J ' might be one in fB tex of the OldTestai ed in parallel lines with the u English, or the New T, with the text in Greek side b; with English. ' The word from the Greek di-- and Hot glotta, tongue.-Literary- Dige Band, Forerunner of Hat In Bolivia a hat with a top re-sembling a parasol is sometimes worn. A hat made of ropes of beads is worn by Siamese women. In the East Indies, men wear a hat which looks like a bonnet. The band, worn by many primitive races to keep the hair out of the eyes, was the father of the hat A crown was first added and then a brimT S'MATTER POP Saved! By C. M. PAYNE Naming Merritt feUnd, ij Merritt Island, Fla., wai J for General Merritt who mf it as a grant from the&J crown. The island is 30 mfe1 and at the northern endijli wide. At the southern end i rows to a point. It is eastof' ville and Cocoa, along ttu river. The chief comma with the mainland is a bridg the cily of Cocoa. First to Boost, Good Roads An Ohio man was the first to for-mally advocate government aid in building roads' and canals. He was Thomas Worthington, who in 1807, while a senator, introduced a reso-lution proposing that the secretary of the treasury driw a plan for gov-ernment assistance , in establishing reads and canals. Found a Fortune The island of Monte Cristb, scene cf the hidden treasure found by Ed-mund Dantes, one of Alexander Du-mas' outstanding heroes, lies mid-way between Corsica and Italy, to the south of. the island of Elba, home of Emperor Napoleon I dur-ing the period of his first banish-ment from France. Birth of Machine Ca The single-sho- t, muzzle-- pistol gave way in 1836 to Si Colt's "revolving gun," and & chine gun was born in 182 R. J. Gatling, of Indianapolis, ented his famous r fire cannon which came it: own during the Spanish-Am- : war. ' MESCAL IKE b, s. l. huntley Take Your Choice wAL;PA, MOUJ VUH " jS AW, HITS A P-l- l AjM WUl--l " , "P COMIN4' ALOMG WITM Wsbtb f FER. ME . TM' OnJLV -- 1 BUT OWLV ,?fl VU-- BOOKKEEPING? REASOSJ MIT TAKES MgAd 1-- VevlRylNj' UPVTlMESy f WWTS GOT ME PIGGER1M - lt IAjJ LczSLmJ flX-rr-- J JlJJ. ,.Wrt J fDVflcht. try U Kuntlfv, Trudf Mark Rt. U, a Pt. Offlc) Board Feet in Cord of Logs There are 300 board feet in a cord of small logs as compared to 640 feet in a cord of Marge logs. The discrepancy arises because the log scale (ails to account for all the ac-tual wood volume in small logs. Schools, Colleges Opposed In 1829 schools and colleges opposed iir North Carolina. A for a Raleigh newspaper exp:: the reason: "College learned sons give themselves (real are proud, and the fewer a! Slill With Us we have amongst us the better Cruelty, fear, lust and avarice are still with us, to be sure, but so also are the higher faculties of charity, faith, as well as the ideals of truth, good-ness and beauty. First Printed Advertismei The first advertisment that peared in print is said to have the announcement of 1 rewan the recovery of two stolen hors the London Impartial Intelligi Lantern Outside the Home in March, 1648. The idea of having a lantern out-side the home was started in 1416 by the Mayor of London, who passed an ordinance commanding all pros-perous citizens to hang lanterns outside. ' , First The first recorded r wagon is found in an illustrated ian manuscript "The Art cf? illuminated about 1430, that is in Florence's UfflzUtoum. FINNEY OF THE FORCE AgSSttL ' pass0ut AthERB BE TooMlfvr. W II f JEST T'ROW TM' BALL S I jfjjfiT IA VAL-N- OT LOlKe THAT YT II1DERS BROKC WIT . A I 'ROUND AW KAPeL OUTTA m WM WZ----Z------ , I BUT IfeZ GET TM' IDEA gk KlCKIM' VER, FOOTBALL TRUBBLE LOIKE THIS' J HI LL-- 01 ?OTTA BE.SOIn'T . I 'ROOMO SO OILL TlLL j . '"I"1 HI --" 5f -- -r NOW 1 Y. . ' - . PO- P- The Hikers By J. MILLAR WATT SHALL WE TAKE THIS ROAD HOME f r WE MAY AS WELL ' v . . fir i S$ m Jmm B3 , ,D1. PINTS If! I QUARTS CODE NO. 313 , ili c CODE N0.312 11 A BLEND Of STRAIGHT WMlSKlfJ , j )U iSllNOtO BY FRANKFORT DISTILL",1! U ''IfeoRPOIUTCeAlT-MDJO- V V Frankfort Distilleries, Inc Louisville and BaKf1 : ; r Ocean Commotion The boy leaned over the heaving deck. rail, and the rail wasn't the only thing that heaved. "Cheer up. sonny," said a ship's officer, com-fortingly. "You'll be all right when the moon comes up." The boy turned a woe-begon- e face on him. "Good gosh!" he moaned, "don't tell me that's gotta come up, too!" Washington Post Events in the Lives of Little Men1 in 1 p, jilij IWimlB ill'1t. I THE WORLD AT ITS WORST . """ By gluyas wiliiams ) PtQh 0N ORDER TO COVER JJ . TH mr OF VOUR ICY & J ft --faZ BARE SfpEEf' Poser "You've been out with worse-lookin- g fellows than 1 am, haven't you?" She did not reply. "I said, you've been out with worse-lookin- g fellows than I am,, haven't you?" "I heard you the first time. 1 was trying to think."-Corne- ll Wid-ow. Helping the Dome "Is your wife a help to you in running the dear old homestead?" "I'll say she is." answered Farm-er CorntosseL "She learned ste-nography and got a good job in town." |