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Show .J THE BULLETIN, RING HAM CANYON, UTAH !! ThT RE YOU Crl MEMB ERS OF CLUB, BY ANY CHANCE?" 0 ' I5 IT TRUE CONNIE, THAT YOU GOT A LETTER I FROM NEAL MARKED 'PERSONAL AND PRIVATE?' I'll HC DiiCiirnwrnl" EL Harsh Laxatives Keep ret?ttfar Ms heafthfu way-- The juice of a lemon in a glass of water, when taken first thing on aris-ing, is all that most people need to insure prompt, normal elimination. No mere harsh laxatives that irritate the digestive tract and impair nutrit-ion1 Lemon in water is good for you! Generation! of American have taken lemons for health-a- nd of doctors have generations recommended them. They are rich in vitamin C, supply valuable amounts of B and P They alkalinire, aid digestion Not too sharp or tour, lemon in water has a refreshing tang -- clears the mouth, wakes you up. It's not a tpeumrgative simply helps your sys- rtgulate itself. Try it 10 days. WJI CAllfOHNIA SUNKIST LIMONS Triplets! ALL GOOD things come in threes, so they say. This threesome of good - looking crocheted potholders will add a zippy note of color to any town or country summer kitchen. Potholders at top of illustration are of double t" ikness, crocheted in two colors of silky-looki- ng cotton thread. The whopper-size- d holder at bottom is made of thick cotton rug yarn in two colors. To obtain complete crochtt Instruction! for the Triplet Pot holder! ( Pattern Number 61751 lend 30 cents In coin. Your Nme. Address and Pattern Number. Due to an unusually large demand and current condition!, slightly more time li required In filling order! tor a lew of the moil popular patterns, 'send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 539 South Weill St. Chicago 1, Ul. Enclose 20 eenta tor Pattern. AHH" II I Why scratch and I III 11 1 tin u"'hopleiilyr I IIWIIIHU Find happy relief I as so many others I of Dry " use looth-- r.- ing, medicated I -- RtSINOL, the 1 TfllflD popularointmeM I Lite 1 1 la of-- u. SPEEDED-U- P COMFORT for so-call- ed KIDNEY SUFFERERS Baokachas, lef paina, broken sleep, painful ns usually go so much auicker if you switeh to Koley (tbe new kidney-bladde- Pills. They aturiulateilurgUhkulueysitbon ALLAY ULALV LIKU lKRlf A 1 ION. That's tbe eauas of most paina, achea, urges enee thouihi tntirtiy dut as kutnty. Bo (or quicker, lonisr-laMin- g relief, oiA bUddw as well as stimulate kidney action. Do this: use 'otsy (the nsw kidnsy-bladde- r) PUli: they also hays direct eedatiys-Iik-a aetioa oa bladder. At your druMist. Unless you find them far more sausfastory, DOUBLiS YOUat laUNUY BACK. Planning for the Future? Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! HW Mother KncwsA Best! How to help your sick child GST WEU FASTER rs I s . os recommended in the interest spFh I of child welfare by UfXt 1 ROSE G. ANDERSON, Ph.D. V 'il !f i Director of Tht Psychological Ssrvict Csnfsr, Nw Yoit I "ms. L The after-effec- of K ; VJ Jj roar chJM', motM " f, 7 vPK f often more importsM "J?A 'iffi than the illneu itself. . D-- Nt W'f ins. catering to f:yikS&:- ' J whims, overiollcituds IwN, Jr. teaches a child to dom-- . IiwSjr50lA!f m&iX convalescence. Xmmm , ''I 2. You'll be smart to help ffj J" him amuse himself. Givs ' "--ms ! i:;l! A him something which 13? ' doesn't require an adult's 'V jt'i'' constant attention. Give JS. r f" ' him your "Eveready" S , Stf& Xif "f ' ....,, flashlight... or get him ; Jf. k''t r-- M ' ' one of his own. If he - I T tires of flashing the 'JhjfZjwMrfS beam, or flicking out ttr2jt !tLJ3sJ a.1 vtUKxi imaginary signals, then.-- W ' I'tT j, f, i,- -- imtT ar a A, Iff II faWU iV, . ' Wi'f f'r'f f'tl Show him how to cut Lp ry X-- 11 V '! f j4&' 1 designs or figures from L. yAA lV'" I "''ff Paper and how so fcj" R J4i fk ft throw their shadows oa p?tf VlT Vl! H I 1 ,ht ce,'lin ot wall. Mot- - r ; i wSti i 'MMk Pde In what he's done. I . "J f lWVytZr 'ir 1 Wtch bim ie well fast- - er bec,iue he' happierl f Proof!.. . In tht laboratory.. .In your own flashlight... jjjj BEVERADY tWTERJES OUT1AST If Jf AIL OTHER BRANDS P mWmi Brighter light, longer life! Thsr"s what you li ZJjJ want in a flashlight battery-a- nd that's what you f r-- fi get with "Eveready" brand batteries. Laboratory jU a tests prove it And the best "laboratory" of all - If 7mt If yor oui fUsbligbt-pnv- es it! That's why i'lCrTto n.rif "Eveready- - batteries outsell all other brand- s- V Jcr. . I because they outlast all other brandsl lfla Th4 nfUrS unxlactsof IJjjf NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY, INC. According I, tk. Gr. W Imc Street, New York 17. N. Y. 2 UmU tw CrMtmd Cmbon Corporation SlmnJardt AiiocUtiom, which nj J J l closely tproximMim mmr-- B " " & PwiLL VtXI SAW THIS ST , By Ernie Busnmiller 3 ilN HALF I WANT! jp VU 2V SI- li " m - 1REGGIE By Margarita fXJSUtKhJ W GOSH r MORNING MISS VL1Drc TILtTX 5 tRVI WiiiMiJ4 ONLY GOT Jf GRAPEFRUIT f REE, H JJ) --A LA GET N GOOD 1 Tk01 ,IBR0UGUTY0U DOZEN? I EVi ,k . -- i,,, fAND JEFF BLB,ud FUher - UoTl fUT yoLJ HOW CAN V0U BE THE THE PROBLAVn'sl 'YOU BOOB) OSlO WAS CLOSER Ind J TOLD me best pupil in night is how much about JREJocl l only to the answer W i three and school when You're are three, Nike , SEfipKL missed than anyone in TRUMAN AND HIS DOG Somebody ssked Tresident Truman the other day what had become of Feller, the cocker spaniel pup pre-sented to him last winter. "Oh, he's around," answered the President, sdmitting under pressure that the pooch was still at the White House and In charge of the presidential physician, Dr. Graham, over at his place. This is bound to cost Harry more votes. A dog-- , especially puppy. Is Rood publicity. Affection for one warms the publio heart. H fives the human touch to man and to a situation. But Harry seems about as close to this pup as he does to Hank Wallace. After a single day's blast of pub-licity when the dog arrived at the White House as a gift, Feller fell out of the news. It later developed that, not being housebroken, the pooch had been turned over to Dr. , Graham. And now, months later, the animal is still an outsider., Mr. Tru-man's campaign backers had better look Into this. Any reputation a man may have built up for au-thority and an ability to cope with major problems is shattered when the impression spreads that home-breakin- g a pup is too big for him. We warn the Democratic na-tional committee that all Is lost unless It Immediately takes action. The Republicans may circulate a photo of a sad-looki- presidential pooch, alone and desollte, under the caption "When a Feller Needs a Friend." Harry should adopt a more heart-warming dog policy at once. (Has he a pup policy? Is he for tolerance when It comes to housebreaking a hound? What is his doghouse prob-lem, short term and long range? We pause for a reply.) Better have the doctor bring the pooch back to the White House, Harry. He must be fairly well broken by this time. If not it might be a good idea to keep the dog and fire Dr. Graham. THE COUNTRY EDITOR SAYS: Ezra Cooper and family had a quiet dinner last night to cele-brate the third anniversary of their application for a new auto. Clint Crockett is talking so much against everything that's always been considered dear to America that he may run for the presidency. Removal of a Landmark To these eyes the destruction of the Charlie Schwab mansion, long a landmark on Riverside drive, New York, and stared at by countless visitors to the big town for more than half a century, is a sad sight. 'To us the Schwab place was the Riv-erside drive of yesterday ... we can remember gazing at it from the top of a bus as a boy . . . and won-dering how long it would take us to make Charles Schwab, the steel king, move over and make way for us to eclipse him as a wonderboy. As it crumbles into dust something of New York goes with it, including the spirit of an era when a man wasn't hated because he had made money, when people smiled at the mansions of the rich and when a well-bui- lt house was not a novelty. The more you watch the wreckers struggling to tear down the Schwab place the more you appreciate the fact that the builders of yesterday never did it with a few stray nails. Si Vanishing Americanisms "What makes everything so quiet and peaceful around here?" "He wouldn't dare do that; it would violate a treaty." "Let's go out to dinner twlct this week." "Walter, that was a fine dinner; here's 50 cents for yourself." "This round is on the house." "Charley, fill up those platten en the free lunch counter!" "LAZY young man wants easy job, high pay, Y 229 Herald Tribune" Advertisement. Would $150 a week to water our century plant be okay? CAN YOU REMEMBER: Away back when a man could af-ford a yacht even if he had only a million or two? An American was a fellow who thought nothing should cost more than five times what it was worth. ERP is now a fact, and we shall find out not only whether money talks, but whether it has radio ap-peal. 4 By Arthur Pointer W jj m FELLERS ' BGene Byrnes by Clark S. Haas I HAVE! m SO HAPPV JlrW HAD ) I .JCljW I .fVi llfffn j rZT lJSStctt TlVAiJU rvlftigrr cJSon TUIS SOME TIAAE OFF THIS 71.,' BSt' f fft? to Rtsr' K aft to clean out f ffltpSEAAErff H I By Len Kleis 5 i n1 gLXs 7 O J' THERE &0 1 ' fJLpe'VwHATS A TTlh V?"! h 0P TH J |