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Show THE BULLETIN LADIES PREFER STRAW HATS (FOR MEN) THIS SEASON 1 jcmmmm DEPARTMENT. en of the ..VJLounted an mm&adiiij by Captain G. Elliott -- Nightingale PHOTOGRAPHY ROLLS DEVELOPED Copyright, WNU ' & THE SKULL WITH A HOLE IN ITS FOREHEAD T'HEY found the headless body of an aged man on the banks of the Bow river right after the ice had gone out, and right away there was a check-u- p to find out who was missing. That was in June, 1910. Several months passed and then, just as the beautiful Bow was beginning to freeze up again, a trapper stumbled over a small boulder. Later on, upon examining the round thing that had tripped him, the trapper realized that he was handling a human skulL Like a good Canadian he was soon in touch with the Royal weight anlmrgameata. tprlaialdoabl ur yunr chuii of M nisi without anlarrtmenu We col. Kaprlau Icmu 0 For a Boot, HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONS Cleaning Electric Toaster. A cheap narrow paint brush is splendid for brushing crumbs from between the wires of an electrlo-toaste- r and also lessens the danger of damaging the toaster. Making Cocoa. Cocoa should be cooked with a small always Mounted. amount of water before milk is A more thorough and extensive added in order to cook the starch search and investigation was soon and give a smooth under way. Within a few yards of mixture. where the skull had been picked up, the Mounted saw a strange looking Blue for the Kitchen. Claiming heap which later proved to be a that flies hate blue, paint experts, blanket and a cowhide tied with recommend that kitchen walls ropes, the whole still frozen solid. medium or implement The first discovery had come in blue with pale blue ceilings. in the second and June, November, still no one had turned up missing. With everyone accounted for, the Washing White Silk. Never on white silk. The only thing the Mounted could do be dissolved in water bewas to store the remains. The checkup of transients and settlers, how- fore laundering is begun. ever, continued; meanwhile a grizzled and widely experienced physician and surgeon examined the remains. The physician announced, a little while later, that the man had been about fifty or sixty, had y hair, and that the hole $250 in the forehead had been made by tsCanaiaiaK a bullet of .22 caliber, and that the bullet had been found imbedded in $250 ts Gracm the skull. Moreover, there had been GIVEN another bullet found in the body. CAN WIN $50 THIS WEEK It had entered from the right side YOU if row QUICK Everybody cm and had coursed upward through nter thisiq umpte a$iy both lungs and had lodged in the FLA-VOR-A- ID ribs of the lower left side. Then a constable had a bright NEWS ITEM CONTEST idea. Everyone had been accounted 1st Mo $50.00 Srd Mo $10.00 he for, argued, but that was only for 2nd 25.00 4th 5.00 S Mm, Ea. 2.00 ISO Frfna.la.1.00 the year 1910 or for the months pre139 CaihPtuca Given Each Wade ceding and following the discovery Hbro At o fho Simplo Sutaa of the headless body. What about 1 -- Clip th moat annul ornomlctl Kawi bam from rear paper or anguine. last year? After all, the constable S -- Complete thli aentanra In It word, or T argued, the deceased could easily have been done in a year or two -iXXrWSS'SMSZS! years ago, so why not go back a 4 Add thn Hama end Addrm of Qioaar bit? Soon all interest was centered wham row booght 5 Sign roar Ham and Addrrw plalnlr. upon the absence of one of the first AMI AhWya, JEL SCUT M, ISM 0. settlers, an Englishman named am lour thm Wedoomoa. Juto . Peach. In no time the Mounted Indam Miioa la Until discovered that Peach had sold out ENTER to a man named Robertson and TODAY had then returned to his home in You May England. Robertson was soon beWim50M ing questioned in a town a hundred miles away, and he corroborated the information of the deal with Peach. Later it was learned that Robertson had moved to Calgarv after having bought the Peach homestead and that he had left orders that all mail for Peach be forwarded on to his address in Calgary. Well, this was really the first break for the Mounted. Why HOTEL BEN LOMOND should Robertson want Peachs mail forwarded to him? Robertson was again questioned, this time by a Mounted policeman he had never seen before but who knew the results of the first interwell-blend- Fashions arent exclusively for women. This rammer the smartly dressed male will blossom forth In one of these new hats. Illustrated above la a roach straw number worn by Dennis OKeefe, screen player. hard-brimme- d A soft crushable Panama wilb narrow band Is the choice of John Beal, above. Mens style authorities say the old hatless summer days may have been comfortable but It's wiser to protect yourself acalnst the sun. Heres another current favorite, worn by Alan Curtis. Its a soft, turned-dowbrim bat of fine manila straw with bicb dented erown. A narrow maroon band adds a note of color demanded by the mens current fashions. n ed use-soa- soap-shoul- CAESAR Cools Off By THORNTON W. BURGESS very fortunate it is that he found out MR. TOAD was so puffed that I also am fond of ants. (JLD out with pride as he started He was so busy with these pleasfor the Green Forest to dine with ant thoughts of his own importance Buster Bear that those who saw and the good dinner that he exhim wondered if he wouldnt burst pected to have that he took no notice before he got there. Everybody of what was going on about him. He knew where he was going, and this didn't see his old friends and neigh- made Old Mr. Toad feel more important and proud than ever. He might not have felt quite so puffed up if he had known just how it had come about that he received this second invitation to dine with Buster Bear. Jimmy Skunk had brought it to him, but Jimmy didn't tel him Buster had been asked to send the invitation and that it was all part of a plan on the part of some of Old Mr. Toads old friends and neighbors to teach him a lesson. What very good taste Buster Bear has, thought he. and how Red-Heade- My names Caesar and I live at the Quebee sooloflcal park, but I don't like the looks of that cameraman. Guess he wants me to try fhat old polar bear divine trick. Well, I feel like a swim . Bride d Furnishes House In Suitable Colors By BETTT WELLS Im as vain as a peacock, announced Gertrude. About my red hair, I mean. Its my crowning glory so why shouldnt IT So, naturally now that Im going to get married and have a home of my own, I want decorations that are becoming to mu hair. I'd like blue for the main color partly because its nice on me and also because I have a blue footstool, blue vasea and good blue scatter rugs to begin with. But beyond that I'm stuck. I think I'll concentrate spending on the living room, and really make that complete and handsome. The other rooms I'll only furnish enough now to get along. But what about rug, wall color, furniture and curtains for the living room? The room is light and good sized but the floors are bad. My family are giv-- although he couldnt help panting for breath as he said it I hope you are feeling well. Buster Bear laughed a great grumbly-rumbl- y I always laugh. feel fine when there is a dinner of fat ants ready for me, said he. It is very fine of you to honor me by Here Mr. Toad coming to dine. put one hand on his stomach and tried to make a very grand bow. Peter Rabbit, hiding behind a nearby tree, almost giggled aloud. I have ventured to invite another to enjoy the dinner with us, continued Buster Bear. Mr. Toads face fell. You see, he was selfish. He wanted to be the only one to have the honor of dining with Buster Bear. Hes a little late, went on but I think he will be Buster, here soon, and I hope you will be glad to meet him. Ah, here he comes now. Old Mr. Toad looked in the direction in which Buster Bear was lookHe gave a little gasp, and ing. turned quite pale. All his puffiness He didnt look like disappeared. the same toad at all. The newcomer was Mr. Blacksnake. Oh! cried Old Mr. Toad, and then without even asking to be excused, he turned his back on Buster Bear and started back the way he had come. Ha, ha, ha! shouted Peter Rabbit, jumping out from behind a tree. Ho, ho, ho! shouted Jimmy Skunk from behind another. Hee, hee, heel" shouted Johnny Chuck from behind a third. Then Old Mr. Toad knew that his old friends and neighbors had planned this to teach him a lesson. He didnt see bis old Mends and neighbors peeping out at him and laughing. bors peeping out at him and laughing because he looked so foolish. He was beginning to get pretty tired by the time he reached the Green Forest and came in sight of the rotten old chestnut stump, where he was to meet Buster Bear. Buster was waiting for him. How do you do this fine day? You look a little tired and rather warm, Mr. Toad, said he. I m a little warm, replied Mr. Toad in his most polite manner, f 0 T. W. Burgeta. WNU Service BEAUTY HINT- - Hundred Strokes Each Day Here we go! Hope that guy with the camera takes his picture pretty soon. I cant stay suspended in the air all day. This is fun, but nothing like diving off an iceberg. Well, here we hit the water with a I'm Vain as a Peacock About My nair, She Writes. ing me a new spinet piano in blonde mahogany. Could you take the idea of dark walls? Because rather a deep brilliant blue for the walls would be becoming to you and awfully smart. Then why not white rubber tiling for the floor? That would be new and not too expensive and you could use the scatter rugs interestingly. Then have your new sofa in a yellow linen slip cover and two easy chairs in flowered linen on a white ground. (Buy your upholstered pieces "in the muslin"). Make a pair of flowered cushions to match to go on the yellow sofa and at the windows hang billowy SPLASH! Guess maybe I don't white embroidered organdy curtains look so graceful right now but you made Jane Withers, child setress, knows what the proverbial hundred very full and to sweep down cant say I didnt with to the floor. strokes with a brush will do for your hair. Specialists recommend It as the cameraman. 0 Bv Betty Well- .- WNU Service. an essential daily routine for the woman who would have beautiful hair. slip-cov- er ' :. . i j : ,;-- v - . ... i i I When Matinee Idol Takes a Mud Bath HOLLYWOOD. There was only one way to make this scene from a forthcoming motion picture so the gentleman in the center a famous matinee idol consented. Here he comes up for air, greeted by two fellow screen workers. To keep you in suspense no longer, well explain that the gentleman covered with gumbo is Clark Gable. CASH iron-gra- ... view. Robertsons story changed color entirely during this second questioning, but the Mounted policeman kept this discovery entirely to himself. Some days later another Man of the Mounted had a quiet little chat with Robertson, and again the latters story changed completely. Surely Robertson was tying self up into a knot. Then he announced that he was going down to a small settlement just a few miles away for a few days rest, a sort of short vacation. Instead of alighting at the small town, he stayed on the train and went through to McLeod. Here he proceeded to get drunk and was soon boasting that he had made a cleanup in the Yukon gold fields and was returning to his home in the States. And, as he sat boasting how tough he had been in his time, a constable of the McLeod detachment walked in and very quietly arrested him for the murder of Tucker Peach. Back in Calgary, Robertson tied himself in such a knot of lies and falsehoods that there was nothing else to do but confess. Win confederate, one Fisk, had fired the first shot, into Peach's forehead. He, Robertson, had fired the second. Fisk had learned that Peach had a large amount of money hidden somewhere about his homestead cabin, and was scheming to get it when he met Robertson who was planning to buy the Peach homestead. "Buy it, advised Fisk, "then well knock him (Peach) on the head and get your money back. Then well ransack the cabin and find the two thousand he has hidden somewhere in it. After that, you take the homestead, and Ill take the horses, and we split his money between us when we find it. No one knows to this day whether Fisk and Robertson found the old mans hoard, but they do know that Canadian law worked fast, and smoothly as these two renegades were tried. Fisk was sentenced to hang. Robertson was given life imprisonment. Inside of a month 8fter capture, both men had begun paying for their awful crime. -- S55 Banma OCDEX. UTAH 1H Bath LM to M.II . Family Smma far t permna . . jut Air Ceeled Lanncn and LaUr Kama . . Code Shop . . Tap MU Hama of Katarr Klwanle EacenMvta Eirhange Optima Chamber of Cam awe ea sad Ad Chib. HOTEL BEN LOMOND Cam a T. SALT LAKE'S ro ar . FUigrrald, NEWEST XA HOSTELRY Our lobby In delightfully air cooled daring the ranuner Months Radio for Ivory Room A 200 Roont- o- HOTEL Temple Square Rtm $1.50 to S3 00 9ciara Ini a Tin IIrIpI IVmpt highly dnurRltlf, frlrmtiy aim will always riml itimuiar wlaia, Miiirrmrly fomrnrlHbk anil thacouahfy ajirrralilr.Ymi ran Ihrrra fara wndrrataml wlsy flat hotel Ul highly nncoMMr.NM:u You cao alo a m.irft ir apprrrlala why i of distinction to ifoy I Uiif beautiful hostelry ERNEST C. KOSSITER, Micr. |