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Show . THE BINGHAM NEWS I FOR SAFETY FIRST AND CAREFUL DRIVING ' '5t3 Here's a reminder, by no means gentle, that all Bronxltes see when pass-ing through the crowded section at One Hundred and Forty-nint- h street and the Square. Y'et, although speaking volumes for safety first and careful driv-ing, thousands pass by this spot hourly and pay scant attention to the silent wurnlng. i C I) , '! Road Taxes Centuries Old I Autnists who feel abused at the modern highway vehicle tm may And some solace In the fact that coaches ,: ere made to pay highway taxes as t tat hack as 16C1. In that year more f than 400 coaches operating in London tj and vicinity had to pay. taxes to use I the roads and the money was used to pave the London and Westminster I treets. I Tribe Dying Out ; A puzzling disease similar to lep-- rosy Is gruduatly exterminating- - the J Slccanl Indians In the Flndlay river s district In northwestern Canada. Leas, than 200 natives of the tribe are left I out of the 1.000 that lived a few years i ago. Medical r.uthoritis are unable I to find a cure for the disease. SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST! j Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are . t not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for ' Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism J r" AcCf pt 0"ly "Bayer" package gfj i which cpntains proven directions. . C Irand7 "ny"-- bo" o' 12 Ublets Alto bottles of 24 and 100 Druggist. 'j Ajptrla I th tndt bus at Btrtr Uuataetim of llowwottlcacldMUr of BtllerUncM Ihin't tnkA rhnnrm of yonr hones or miilm toiiqr 1'tid up with lMatpmper, IniluriiEi. I'lnk Ky. Lryiurill, llrHvra, CoiikIw or Cold lilvo "M'OILN'S" to both tlii. nick anil too writ onra, Th tantlitrd rimisly fur 80 year. ilvo "SI'OirN'O" for Do 60 ent and $1.20 at drug tore. WOlt MEDICAL CO. GOSHEN. l.ND. PARKER'S I HAIR BALSAM u Vl J Roatorao Color and iilbi JjL. Baautr to Gr.r and Fadod Hair VIrTS a and II l at IniBlit. HINDERCORNS Iiiums. ate., atop all palo. ananrra comfort l tha fern, Biakaa wafkln aaay. Uo br mall or at Lima' Ilata. Ulaooz Uheuloal Worka, fatcbogna, M. X. L. D. S. Business College school or crricicNcr , ' j AM commercial branrhaa. Catalosfra. , 60 N. Mala St. SALT LAKE CUT, UTAH Df f O Any book you want DUUIVo -f- ay c- - D-Deseret Book Co, 44 East So. Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah RUB YOUR EYES?H5v liaa lr. Thouipm.n'a Hynwater. C Bujat roiirdruk-glat'so- 4ra k U06 Klwri'ro. S.Y. Booklet SW (T aAiter A - Bath 1M( With CuticuraSoap I . Duit Witb CuticuraTalcum ! I T)elteatolr Madloatad tit '"J Of Fleaiind t'radranoa Knowing what to do and not being allowed to do it. Is one of the thorns f along the pathway. j I In friendship we are willing to give everything except enough of self. A$s&2?, I I you are constipated, poi- - WHENare formed in the accumu- - lated food waste, and reach all parts of the body. The first results, headaches, bilious- - 1 ness, a feeling of "heaviness", etc., serva as warnings of graver diseases to follow i if this intestinal poisoning continues un- - ; checked. i f This is why intestinal specialists state 1 that constipation is the primary cause of ! three-quarter- s of all illness, including the gravest diseases of life. V V I Physicians Advise Lubrication . ( for Internal Cleanliness I 5J Medical science has found at last in Iubri- - ' " cation a means of overcoming constipa-tion. The gentle lubricant, Nujol, pene- - j . trates and softens the hard food waste, and thus hastens its passage through and out of the body. Thus, Nujol brings in-ternal cleanliness. j Nujol is not a medicine or laxative and I cannot gripe. Like pure water, it is harm-- less. Take Nujol regularly and adopt this . ; habit of internal cleanliness. For sale by all druggists. r ? ftyayy ijjfgffj Rio. us. cat. orr. t For Internal Cleanliness L ' .' REPOSSESSED I CARS AT OUR EXACT EQUITY ( 1 A great Automobile Bargain Sale is now in full progress. We are forced to foreclose 29 J cars. These will be re- - t iold at no interest, no ! insurance, no down I payment; to the first 29 fortunate persons ! taking over these con- - I ' tracts.' Don't wait a J minute. Write us a- - bout any car you may want if not listed. J Tell . uj the price you ! want to pay. (No Fords). We have Bu- - I icks. Dodges. Hupmo- - I biles, Studebakers, j Oldsmobilcs, Maxwells, i Here is one ' example: 1922 Jordarf Touring, cost S2J75, resell foi $860.00. Every' car guaranteed first class mechanical condition. Lasy monthly pay-ments, TREMENDOUS BARGAINS INLAND FINANCE CO. Box 326 Ogden, Utah f J 1 No Obstacle to Wireless Wireless waves ran leap throtiRh 120 I feet of solid rock almost us swiftly '! as through free air. This was demon- - utrated recently In Ohio when a rerelv- - I' Ing set placed that distance under- - j! ground In a mine shaft picked up con- - I ert8 from local and distant stations. pipDaddy's OMveiii Fdiry Tale jywf graham Bornm THE ECLIPSE "It's worth seeing. Yes, she should be awakened to see it as she'll have something to remember. It's a very unusual ecllpw. These were the speeches Polly heard as I lie whole family seemed to gtitlier bout her und try to wuke her up. "Wuke up, wake up," her father snld. "Wake up, wake up," her mother said. "Wake up, wake up," they nil said. And sleepy though she was she tried to open her eyes as wide as she could to see what till the excitement was about. "It's the eclipse, dearie," her mother said. Well, she didn't know whether she was still asleep when she heard such a strange word. It surely was not a waking-tim- e word. "It's a very remarkable eclipse," her mother said, "und tliat is why we're getting you up In the middle of the night. You ciin go right hack to sleep afterward. You can see It now." She whs so sleepy she couldn't wulk. Her mind seemed asleep too. She couldn't tell what she wns think-ing. Everything was so confused. Her father carried her. "She's so sleepy she 'enn lmrdly walk," he said. Her brother spoke to her. "Keep your eyes open for Just' a little while," he said. "I've been al-lowed to sit up and watch for It." And then they all gathered around an open window and looked up at the dark sky. It was a very dark sky. It seemed to Polly that it was a sleepy sky. It looked Just the way she felt. It looked as though It Just couldn't mm1 A "Wake Up, Wake Up," They All Said. wake up. That was why. she thought. It looked so blurred and funny. "Isn't It great?" her brother said. "You see," he explained, "something very wondi'rful is happening right now. "The earth Is passing between the moon and the sun and the moon is be-ing eclipsed that means partly hid-den." Holly looked. Oh, how hard It was to keep her eyes open, but she blinked as hard as she could and peered out at the funny sky. She thought of the earth passing be-tween the moon and the sun, and then she begun to think that she must be passing along this way too since she was on the earth and It was the earth which was doing this. . Y'et how could she he putting a shadow over the moon when she was way down here In a house by an open wlnd'fw? And the house wasn't mov-ing. It was very confusing. Siie was glad all the family under-stood It. F.ven the word eclipse was too much for her It was simply an Impossible word. She was taken hack to bed at least she knew that must have happened as she woke up In the bed In the morn-ing tliough she hadji't remembered being actually taken back to bed. But the next day and the day after that and for some time to come she would say to everyone. "I saw the Vlipse the other night," and they would look astonished for that wonderful tiling hud happened after midnight. Kven If it' was something too con-fusing to be understood It was nice to boast about. But It wns a pity It had to happen at such a sleepy time. It made it more confusing than ever i that way. ;' Sliphtly in Error Jud Tunkns says he sees several , men fool In' themselves the same as I he did when he thought for a minute 4 he was at the head of the class; only the teacher wna countln' from the other end o' the line. J London's Terrible Fire The great fire which laid London low In Ifilid raged for Ave days and t. devastated 4.'H! acres. It laid waste 4 400 streets, destroying SO churches and 13,200 houses. About 20,000 people were made homeless. Rooster Could Count A class in experimental psychology at the I'nlverslty of Chicago hm I. found that a rooster can count. Ker-- f nels of corn were arranged In rows on fj the floor, every third kernel being tacked down. The rooster discovered J i this and passed up the stationary ' kernels. Then the third kernels were : loosened and the rooster was set at Ida task. He skipped them until his foot struck one, when, with a chuckle, V ' he' returned and ute nil the kernels.. " Front Wheel Drive Will Revolutionize Industry A car that Is built for racing, the highest part of the car being 34 Inches from the track, but the main feature being a front wheel drive, The front axle contains all the driving gears that the ordinary car has in the rear axle while the rear axle of this car Is merely an axle, the transmis-sion, (lilTerenllal and the steering ap-paratus being in the front axle. The Only Machine of Its Kind. car was designed by Harry Miller for the use of Jimmy Murphy, world fa-mous driver, killed at Syracuse, X. Y. The Invention was bought by Cliff I'uriint, manufacturer of the Durant curs, and It Is said that the front wheel drive will revolutionize the au-tomobile Industry. I'hoto shows CIItT ut the wheel while Ilarlen Fengler, race driver, looks on as Lew Cody, movie slur, christens the car. Electricity's Great Speed I Electricity travels with much great- - I er speed than either llirht or sound. I It covers 288,000 miles In a second, 1 while light travels 1SC.OO0 miles to ,t the second and sound only 7.'14 miles 4 In the same time. a i Set for Rainy Day , Prince George, youngest surviving ' ' son of King George V, has prepared . ) tor a "rainy day," such as the oust- - ' Ing of the royul family. He has be-- J, come a member of the famous Mer-- ; " J t ' cers' company, from which he can ob-- tain practically Indefinite relief In the ,! ; event of "old age or misfortune." ,. ' j : Funds for such purposes were set : aside years ago by members of tb j guild. - f "I I Gorillas Not Man Eaters Gorillas, ferocious though they seem I to he, are not carnivorous. If they I kill a human being or an animal they ? do not eat the flesh of their victim. I They kill generally In -- 6 DO NOT TALK TO DRIVER OF AUTO There Is Too Much Driving Being Done From Seats in Rear of Car. There is a sign in the front of most city street ram bearing t lie words, "Don't Tulk to the Motonnan." That sign with even greater emphasis might well he posted on the front of every windshield. The driver of an automobile has far more need to devote his attention ex-clusively to the work la hund, thnu has the motonnan. The latter has a straight one way truck ulieud of him with two rails to guide him, the motor-ist has no such aids to safeguard his eye und hand. Distracts Driver's Attention. Iiecuuse passengers are in close con-tact with the driver there is a definite tendency to distract his attention. The engineer of a locomotive Is located where he can give complete attention to the work of operating the train. What the passengers do or say, or think. In no way ulTects the final re-sults. Automobile passengers are to blame for much of the trouble drivers get into. On a count of a number of seri-ous accidents it was found that in the majority of cases the drivers were accompanied by pussengers. The rela-tively small number of Instances where lone drivers are Involved In serlousr accidents seems to support the theory that tberf Is top much driving being done from t tie back seat. ConversMion is perhaps the greatest single cause of automobile accidents where passenger are being carried. The driver gets too deep Into a sub-ject that Interests him, only to sacri-fice his attention upon the matter of driving. The less drivers and passen-gers converse about mutters which have no direct bearing upon the facts at hand the better it is for both par-ties. Some people feel that they must offer a surfeit of conversation In re-turn for a driver's courtesy. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Timely Warnings. Where a passenger Is capable of giving the driver valuable warnings he should do so by all means, and the driver ought not to resent being warned when necessary. The passen-ger sees t lie mail from a different angle. His advice may be of consider-able value. "There's a car coming to our left," stated In a matter-of-fac- t way has prevented more accidents than all the exclamations and gasps combined. Hut to keep up a continual chatter on the topics of the day Is as danger-ous as It is unnecessary and frequent-ly leads to a collision or an upset in the ditch. Intelligence of Pigs ' Doubtless the ugliness of pigs and J the ugly noises they make have earned 4 them their bad name, but actually their ? Intelligence stands on a level with that i of a horse, f Tuberculosis "Cures" J J The public health service says that "'I'' .there Is an average of one new cure ' i per week proposed for tuberculosis, practically all of which are failures. ' Authorities are Investigating the new f Mollegnard cure for tuberculosis, and J when they determine Its value the re- - suits will be announced. y""J Use for Old Films Old cinematograph films, after being boiled down and having a certain of silver removed, are used for making patent lenther. ' New Version j The reason many n man loses faith in his fellows Is because they do to him the things he would like to do 1 to thf in. Duluth Herald. Fog Injurious to Birds ' Fog affects the birds and beasts at j the London zoo to such an extent It has been decided to Install electric j lights to temper the dampness and darkness caused by the moistened haze and coal smoke that creeps Into j all the cages when fogs are at their height. i No Use Small Hoy What's the use of wnsh- - Ing my bunds before I go to school, mother? I'm not one of tliose who are always raising them ! Tragedy The smaller daughter of a certain actor hud seen and heard her father rehearsing a new part, and after it was over she retired, greatly Impressed, to the nursery. A little later her mother overheard her ap-parently rehearsing a play she was Inventing us she went along. "My loved one Is III. I must go to him !" There wiis a momentary pause. Then suddenly: "Blow It, he's dead." Prettier, Too In the bowl with the growing bulhh 1 use the large glass beads like those used In klndergurters. You will find j them a change from the 'rdlnary . stones. j' That Settles It ' Silence la golden and women, being naturally thrifty, hate to make use of anything so expensive. Duluth Her-aid. , Conqueror Could Not Write Documents prove that William the Conqueror, the tlrst Norman king In England,' could not sign his own name. Creeper Is Convenient During Severe Weather A creeper Is a very liuiidy thing about the workshop for getting under the car to make a repair or an adjust-ment. It not only provides a means of getting under the car, but keeps one off the dirty and oily floor, as well as protecting the health during cold and disagreeable weather. It is so simple to construct that no shop or private garage should be without one. It con-sists of a frame made from two by two ends and one-hal- f by three boards about three feet long. A pillow is pro-vided for a headrest and caster rollers, the hitter permitting one to slide un-der the car with It. ' ' Housekeeper's Fault V There Is too much effort to keep dust ' out of the bookcase and not enough ef-fort to keep dirt out. Dulntli Herald. j i People and Places In this world there are no unlnter-- esting places, but only uninterested J " people- .- Gilbert Chesterton. Spark Plug Test When there is reason to suspect a spark ping of not firing properly It may be tested by removing It from the cylinder without disconnecting the wire terminal and luylng the metal part of the plug on the engine. By turning the motor over slowly the electrical circuit will then bt, com-pleted by the commutator, und. If the spark plug is In working condition, a spark will Jump between Its points. If not, the probability Is that the plug needs cleaning or is short-circuite- d and useless. Tire Hints Given Don't neglect small cuts. These will often extend farther than you think. Dirt and wet get In, the fabric rots and a blowout follows. Look over your tires from time to time. Don't keep a spare tire out of use too long. Change over occasionally. A tire lasts better In use than exposed to the sun and rain on the running board. Clean Cloth Upholstery Cloth upholstery may best be cleaned by beating curtains and backs lightly with a stick or carpet beater, after which the accumulated dust Is whisked off with a brush. Grease or oil may be removed by an application of lukewarm water and good soap, ap-plied with a woolen cloth. There Rre a number of new woolen cleaners which will work very well on cloth up-holstery, but gasoline and benzine have a tendency to spread Instead of to remove dirt. Testing It Out A foreign hoy was attending night school. One of the things he learned In arithmetic wus that four quarters make a whole. He studied It over and over avaln. Sunday morning he went Into his back yard and began to dig. His father heard him, and asked him what he was doing. "I'm digging a hole," said his son, 'because iny teacher said there were four quarters In a hole." Painting Spare Tirea Where it Is desired to paint your old spare tires merely to make them look better, and not to preserve them against deterioration from the action of the elements, a good plan Is to mint hut one side and the trend of "ach tire, leaving the Inner side just as It was, so that when a spare Is to be used the unpninted side can be dis-played. Examination of Casing A very handy weapon to make easy the examination of the Inside of a casing when lookhig for punctures, fabric breaks, or weak spots Is a wedt'e made of a substantial stick of wood three-quarter- s of an Inch thick and three to five Inches long, depend-ing on the size of the tire. Thisvedge may be slipped between the beads and pulled around the entire circumfer-ence of the casing with one hand, leaving the other free tu hold the tlra J' Was Not Sick Hetty Jane was playing in the yard when the family doctor came along and callud to her, "Hello, Iielty .lane." Hetty June paid no attention to him and he again called, "Hello, Hetty Jane." Again she paid no attention to him. The doctor put his hands up to his mouth and called loudly, "Hello, Hetty Jane." She looked up and suld, "I not sick." .' ' . . ' J - - "" Cleaning Muffler Box In cleaning the muffler, after the part has been disassembled and the .arts cleaned with kerosene, it is well fo go over all the holes designed to break up. the cas with a sharp punch r flue taper reamer ta make sure that these hobs huve list been reduced in size. - i a |