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Show '( THE BINGHAM NEWS I Completion of Bridge Delayed by Tolls Dispute 1 f IUijIffl -- :. - MMa bm I xr tA T.W anJ I,terestlnB Icture ' the bridge across the Delaware river between Philadelphia. Pa., and Camden. I m""1! "n t0". chnrges- - w,,lch Nw Jersey wlu iew Is nt allow, may halt the work on the Jersey aide. The I looking toward Cumden. a RIP Daddy's QpdEveiii$ Fairy Tale SV W GRAHAM BOWER THE DOUGHNUTS' HOLES Melly loved to make doughnuts. Her daddy was devoted to them. Crullers he called them. Melly didn't quite know the differ-ence between douKhnuta and crullers, or wheth-er there wai much difference. Hut anyway he knew how to make them. They were light and delicious when Melly made them. They never gave any one Indiges-tion. They were sprinkled with When 8rte Wae Pwderd ' All Throuoh. JU8t as ,hey came steaming out of the hot fat and rested on the brown paper until they were cool. They were round doughnuta with holes In the center. Sometimes Melly tried to drop one Into the fat so that It would come the shape of a figure 8. Usually when she tried to make them a particularly good shape they didn't come out so well ss now and ugaln they did by accident. Hut they all were excellent to eat and they all were pretty good shapes. She used to cut out the doughnuts, after the mixture was all finished and when she had rolled them out on the board In the kitchen, which slie had cov-ered with flour so they couldn't stick, with a round top of a tin which she had washed carefully first. Then she had the top of a little tin which she used to make the hole In the center of every doughnut That was splendid and she loved the big doughnuts with their round holes. They were surh dough-nuts. They were such delicious, light doughnuts. But then she almost liked the boles best of all. Of course, perhaps they should not he called the holes, as the holes In the doughnuts were the real holes. There was nothing to eat where there was a hole. Of course not That was absurd. The doughnuts were plenty big enough without being solid. The holes made the doughnuts Just right. But the parts she had cut out with the smaller tin she cooked la the hot fat after the doughnuta with the boles bad been cooked. She called these the doughnuts' holes. They came out round and chubby and as cunning as could be. She sprinkled these with powdered sugar, too. When she was all through there were two huge platters covered with doughnuts. On one platter were the doughnuts without the holes. On the other platter were the holes ! Yes, what had been taken out of every doughnut In order to make the hole was now a delicious little dough-nut itself. ' Quite different In shape to be sure, but extremely good to eat I How pleased her father was on doughnut day. How he did ask for doughnuts every night from then on, until the doughnuts were all gone. How he compli-mented her upon the way she could make them. "No one," he said, "could make such delicious do u g h n u t s. No one at all." He liked the little ones, too. He always called them the "little fellers." How psed Her "Give me an- - FatneP Was. other little fel-ler, Melly," he would say. And Melly would give him another one. But she never called them anything else but the doughnuts' holes. And sometimes she thought they were pretty smart, even though she had helped them so much, to come out as such good things to eat when they had, In a way, been merely holes. Yes, she really thought a great deal of tlieml 9 f .Jfi3fl, i 1 The Ideal Wall Finish for every Room in the House Living room, bedroom kitchen or pantry urwtiirt or down every room in the home can be made bright and attractive clean and IHtS5S?rfTifv,i anitary with King Wall Flntth. IttoTpS 'ftftiT Easy to mix eaay to apply and to economic fnijM i cal that a dollar's worth la tuually more than I enough to decorate the average-aUe- d room. '' Doo't epand a alnata penny for dacorattng until ru M 1JaHei' : : vft know murf about ihia ramarliahla wall fcnlah. Wttta h Jj' today o Colof Chart ahowtna l baautlful colon to Ijtt! I chooaa from and nama ol dealer acaraet yuu. I THB CHICAGO WHITB LEAD & Ott CO. LVN I fmj 4 15th8hand&WMtrnAnCbicao,Ill. C? ' eBSBSaBaBai3laKaS Distributor Salt Lake Glass & Paint Co. Salt Lake City, Utah Farmers Attention! Buy Your Car Now Save Money We have 75 automobiles that must be sold NOW without regard to profit Any make you want new or used. Truck of all kinds. Priced to sell on sight. Write us today for com-plete details of any make cat you want Inland Finance Co. Box 328 Ogden, Utah Truckers DaanirV Farmers Wayne County with Its wonderful soil and climate, long seasons, mild wlntar. cheap landn, splendid churches ana echoola, and excellent transportation facilities, Invites you to locate bar. A frreat boom la beaded our way. Act at once. Writ DOAHU OF TRADE, JESUP, OA., W. N. USalt Lake Clty, No73!192a; 1 Permanent f II road art a good investment not an expense Oime Honrce Towan, Any commtrnfcy whoee streets are not dur-- a ably paved is going to be known as a "one - horse town." " When that time arrives. Prosperity says, T3ood-by- e, old friend. Good-bye!- " People start moving away. Bank deposits fall off. Business in general begins to take a slump, and the place is no longer on the map." Contrast all this with the city that is well paved. It steadily forges ahead over its hard, even streets. Automobiles, busses and delivery trucks, operate efficiently and economically, ( regardless of season or weather. Business is good, and keeps getting better. Modern, fire-sa- fe buildings spring up. New industries are attracted to town. Plants and ' factories are working full time. Trade at the stores is brisk, and everybody's busy. In short, permanently paved streets and roads are one of the very best 'investments any community can make. You can enjoy the tonic effect of well paved streets by help-- ? ing your local authorities to find ways and means to build more of them. Snd today for our fru iUurtraUi Booklet aaaJJ "Concrata Strut for Your Town." tMtmmme PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 111 West Washington Street CHICAGO & " ' - "j A National Organization to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete OFFICES IN JO CITIES J L I Storm Does Vast Damage in Detroit and Environs This photograph shows Detroit street with roadway ruined by a recent rain storm which causod over $1,000,-00- 0 worth of damage, Inundating large areas, flooding cellars, washing away pavements, ripping up gutters and seriously crippling transportation In the city. ! f1 S'lmm?'mW: I I F 4i M --M ': ? r Jill ' ".jtV'Wt 2', ' ' ! tL I i''4tt'i" V'ttf 1 jf n ZZ-- b Mft--' - rZj-'-fD- . , f !1 l - I i LJ II-- Kirn t wMf'- " - yll?!' " I See$ Age of Science Prof. A. M. Low, famous scientist, asserts that In all probability the man of the future will not have to shave and will most likely be bald. Hut that Is not all. Among Professor Low's genial forecasts are the following: Women will wear trousers. Incuba-tors on the hire system will solve the difficulty of rearing children. Prettl-nes- s In women will be a drug on the market and national birth control will free women for educutlon. Foods will come from communal kitchens In tubes. Complete triumph of radio communica-tion In every department of life. Pro-fessor Low Is very sure of it all. And he does not think It is so very funny, either. Cutlcura 8oap for the Complexion. Nothing better than Cutlcura Soap dally and Ointment now and then aa needed to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cutlcura Talcum, and you have the Cutlcura Toilet Trio. Advertisement ld Head, Cult A boy six years old now heads the Confucian cult In China. He Is known at the little duke of Kong and he lives near Chufoo, where his family has lived for 2,500 years, according to authentic records. On this site cul-tured men lived when the battle of Marathon was fought all during the rise and fall of the Roman empire and through the Dark ages. i SEEN AT 300 MILES ' tt if'"" J This Is the new giant searchlight ; Just lnstulled on Mount Africque, near ' Dijon, France, and which at night Is visible for a distance of 300 miles. s The light is of one billion candle power, and from a height of 500 feet Is visible as far nway as the British t coast, Brussels, Frnnkfort-on-the-Mal- n j and Milan. The primary purpose is to f facilitate night air travel. I Chinese Is Easy for These Men ' 1rTV ''vry ! vji$m I $ r --I r V ' 1 O .. - II r,mM..T l minx ll m There are 20 distinct (liulects In the Chinese laugiiuge and very few Americans or other foreigners have ever mastered the language. Washington, however, boasts of four men who can read and write and speak Chinese. They are In the Far Eastern division of the State department. Left to right: Ray Tenney, Nelson T. Johnson, chief of the division ; Muhlon Perkins and George Acheson, Jr. Spirit to Be Cultivated Iteul sportsmen find more pleasure in catching flan than In counting them, although they take pride In a "good catch." If all men who work with brain or hand had the siiortsman'i spirit more would be accomplished toward maintaining national pros-perity. Grit. Couldn't Kill Romance Forty years to the day after he had planned to wed Miss Emma Aldrlch, John G. Gllmartln married her. Their engagement was broken off when she was fifteen, because of parental objec-tions. Both married other persons, who died a few years ago. Appropriate "When I eat spring lamb I feel ttke gambolling." "Try the caper sauce with It" Helping Out the Ostriches I 3Tfe?l y: " A. fv J V ( t , i . Vli - i f K: t - PS Vi,c i - . 4' v -- 'r,lr- ! np-r-et-- T'" , KS35TBI fff Little d Cora Jane Culver of Pasadena, Cal., officiates as maternity matron for several dozen Incubator baby ostriches at the Los , Angeles ostrich farm. Her duties are to help the babies break the shells. ' I FOE OF BLUE LAWS 4 i gt? Stent- -' f John D. Bradley of Washington, D. C, who has been chosen as bead I of the Anti-Blu- e Law league. The 4 league aims to fight censorship, anti- - I evolution laws and all kinds of "blue" I legislation. I Conundrumt Why Is a crocodile the most deceit-ful of all creatures T Because he shows an open counte-nance in the act Of taking you In. When is a little girl's hair like the sea? When It Is In waves. Why does a cook never make a square pudding? Because she wants It to go round. e When Is a gale like a bear? When it's (a bruin). e e What Is the only tiling that caa live in the midst of fire? A nine, of coal. |