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Show - ( Lhnrsday, September 13, 1928 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH - - w v yL2 i f THERE Is nothing that has ever taken the place of Bayer Aspirin as an antidote for pain. Safe, or physi-cians wouldn't use it, and endorse its use by others. Sure, or several mil-lio- n users would have turned to some thing else. But get real Bayer Aspirin (at any drugstore) with Bayer on the ', box, and the word gtnuint printed in seat WHAT DR. CALDWELL j LEARNED IN 47 j YEARS PRACTICE j A physician watched the reralta of constipation for 47 years, said believed that no matter howrareful people are of their health, diet and exercise, constipa-- . t tfon will occur from time to time. Of next importance, then, is how to treat it when it comes. Dr. Caldwell alwaya was in favor of getting M close to natwra a possible, hence his remedy for consti. nation, known Dr. Caldwell's 8yrnp tepsin, is a mild vegetable compound. It can not harm the system and is not habit forming. Syrup Pepsin is pleasant tasting, and youngsters love It. Dr. Csldwell did not approve of drastic physios and purges. Be did not believe they were good for anybody's eyatem. --In a practice of 47 yeare he never saw any reason for their use whea Byrnp Fepain will empty the bowels Just "Donot let a day go by without bowel movement Do not sit and hope, but go to the nearest druggist and get one of the generous bottles of Dr. "Cald-well's Syrup Pepsin, or write "Syrup Pepsin," Dept BB, Montioello, Winoie, for free trial bottle. ICE I j Is Always I 1 j Gold 1 K 1 When your ice box is 1 I 1 fuil of ice, you can go j j I away for an hour or 3 I 1 for a day and forget I 1 about it. You know j I 1 that the food it is I I protecting will be pro-- j I tected. Nothing can 3 I j go wrong ice is a!- - if ways c0' I '" 1 U.: if PHONE 208 W j II E for prompt delivery 3 I I V. B. COON I ICE CP. j ... MonootlccldUr tf IsUtyllssste m from a bone epavln, ring bone, I apllnt, curb, aide bona, or similar 4 troubles? gats horse going sound. II Absorbine acts mildly butquickly. I I Lasting rssralta. Does not blister H or nmove hair, and hone can be worksd. At druggists, or postpaid, Jl $2.50. Horse book S fr. 3f F1mmJ Met says; "Hsd aWtaae f fcorw with bone nxvtn. Now eouwj fl wk-- doiUr-- . not lama Step SB Bssatba SJL"Wrkii daily." wrYOUHQ" Inlcj I' roIvmsiiSpriwilMess. TOEB PALM READ BY MAlt Let tU you how we do It ;f ull wrKt roport. PAI.M COMPANT. 01 B. ST. N. WASHINGTON. P. O. flaarantecd Salary and CommlMlone setting now doal to merchant In thta atato. Posi-tion la permanent. We teach you how to ell ucceaafully. Addreaa lltco. Cedar Rapid. la. MEDITERRANEAN Sftf a "Transylvania" sailing Jan. 30 Clark's tStherulae. CSrtaya, including: Madeira. Canary Ialanda. Caaablanca, Rabat. Capital of Morocco, Spain. Airier. Malta, Athena, 15 days Paloatineand EBypt. Italy. Kiriera. Cherbourg;. (Paris). Ucludea hetela gruidee, motor, ete, Wiiem aUSIIinanaen. tn "l"f FRANK C.CIAHK,Ttm Bid., H.T. REGOfllENDS IT TO OTHERS EytfaE, PirikWi Vegetal! Compound Helps Her So Much emmmmmmmmmmmm Cleveland, Ohio. "I sure ttcom- - mend faydla E. Plnkham'a Vegetable , t " . "t Compound to any Smi. , woman In the con--l dltloo I was In. I was so weak and I r. j run-dow- n that I t h"'' could hardly stand $ VV up. I could not d--;f eat and was full ! of misery. A friend llT,n oQ Arcade - i i-- $ 7 Avenue told ma fff . Jf about this meul-- ' I f lff cine and after tak-- v ing ten botUes mr weakness and nervousness are all gone. I feel like living again. I am etui taking It until I feel strong like before. You may use this letter as m testimonial."-- Mas. Elizabeth Tobo, 14913 Halo Ave., Cleveland, Ohio. Ignore your aches and pains, as youth does those It has. Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh Since 1846 Has Healed Wounds aa Sores on Man and Beast fcbcMT back tcx irela'.t Dot Kitted. aDlbalank 1 W. N. U.. Salt Lake City, No. 37-19- 28. Those who use the "OREM LINE" Hide cheaply and safely WEElt- - END EXCURSIONS MAGNA TO SALT CCC LAKE and Return PROVO and Return .. ' . Commutation, or 500 Mile Mileage Books 2 CENTS PER MILE. Good between all tations Private cars and special rates to parties on application. Special car service for protection of perishable freight. " SALT LAKE & UTAH R. t ' Henry Moore end p. p. Abercomble, Receivers. Aldon J. Anderson, Traffic Mgr. , f& DSADDDdD Of course you re ; going to hear 1 I .Hoover and Smith iJ .IplffJL to radio, they expect to talk directly to every ' '? THANKS the United Slates. Where is the family that to be without a good radio set in this most Viv ; J J interesting of Presidential years? I When Smith and Hoover go on the air, you can count on MO01U4O jf T Atwater Kent Radio. Its reliability, its power, its range, its ELECTPJC 77,,t.. r X WW simplicity of operation, as well as its clear tone,1 have made .. V7 4 4 ' wa it the leader everywhere. It comes from the largest radio - ' LM where is slighted. It is not an L .L ' pen7ment.Yodo-th.vetoUkeitonfaiIti.thefr- f .DK; - JL ... of twnly-i-x years' manufacturing experience six years J tuU$ and m notifying tub. In. AUo Afbt - y;t Wf j, 'tv Of radio. ' I 42. with automatic voitafr0 rmfiulator, $86, and J JJ JraN . . Nearly 1,700,000 owner, know that, the name Atwater '"H-- W J IgJ Kent on radio means the same thing as "sterling" on silver. ' 'ft!XW0! ' ' , , - Whether or not your home is equipped with electricity, J V -- '' iJ' there is an np-toJa- Atwater Kent model to carry on the v , fJg3X--l Atwater Kent tradition of giving the finest reception at the - - ' ' lowest price. . The Atwater Kent battery Bets have woii their reputation The Atwater Kent electric 1set.s' for fine performance in 1,400,000 homesand now both require no batteries. A , . Bffain tmnrovi for 1Q20 ebrd from convenient lamp socket and the current costs only about as From ithe orange orchards of Southern California :to the muchasthelighUngofona40-wattlamp- . iotato fields of Maine, Atwater Kent Radio u far and away the preferred choice of rural families. The nearest Atwater Kent dealer will gladly show yon why.fuid will advise you - in your selection of the model best suited to your .needs. , '.m BAirtRY L1S Campaign year! You'll need good ,J f49- -' radio a$ you never did before! ft- ! '"' ft'&tott , Onthtalrtmrr J , I'v''.,-?-'-. Sunda, .t-- i ATWATER KENT ' iv.SV T-- i, i MANUFACTURING COMPANY ,v)4 Radia Hour . - J S4,VV. ,) '""f W' I - Xi i Atwatm Ktnt, Prtdmni 4d'tf x? f i - f 4764 WlhltkwA.PhUielphU,Pfc fjddKdiagol Model U.UiUaad QT ' "RADIO'S THUE3T VOICE" Atwater Xent 44. l, t'. IMm ia 'm Spekt UoduU E. EJ, K4, MM H , . belwUliilMtarUueri Ki'SiwwJ Rj, (UlenM ia kM, Mek, 124. . , - ",l?"t """iilJK. 1 dIgiisiesoi T ; Lawyei ' ': t : ' s Located in the Office ? of the Bingham Bulletin i J " Pbone 91 i i.i r.yywJf-'','ljJlll''- l 1 jjjS iVo Lege! Meaning to the Term "Blackmail' In the King's Bench division, Lon-don, before Justice Horrldgo and pedal Jury, Horatio Bottomley was further cross-examine- d In his libel ac-tion against Hnrst A Blackett, pub-lishers, and Henry James Houston, formerly, employed by blm. Bottomley complained that be had been accused of blackmail In a book, "The Real Horatio Bottomley," writ-ten by Houston and published by Hurst Blackett, who pleaded Justi-fication and contended that Mr. Bet-tnmle- y bad signed a document In-demnifying Houston against libel. The foreman of the Jury asked Jos-tles Horrtdge, the legal meaning of blackmail, as some of the Jurors did not seem to understand It "It is a well-know- n English term," replied Justice Horrldge, "and , 1 should hate thought you would have given your own meaning to It There la no legal meaning to lt.M From the Continental Edition of the London Dally Mall. Abnormality of Groups Can Easily Be Turned Into Collective Insanity By PHOF. E. A. BURTT, University of Chicago. individual member of any class, profession or religious group, TI1Ematter how intelligent or conscientious he may be, is seldom to realize the errors and fallacies' believed in by his own group as a whole.- - Group abnormality, sometimes becoming t case of collective insanity, is a force so powerful that it can impel people to beheve in even destructive ideas, and what is worse, act upon them. Only by the assumption of group abnormality can we explain the pe-riodic outbursts of fanaticism and militaristic frenzy which have worked such havoc upon the human race. It is by thff consideration of this'phenomcnon that we are able fully to appreciate the extraordinary achievement of the scientific-attitud- e in developing the habit of arriving at truth through the use of some tenta-tive statement termed an "hypothesis." " , V ' An hypothesis represents what the scientific guesses may be the truth, and which he employs as a working attitude pending the final re suits of experiment and observation. If demonstrated "wrong, the hy-pothesis is discarded for a new and better statement. Such an attitude is directly opposite the view derived from the-ology, which starts with faith in something considered eternally and un changeably true, and extends this faith to include every detail in the scheme. The scientific attitude is that of an agnostic, which does not mean atheist, but rather the open mind. Habit of working by tentative statements has developed a true "law of progress" for Kumanity, the open-mind- ed attitude which will eventual-ly enable mankind to control many future conditions now regarded as be-yond human power. Eskimos "Mine" Ivory Left by Ance$tor " Ancient fossil Ivory valued at $00,000 came South on the first boat from No. e this season. The tvory on board represented an unin-tentional bequest from the long de-ceased Eskimos to the present gen-eration. The natives from time im-memorial feasted on walrus and the tusks, having no value, were tossed aside. These piles accumulated, especially on the St Lawrence and the Prlbllof Islands, during the centuries. Thei, white men came north with trading schooners and bought freshly killed walrus Ivory. The Eskimos, remembering the wasteful habits it their ancestors, promptly began sink-ing r!nrr on the sites of ancient camps. Each summer they dig out thousands of dollar worth of fossil Ivory, valuable because of Its deep coloring and extreme hardness. Her Testimony Doubted "What Is your age?" "Twenty-two- , Judge." "I forgot to remind yon, madam, that you are under oath." Too Many Make Religion a Matter of Their Personal Comfort By DR. ALVIN & MAGARY, Detroit. " I went to that church a few times," said the good, pious man, "and I got great profit from the services; but the seats were rather uncomfort-able and I decided to go elsewhere. . His remark is a commentary on more things in modern life than our choice of a church. There was a time when our fathers would brave blizzards and eit through a two-ho- ur sermon in a church in which a cor ner stove struggled vainly against a zero temperature. Today we insist on being comfortable whether we are righteous or not. I wonder if it would not be profitable for us to remember that re-ligion has not always been a matter of comfortable listening to a comfort-able preacher and a comfortable choir. Our forefathers, many of them, paid dearly for the convictions by which they ruled their lives. Some of them were imprisoned, in prisons where the seats were uncomfortable. Some sat in the stocks' and had no cushions under them. Some laid their heads, not on soft pillows, but on the block. Some were warmed for their faith, it is true, but the fires that warmed them also roasted them alive. Aren't you being a little too insistent that life shall bo a comfortable thing? Do any of us suppose that Almighty God is interested in provid-ing for us a comfortable seat in IHr sanctuary? When we complain about tl life we live, do we forget that our fathers bought it for us with blood and sacrifice? Hat World's Softest Job The world's softest job Is the one held by Serglns Cghet, a Russian In Washington who once represented the Kerensky regime, according to a writer In Capper's Weekly. "We re-fused the new Russian government recognition and during all these 10 years Ughet has been In charge of the Russian embassy at Washington living off the fat of the land, respon-sible to no one. Be has had charge of business of former Russian gov-ernments involving the collection of assets which exceeded liabilities by many millions. Only the other day he received a check from an Ameri-can railroad for $084,104 In settle-ment of a Russian claim. And he doesn't have to render an account to anyone." : Church's Great Periods With much diversity of opinion on minor points, there Is a general agree-ment tn dividing the history of the church into three great periods. The first, from the birth of Christ to the time of Constantino; the second, from that epoch to the Reformation; anfl third, from the Reformation to the present time, t Modern Child Evincing Increasing Disrespect for Law and Authority , By MISS ANNIE DEMAREST, Veteran New York Teacher. ' Sparing the rod has indeed spoiled the child. 1 know it is but I do think the present generation has gone entirely too far in this freedom. " I think the greatest change has come in the attitude of the children. Of course, our teaching methods have changed, and our teaching philoso-rsh- v ba hpnn versed since I started work 51 years ago. The state, for instance, which never used to inteu'ere, constantly demands more and more of the teachers. There has been continual growth. But the greatest change has come in the children themselves. They still have the same instincts; tltey do not have the same training. There is no longer the respect for law and authority among them. There is more freedom, more independence and less obedience. They' have little respect for their parents, ami, of course, less for teachers and for those with whom they come in contact outside. Face to Face "Do you experience stage fright in speaking over radio!" "No," declared Senator Sorghum. "I feel as If I were speaking man to man. I classify many of my constit-uents as morons, who have about the same facial expression as a micro-Perambulating phone." "What has become of the auto-graph album?" asked Alfred. "It Is now worn as a slicker," Elolse. Poorly Selected We picked out a poor Bpot for our camp." "How's that?" "Too damp for comfort Not damp enough for fish." Louisville Courler-Journn- l. When a brainy man Is stoop-shouldere- d they say It Is the weight of his intellect that does it "Getting By" in College False Doctrine for the Student to Hold ' ' . By DEAN SCOTT H. GOODNIGHT, University of Wisconsin: The legend that "getting by" in college courses is sufficient is a falax doctrine. Don't let anybody tell you that it doesn't pay to put great ef-fort into one's college work, that college work is impracticable and that to "get by" is all that is uecessnry. . It pays very handsomely, to do high-grad- e work in college, both hi satisfactions and. recognitions obtained during the courses, and in good positions in the business and .professional world that are always waiting for, men who have excelled in their college work. : v : , ' The mental satisfactionof a job well done will bring not only mo raentary sense of triumphs because of achievement, which is gratifying in' i elf, but it is also aceomp'anied by a consciousness of increased powev.. arid renewed confidence in yourself. It becomes a big factor in the all important process of our growth and development. , Science Making for Peace Because of Distribu-tion of Balance of Power ' ' By DR. W. LEE LEWIS, Inventor. If Etienee served warfare only, it would indeed be a human rurse. hut science has lessened the 'possibilities of war by providing pieansof protection and peaceful internal expansion. .' Even as applied to warfare, science makes for peace because it jr-v-the balance of power to the more advanced races. Tangible instrumiiite of war, controllable by agreement, undoubtedly will play a smaller part in future warfare than less tangible ones, battleships and fortresses will be leas' potent agents than airplanes and chemicals. Soie.ice makes war les romantic and more deadly. I, is. therefore fundammtnlly an ally of peace. The potentialities of eciej;6c jrarfa-ma- i,? it m nasiugly unpopular. |