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Show Thursday, May 17. 1928 THE BINGHAM BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH - ' ' OUR COMIC SECTION t CAN'T PRAISE IT ENOUGH Lydla E. Pinkham't Vegetable Compound Helped Her So Much Klnpston, Mo. "I have not talcen anything but Lydia E. Flnkham'a I Vegetable Com- - jpi'SS i v pound for IS V JfsV months and X 1 fi cannot praise It S? 1 enough. 1 weighed yV'A-- about 100 pound ' :: and was not able :IJ??,P! of work. My iiT? homework waa 4$sJ done hf my moth' nr rs work I1!w. not done. I have taken four bottlea of the Vege-table Compound and now I am well and strong and feel fine. I got my iiter-in-la- w to take it after her last baby came and ahe la atronger now. I cannot praiae it enough." Mia. Hattii V. Eabtut, E. 1, Kingston, Minourl. Rome Italy's Third City Although Rome ia one of the oldest j cities in existence, it Isn't even the largest In Its own country. Naples and Milan both are larger than Rome, which has a population estimated at 8ro.ooo. TELLYOUR FRIENDS What You Know about BELL-AN- S for Indigestion SyMtyzSo BeijvAns ITjgCmi Hot water Sure Relief ELL-AN-S FOR INDIGESTION 23 AND 75 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE I ,14 Business Training Pays Last year we placed more than 1000 in good positions, Wa can place you when competent. When will you be ready? Behnke-Walk- er Business College llth and Salmon Street Portland, Oregon mmmnmmmmni ml tnr rMt isHafartlt. It tout Ike wort. (1 aod . II PRSE BOOK LOT. Art war d..lr m rlto Hi Dr. C. H. Bcrnr c., 27S Mtckiwa An ciim Kill All Flies! "ME4" PIm) tnywhara, DAISY LY KILLER attract ftnd kiiit all (Lit. Neat, clean, ornamantaJ, convenient ud f m .im B9 K choap. Laata allaea-- ysAwt&W on Made of metal, JJQfHim can'' P' ortipowr; foi?frKw w'" not soil or inJtm JKSlvcEtW soythtng. Guaranteed, DAISYFLYKIIXEB from your dlr. HAROLD IOMIRI Breaklya M. T. Pike'e Peak Elevation Pike's peak achieves an altitude of 14,147 feet. It Is not the highest peak in the United States (Mount Whitney, California, 14,.r01 feet, enjoys that dis-tinction) nor even In Colorado, where Mount Elbert exceeds it with 14,420 feet. The population of Buenos Aires, Argentina, has Just passed' the 2,000,-00- 0 mark, making it second only to Paris among the Latin cities. For Barbed Wire Cuts Try HANFORD'S Balsam of Myrrh All dealers arc iBthorixed to refund year money far IK firt bottle if not witcd. PARKER'S h-i- j HAIR BALSAM Remove Reitorei Color and JSS Beauty to Gray and Faded Hail 7n and $l.iat I'miriricts. .xyV! " A HVt flifm. Wk. FLORESTON SHAMPOO-Id-eal for nse tn connection n iih Parker s liir Ba fam. Make" the hair soft and fluffy. ISO crnui by mail or at drag-cisl- a. liiscoi Clwmical Wcrks, I'alcbogue, N. S. W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 20-19- 28. Your Boy Needs MnI Cuticura Soap U S is? f To keep his skin and scalp clean f and healthy, and Cuticura Ointment --J to soothe and heal rashes, itchings S andirritationsandtopreventthefor- - " mation of blackheads and pimples. vN Soap 26. CiDtnwnt and 60e. Ta'CTrm iSe. Sold CTerywhara. X h'Tfe cvh free, Aiilrial --Cmioara Laboratories lrpt. C4, MaMaa, au " SBy Cuticura Shayiac Stick 25c ' - .., .1 Originator of "Little Eva" Found in Boston Much against her will, Mm. Cor-delia Howard Macdonnld. the first person to play the part of Little Eva In an "Uncle Tom'e Cabin" show, has been discovered In Boston. Stae his-torians have been searching for mem-ber of the original cast for year. She la the only living member. When a writer for the Farm and Fireside Magazine found her tiding In no or sen re boarding house, she reluctantly admitted that ahe was once the cele-brated girl who enjoyed a popularity before the Civil war greater than that of any other child actor before or since. She reafllrnied her vow, however, never to talk about her days with the play that baa been presented nearly MH,(xm times since her first performance on September 27. 1852. In Troy. N. Y. Mrs. Mac-donnld gave no reason for her al-ienee. Mrs. Macdonald. then Cor-delia Howard, four years old. with ber first performance started a record-- breaking run of twenty-fiv- days In the small town of Troy. Sucn a record then had only been equaled In London. Her triumphs continued for eight years. Events in the Lives of Little Men J Kind-Hearte- d Boy Dr. Martin U. Brumbaugh, president of Juniata college, raid at a dinner In Philadelphia: "Our churches of late years have failed because they have been too soft-hearted. They have been too lenient to our faults. Honesty, no matter how It hurts honesty Is what the people need today. "Our churches suggest an anecdote. It Is an anecdote about a tired-lookin- g man who balled a boy at work in a field, and said : "'How far Is It to Croydon, boyf "'Eight miles,' said the boy. "'Eight miles stllir groaned the man. 'Are you sure, boyT "'Well,' raid the boy, 'seein' you're so tired, I'll call it five. "Philadel-phia Bulletin. M CLOTHES IDEAS FROM ABROAD aggMaeMartfn Last fall when I was in France, I ad-mired the dress which the daughter of our hostess was wearing, and she confessed It was three years old, orig-inally rose - beige, now dyed a rich, deep shade of red! The French are eternally surprising you with thrifty lit-tle tricks like that tricks which It pays to Imitate. Most of us have dresses which, if al-lowed to remain their original color, are discarded or seldom worn, ite-dye- d, they become favorites agnln. Just get a package or two of true, fadeless Diamond Dyes, and try your hand at tinting or dyeing. You'll be amazed to see how ensy It is to use Diamond Dyes. They never disap-point you. The "know-how- " Is In the dyes. They are real dyes like those used when the cloth was made. They never give things that redyed look, like make-shif- t, Inferior dyes. The more than sixty colors yon can get from them Irclude everything that's fashionable. My new 64-pa- ge Illustrated book, "Color Craft," gives hundreds of money -- saving hints for renewing clothes and draperies. It's FREE. Write for it, NOW, to Mne Martin, Home Service Dept., Diamond Dyes, Burlington, Vermont Checkerberries I j and Romance j o By DOUGLAS ROTH Copyrtbl.t OLIVE MACFAULAND had In eluding the other mem-bers of the party with whom she had motored up the Mohawk trail and Into the old Vermont town wherein they had decided to spend a few days. She had rtolvn out of ber room early In the morning, begged the old cook In the kitchen of the tea-hous- e In which they were staying for a cup of cof-fee and a sundwlch, an extra bite to take In her pocket, and had escaped across the river alone, on foot, into New Hampshire. When she had . spoken of climbing the great mountain that overhung the river there hnd been no wild enthusi-asm on the part of the others. So she had decided to climb the hills alone. Snnker were the only tilings to be feared, In Olive's mind. Enjoying every moment of the morn-ing, she had climbed up, up the nar-row trail and not encountered a hu-man soul. She had sung aloud, she had gathered blueberries, she had sat down on the soft, tufted soil of pine needles. Her every nerve was alive; she wae huppy almost Olive always added, softly to her-self, the adverb. For she was not al-together happy when, In her heart was the feeling that a big thing had passed her by. She had not won the love of the man whom rhe bad adored since school days. Now, as she climbed up the moun-tain trail, purported by the big stick she had picked up on the way, she thought of him. He seemed to be vividly before her here in the silent places of the bills. At last she sat down benenth three friendly white birch trees and un-wrapped her meager lunch. How oft-en, back in her school days, she bad sat beneath birch trees and eaten her midday meal together with the girls in her botany class and the teacher. Ceorge Earllng had taught botany, among other branches, In the prepara-tory school In the Middle West to which Olive hnd been sent before en-tering college. Every girl In the class had fancied herself in love with the big, handsome, kindly professor, but he had treated them all alike, as little girl?, and was Interested in teaching them of all the growing things. The girls enjoyed their hours with him more than they would admit to each other. Olive had always been a student of nature, and perhaps in her George Darling found a particularly compan-ionable mind. At least, Olive felt that he liked her, though she dared not be-lieve that he thought of her In any way rave as a pupil among the others. Today as she sat dreaming of him for In perspective he had grown more truly to be her Ideal man her eye caught a leaf growing near by that seemed to recall memories of him. She reached out to pick the little cluster 'of shiny green leaves and found the white berries, once so fa miliar to her, growing on the stem. "Checkerberries!" she cried aloud. "1 have not gathered any for years." She found a number of the tiny plants and gathered them all Into a bunch and sat down again. "1 wonder if he would remember me if If I rhotild send him a speci-men and ask him for a description of it?" she soliloquized. It must have been the romance of the mountains that got Into her blood, for when she descended she was lit-erally walking on air, so lightly did she touch the paths. And in her pock-et were the checkerberries with their pungent fragrance, recoiling those hnppy schooldays. In her soul was a determination to see if these leaves, gathered In this remote but wonderful woods, could spell romance for her. She stopped at the post office on her way hack to Join the others that night and when her friends rcolded her roundly for having taken the lone-ly trail alone, she did not seem to mind. It took only time for a return posi to reach her before Olive hud a letter in a hand once familiar to her. "Hear Olive," it ran, "1 tnste not only tlie wlntergreen ns I bite into tin? little cluster of leaves you have sent me from your mountains. I sense our romaiuv. dear, in their fragrance. I have l.een wondering, day after day, ii you would ever recall me. When you were in school, I dared not let you i know I loved you; it would not haw been fair to you. I wanted you to se. the world, know other men, before j asking you to join your beautiful young life to my old. moth-eaten- , cob v.el.by existence. I'.ut this little cluster of leaves brings you back s.i ' poignantly to my life that I must tell ( you of my love. Have you remein bored? Io you care? May I come and tell you?" There was more, but Olive could read It w dillieulty. Her heart w. - full to overflowing. The seven v during which she had been out of presence had only made him m ' dear, and yet she had feared that had forgotten her. Now to km that she was all the world ti. him w:i almost more than she could unilvr stand. f When she wrote to hitn again P was to tell him where lie might- llmi her on her return to town, Slie wore a little clus'er of checker berries on ber coat and be pulled a pressed leaf from his pocket when they met THE FEATHERHEADS Felix Gives In J I FHAltt COT TOWf FEUX- - Y AWYAA. J lAJ'1 Y ABOJT MY NEEDING A sill 3MM3 To TvJCOvJ pll A1MVAA J j RV f HAlG-CUT- - A BRK3UT Tu7 I I, MM HfcO A BOUE tCi- - V ' I 1 AMD FCCSH ElBBOM &i MfrV U P V SOPPQrfcO LOOK, d I V HAT WILU FV ME UfV fit OH M FCATriEC-- ffwrju2r " I SAVE ME FROM HfAD" MDO ICCK. r1 OGGY. . i GOlUG TOTHEy I THAT DOGGV TUiS jgyjv SW JfABC0- - VOOVOS S- - O Wwfrn NiripwPnlon ff alXj&fcT I TYII II 111 ' L 'S Autot in New Zealand New Zeitlnnd. one of the richest countries In the world, Is exeeded only by the Onlted States and fun-adi- i In the number of automobiles owned per capita, one care fot every eleven Inhahltnnts. Sales are depen-dent upon the financial condition of pastoral Industries. Most of the curs and trueks bought are American made. j . The Real Thing Prospective Purchaser is that a genuine English bulldog? Dealer Why, say, that (log ae-- ) tually drops an "h" every time he barUs. Boston Transcript. j Too Dad Bnldhended Man-"til- ve me a shntn poo." Barber "S.irry, but I'm just out of finlnl soap sir." FINNEY OF THE FORCE Beware the Dorg V JWA SOftPRlSfDAT ) iS.i ( BV TuE SEAT OP jjjj'A' Ayi A r;Jp Western Newspaper L niong ' t,aYteJ Wel'h your words and the conver-sation becomes like a minuet Instead of the fanso. |