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Show THE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH Thursday. May 17, 1928 1 Flyers Pay Tribute to America's War Dead fl rirr---r : 1 HOE fY" " - t""" "n j a& or ; I6T W wreath at the base of the Eternal Light n Jork M IH Baron Von Iluenefeld of the Bremen crew placing a With him are Captain Koehl and Major to Americans who died in the World war. I UP MUSCLES I 1 By J. J. TOEDT I WiUon At.bu. "Y," Chicago. I noes. Position Lying on back, feet flexed with heels near seat Arms folded across chest. Twenty fourth Exercise Raise body up forming a bridge, resting on shoulders or top of head and feet Lying on back, arms folded across chest, knees bent with heels close to your seat You have seen pictures of wrestlers doing the bridge with their bodies raised off the mat and support-ed by the feet and head. This is the exercise: You are lying on your back, arms folded across chest feet close to your seat now push your body up so that It rests on your up-per back, and your lower back form-ing a perfect arch. Now on each attempt to raise up, try to go upward and backward a little farther until you are resting on top of your head, your feet on the floor helping In forming the perfect bridge. Now rest a little while, then take your bath and rub-dow- n with a coarse towel, or Just a rub-dow- n will do. You can also add the paddling of the mus-cles and kneading and massaging of the fleshy and fatty parts. ""T&PVt-un"- ' Position Lying on back, handa resting under legs; legs raised, neela together. Twenty-flft- h Exercise Lean lega over to left and right swinging like a pendulum. Place hands under legs, arms straight, Now raise legs and hold them there. Do not raise the back. Now lean both legs over toward the left as far as you can without falling over, then lean to the right Continue this, like the swinging of a pendulum, left and right Sixteen or more counts. Position Same as Exercise XXV, with exception of starting with legs down. Twenty-sixt- h Exercise Raise legs a few inches from floor, then circle to right over bead to left, and to start-ing position. Opposite direction. This exercise is one of the best for abdominal flabbiness. Your starting position is the same as Eierclse XXV, (lying on your back, legs down). The exercise Is to raise both legs a few Inches off the floor, then proceed to circle toward your right and back-ward toward your face and thf the left and arriving at the starting point Continue this several times, trying to perform as large a circle as possible with your toes. NoW, go to the op-posite direction. Do not overdo this the first time you try It Position Same as Exercise XXV. Twenty-sevent- h Exercise As yoo raise body, also raise legs; reach for-war- d beyond legs with hands. This Is perhaps the most difficult abdominal exercise and yet safe enough for most anyone to try. You may not succeed In getting this the first few trials, but practice will give you control. Your position l the game as last exercise, with arms rest-ing alongside of body. Now. here Is the stunt. As you raise your body to-ward a sitting position, you also raise your legs. Your position when you complete the upward raising of body and legs should be something like a Jack knife closed up. Position Resting on shoulders, hands under hips, elbows resting on floor and close together, legs extend-ed high. (Arms act as a prop to hold body In this upside-dow- n position.) Twenty-eight- h Exercise Manipu-late legs as If you were running a large-geare- d bicycle upside down. you can get plenty of fun out of this. Imagine you are riding a bicycle upside down and maneuver your legs just as if you were riding a large- - geared bicycle, O'DONNELL & CO. Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon Utah Phone 17 Wasatch 6461 Salt Lake Phone WtatYeroYairt How Yoa Want It Whea You Wnt ft iflT For aaytking io the V Km of pnntMt toam Ji to us m ws'l guar Mte yon ubafaatory work at prices that an riffat I jl.. Bingham Stage line Bingham Depot Main and Ca'rr Fork Phone 41 , SCHEDULE Cars leave Bingham at -- 8, 9 and 11 a.m. 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m. Salt Lake City Office Semloh Hotel 107 E. 2nd South Phone Was. 1069 SCHEDULE Cars leave Salt Lake City at . 7, 9 and 11 a.m. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 p.m. FARES One wav ..$1.50 Round Trip $2.50 P(rintin)G Get - !: Your JW ! : From i- :- I Granite I; Furniture Co. ;; Isis Theatre Building V, II Bingham Canyon , j; 11 yydvertisers I will find this I paper an excellent j L j' medium in which 11. to display their j bargains and make II theirwants known I ji Jl ll i! M. II l! Ii II II J Don t Overlook T that subscription. If you , arc la arrears remember D that wt can always find goo4 ate lor j the MONEY Texas Farmer Hunting g Rabbits, Bags Lioness 5 S Dallas, Texas. Cart Payton, 5 g a farmer of near Rowlett, Tex- - fi 5 as, was rabbit hunting and g g bagged a 7 foot lioness. The S beast was shipped by express by g g the Dallas municipal too to Iu- - g 5 dependence, Mo. It escaped g g from Its cage and Jumped from fi g the enr between Dallas and g g Greenville. g g Joe Uurkhart, a farmer, saw g 5 a big animal under a. culvert 5 g Bhortly after daybreak when he g 5 went to repair a fence. He g g called Payton who was hunting g 6 nearby. The lioness Jumped g from cover and Payton emptied X his pump shotgun, killing her. g g They hurried to Rowlett and 5 g told of the "bag." Until then g g they had not known of the es- - g g rape of the lioness rora an ex- - 2 5 press car. g DISGUISED AS GIRL, BOY IS LOCKED UP Fooled Policemen, Matrons and His Cellmates. New York. If you ask the pohce, probation officers, matrons of Jeffer- - son Market Women s prison and others connected with that institution how It came about, they will undoubtedly tell you It was because girls' aud boys' haircuts these days are so much alike. Anyhow, for three days a cell in the prison held one who was accepted as Jenetta Sheridan, sixteen-year-ol- d runaway from Montreal. Jenetta had been found In a basement apartment with three men. Detectives dropped In and took the men away on a robbery charge. They didn't quite believe Jenetta's story that she didn't know her companions and merely lived at the same address "with another girl." So they took her to Jefferson Market prison as a way-ward minor. Jenetta was tastefully garbed In a short, high collared black sutln dress, green coat, red turban, brown gloves, sheer white stockings, and high heeled satin punip. This costume, it de-veloped later, was Intended as a mas-querade representing "Peaches" Browning. Jenetta had confided to a probation officer that her mother did not live In Montreal at all, but in Brooklyn, so the mother. Mrs. Lyde Gude, was sum-moned to court. When Jenetta's case was called, Mrs. Gude took a long look at the un-familiar figure and exclaimed: "I have no daughter. That's my son !" Magistrate McQuade was so sur-prised he adjourned court then and there. He took Jenetta, who stood revealed as Edward Schlessinger, eigni-ee- Mrs. Gude, and the probation officer Into his chambers. After satis-fying himself the prisoner was a boy he suspended sentence. The youth and his friend, Edward Walters, went to a masquerade In Harlem as "Peaches" and "Daddy," according to the story he told. They won second prize with the costumes, he' said. Later Walters disappeared, and Ed-ward went to the other lad's home, only to find that his clothes had disappeared, too. So he returned to Harlem and got a Job as hostess In the Lulu Belle nfgiit club, he asserted. Several hours later, growing friend-ly with three men, he told them his predicament and they took hlra home to the basement apartment on West One Hundred Twenty-thir- d street. Not only did the detectives not ques-tion his sex, according to Edward, former!; Jenetta, but the prison ma-trons, his cellmate, the prison physi-cians, and the probation officers mis-took him for the girl he said he was. After sentence hnd been suspended, Edward left court with his mother, still disguised as "Peaches." I New Joan of Arc Has Visions of the Virgin J.ll'l ' ". ""-tM- llll Remarkable scenes are taking place on a farm at Pon; ;Rjehj J ffi ri.'lS' celle Georges, becomes transfixed dully in nra jrer and. Jn?Z on been roped off, 10 L h MarCe,le U SeeD ,1 Al.lltm n nnndlp - PRESENTED AT COURT I Miss Marion Dixon, society girl of Chicago, who was among the Ameri-can I women presented the Court of St James the other day. Refugees From Bulgarian Quake S: VliiU , ' ' 38 Photcruph sliows some of the homeless lu the devastated sections of southern Bulgaria resting In the streets of Pliillppopolis, after escaping from the district affected by the series of earthquakes. """ - Finds Spring in Winter of Life " 1 ' .. 'a - Ji: nirniii m iiiii m tMe of life, romance bloomed for Edmund W. Blossom, eighty 2. and I.uana M. Spring, who Is seventy-five- . They were nlfnied at the Los Angeles home of Mr. Blossom, wealthy retired Jeweler auJ Civil ur veteran. I BISHOP ON TRIAL Bl.--ho-p Anton Bust of Copenhagen, who was tried by a commis-fij- n of the Methodist quadrennial gen-piu- l conference at Kansas City on cl.nrgt'S of misuse of mi-io- n funds :id imprudent condtu't. He was found guilty in a Ihiiiisli court oil iieiitenced to Have mwiths' im-i?r,- i, a. nit. Saves a Boy's Life and Gets a Beating Des Moines, Iowa. James Boltz, who saved a boy's life despite the objec-tions of a woman spectator who thought he was giving the boy a beating, received belated thanks re-cently. A piece of popcorn lodged In the windpipe of eleven-year-ol- Max Hodges several days ago while he was riding on a street car. Boltz, who was a passenger, tossed the boy to the floor and applied vigor-ous slaps and artificial respiratory measures, at the same time fighting off the hair-pullin- g and drubbing adminis-tered to him by an infuriated woman who did not understand what was go-ing on. After the ambulance arrived, Bolts disappeared. A City-wid- e search wag carried on by the parents to find hlra and express thanks for saving the child's life. Drowned in Can Plalnvllle, 111. While Mr. and Mrs, Wesley Yo-in- g were working in the garden of treir home near here, their thirteen-month-ol- d baby Ml In a lord can and drowned in 6 inches of water. I : Mourners in White New York. The will of Celeste dc j Longpre Hwksher. cemposer. directed that her funeral le held in th' eve- - ning and that the uiouineis white. J Nugget of Wisdom j Contentment Is not satisfaction. It Is the grateful, faithful, fruitful use of what we have, little or much. |