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Show , f i i THE mTT T CTIN. BINGHAM, UTAH The Bored Are Boring J . People of Outstanding personaiJ tr Are Interested, and Never pi I ing bZT" erybody finds tafiS exception they wiUhl tw are vitally interested '2 I never bored, never ?! are able to give out w& If others because thro'H terest m things and AM them they are coasM in. Their main ZjM certain aliveness, t?. 1 has absolutely no re&l fl being bored. J 0BeU Syndicat- e.- $1 j uvrOUNG people of today," a I mother writes, "seem to re-gard it as a sign of immaturity or weakness to be thrilled with anything. Their idea of so-phistication is to appear bored with everything, the having-done-all-seen-- attitude that finds it very difficult to be impressed with anything. It is most annoying to find that anything you can offer them for a good time seems to be inadequate, that the thrills of your own youth cannot be repeated for them. It seems to me they miss a great deal." I would point out to this mother, 6ays a woman writer of interna-tional note, that naturally we can-not expect that the thrills of our youth will equally impress the young people of this day. So much that came to us gradually as colorful experiences are a part of their daily background. But there is something definitely true in what she says of a pose, of a deliberate care never to seem im-pressed, of a pretense at being bored. It may interest such young people to know that that super-sophistica- te, G. K. Chesterton, said "there are no bores, only people whc are bored." In other words there can be nothing inter-esting about a person who is bored! That takes us right down to a bedrock fact that can be observed if we will note people of outstand- - IN UTAH F AND S" H?S5i !av M'f ' fef ITS TA HOTEL BEN LOMONI Ogden's Finest . . One of Utah's! m 350 Rooms 350 Bilk i $Z00 to $4.00 Delightful Rooms Air CooledCx I") Gr ill Room Coffee I , Spacious Lounye and Lobby j Courteous Service e'. 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Quaker State Oil JL--- 1 Refining Company, Oil Gty, Pennsylvania, h Retail price ...55 per qnartJI lu I WORLD'S BEST COMICS Lighter Side of Life as Depicted by Famous Cartoonists and Humorists Night Latch THE FEATHERHEADS .Jzr. - IzT 1 ip Pstocking ttTr?ms!rKlgm fS-rl- H J"1 Cet To iYee a 1 iSS50 v--v " -- - By C. M. PYNE S'MATTER POP--Of Coure You Can't Always Cure Bow-Leg-s So Quickly I p-- -. "lf T5? - llL J r55'--5 J fTC Vt, fl RcoPTritH 1936. bT Th. B.U gymUcito. Inc.) A Man in Trouble No matter how uncouth a man may be, if his character i3 firm and he faces trouble like a man, your heart warms to him. Innocence, like an icicle, once melted is gone forever. r.lv a newlv met man a chance to show his good qualities before rejecting him as a friend. Great fault of daydreaming about the great achievements one contemplates is that one is likely to go to sleep. Society's Gain Solitude is not to be considered solely from a selfish standpoint. Society may profit much through the frequent individual adoption of it. Cultured people are those who are informed on intellectual val-ues; highbrows are those who are ostentatious of their information. Nice people are people who are polite and pleasant to you; and it is next to impossible to make you believe otherwise. Life is something much bigger than human consciousness. Enjoying You How restful to feel that you have only to sit and look pleasant to make your friend enjoy your presence. Oft a man doesn't wish to be asked, "What do you want for dinner?" He likes to be sur-prisedagreeably, of course. MESCAL IKE By s. l. huntley What Will Muley Think Up Next? foJA pTO YvEAH?T f LETTERS AKjTcAM.ePi&eOlJf ( g2r J ' 5 BOUT OLEVy'Wr CA1E TWA P.SEOMSj'Nl AU-SE- T JTUPF TO twul. DO 1WET- - IT 3ATE5' 'DEA f 1? I VOlTM WOOD-- I HE )l FOUS tOMATvS TM n WCOwmm FER . .V 9l V SCXJN OSS HC3U5E31 luOODPECKEH JpV v A SLEEP wtXEJ?; i Rttfp. 0yrlrh U Hunily.r(l Mai Pat. Ofllct) FINNEY OF THE FORCE .CzSiL DcnngHisBit SH ?S SSl Ol BIM OUT DID fOUEVER H SwS SlX. AuT HORSES H SSSll? "7 r-- ' Al'T -- f5W,M' patrol im the. Jim a boat mouMT wurrSn' fer -- wuw do vou --fo currv JO BUT HAVE WOU LOTS O' 71 A TAYDfeRMiai A RjuR. FOoTD L BEAT 1 , Evep. rode. JvToies r Kr l 7j r sreer?2 J y . J tSlyfeL ADAMSON'S ADVENTURES Subway Syttem By O. JACOBSSON i5e-- CraMiMuM in rMtuw, . Practical Sentiment "Do you always stand up when the band plays "The Star Spangled Banner'?" "Of course," answered Miss Cay-enne. "The old song holds a senti-ment that I cannot resist. I wish thay would play It In passenger busses. It might make standing up seem easier." Of Course! The train was just pulling out when the breathless lad dashed to the ticket window. "Hurry up," be gasped, "gimme a roundtrip ticketl" ' "Where to?" The boy lookec at the ticket man In disgust k herel" be panted, "where didja think 1" Curse of Progress , T . SOME k!fWN6lD P IP KEEP NOO FEOH " "JOCIMG NOUS. BUILDING BLOCKS Br gluyas wiluams B PIAW6 HAPPM.V WrW NEW juwhw u;,uT wwiewHBirA ers bw5 wiwo& wockw& vwm rmocfutf HH oncer tWIRJ AK5 SOFA, feffRtliy piat ch HMsrif, wiw w!- - Ptct. osr BAtAfKE, W" M .JTl; ,7r Trying to Please "Which do you think are more Important, the rights of property or the rights of man?" "Neither are of any conse-quence," replied Mr. Meekton, "compared to the rights of women." |