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Show THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH . j' Smart, Flattering Dresses I becoming clothes. signs from th.Bar planned, easy-to-n- j Interesting and excW. for little childre Junior age; send patterns for the jj afternoon dresses fa particular young W0Qt trons and other patten cial occasions areiH In the Barbara Bell P Send 15 cents today fo, Send your order to? Circle Pattern Dew' Montgomery Ave., & co, Calif. Price of R cents (in coins) each. C Bell Syndicate- .- IVTRS. DICK EVANS has come to town and brought Ann and Eddie LeRoy with her. She lives in Palm Beach in the wintertime and, of course, knows all about style. That's why she wears this directorie type frock that is both new and figure flattering. In the floral print she has chosen she is perfectly gowned for the parties that will be given for her in the home town. The kiddies are wear-ing the simple styles appropriate to childhood and therein their smartness lies. Auntie Rose Sews Too. Little Ann is asking Auntie Rose if she makes her clothes too. "Sure enough, dear," comes the reply. "I made this percale for mornings and have a beauty in yellow crepe cut from the same pattern to wear to the Bid-or-- Bi meetings." "I'll bet you can sew fast, too, the way Mother does. It only took her two mornings to make Ed-die's suit and my dress. Won't you help me with my doll clothes now?" "Indeed I will, Ann, and then we will have some of those oat-meal cookies you like for lunch." The Patterns. Pattern 1272 is available in sizes 14 to 20 (32 to 42 bust). Size 16 re-quires 4 yards of 39 inch ma-terial and 2 yards of ribbon for tie belt. Pattern 1275 is for sizes 6 months to 4 years. Size 1 requires, 1 yards of 32 inch material. Patterns 1403 comes in sizes 2, 4, and 6 years. Size 4 requires Vi yards of 36 inch material. Pattern 1212 is designed in sizes 34 to 48. Size 36 requires 5 yards of 35 inch material plus V3 yard contrasting for the collar. Send for the Barbara Bell Spring and Summer Pattern Book. Make yourself attractive, practical and NO 5. h by u: fUn F fO7717 1YIELVIN PURVIS FORMER) I P UL G-M- AN FORMS NEW COK U ULrULyULJO OF SECRET OPERATORS! INVITES ALL BOYS AND GIRLS TO JOIN HIS f NEW LAW-AND-ORD-ER PATROL I MELVIN PURVIS, former ace G-M- an OPERATOR&Theyhavespecialcodes, who founded the Junior G-M- an passwords, and special equipment. A ' Corps, has formed a great new organ-- Below is a "candid camera" snap-- V ization Melvin Purvis Law-an- d- shot of a squad of Secret Opera- - J Order PatroL Members are SECRET tors who have a special problem . . . jtf ' fLOOK HERE. TEDDY WOW CANYf jfN j ' f V-- J m TELl WHETHEO A CLUE IS (, ' PEAL--O- R A FAKE ONI LEFT TO .'Vt ' 7fiA ' ,S h DECEIVE us' ? VN. M0!;'l VHM. FALSE CIUEIW' MY j&W V --Al T7l JLi OFTEN TtMOTHIPEBSOK - V- - JKi THIS LETTER MSTSYTtl 7 Jmf.ltt ti V TV ' ABOUT AN EXPERIENCE Of lTto- -S Njv V'V ' Z . YaKSsb. ' OWN... AND WHILE lW OOW i OV, I GEE. THAT'S RIGHT. .MAYQEl V ' IT. HOW A30UT AUOWlOff J jft"" ,., WE OUGHT TO WRITE TO LV, - J 0IT TOAfTIII ?T I J AND ASK "W'M (T g""--1 f 4 jjn Six ttembersofKliiitsleyCoIton'iSqntd of Secret Opef. 1 7 fimftmlmBB. Y ton. Flushing, long Island. Left to righcKingsIerColtoo purw! A (Hed Secret Open tor), John Appleby. Edmond HwketL J, --V J 1 V-- yri'JK- - Olcott Colton. Stanley fieldi nd Teddy Bruce. t 'l.SyUml. x'- - luuSEEZSESESSimSZ jp r- - 1 wu InTestisadns bank robbery..." I well. wta. this ii themthesToveT ES32S-- I INTERESTING.. .IS WERE PROBABLY LEFT TO YOUALLWWrfl1 ytDc.nc,u.,n- - I THIS MAN MULLINS THROW US OFF THE TRAIL! HAS EVERY ONI A CO' Avjams. our cashier, f I didn't oo rr! ' m. "'HMKl-- ? thereIs a faint trace of oiagra?ikme' FORGOT TO TAKE AWAY SOMEQOOY MUST HAVE 'MTZS CIGARETTE STAIN ON THE I GOT TO AAAKET WITH HIM--W- E FOUND STOLEN THOSE GLOVfs! NLT 1 ( tCFT GLOVt. I HAVE A mSs QUIETLY" 9 THEM RIGHT BY THE rJJ H HUNCH... LEFTY LOUIE THE 1 CHANCERS -- WE 2 TANCSAFEaiAOtt Jf t v--s LIKE THAT ABOUND. ! ,d Lma 1 Emi "My .ides took np their potia'on corerias erery jf.viii" . ;, --ri . - exit of the buildin. Two men and I alipp T.. '.1? CENEBAll SS Qniedy into the building, and..." all OPERATORS know... KiV vStr-- I , , WHEN A CLUE'S TOO SIMPLE ffl lm CAUGHT WITH THE GOODS. EH, LEFT Y 1 gJl Uf' USUALLY FALSE! NOW HOW ABOUT fi u.iwiMmiOVIS'B ..trtHS ,A1 LOUIE .' THE GLOVES YOU PLANTED BY J MORE OST TOA.TH..X V-- -- ,?rpj THE VAULT ALMOST HUNG THAT CRIME tejC . PAUL AND JOAN.'-y- ') hi Iffl ON MULLINS- - OUT THE STAIN ON THE " 'mrA T V LEFT GLOVE POINTED AT YOU, A LEFT- - it &J " 1. Polished .old brooM. 1 HANDED MAN ALWAYS HOLDS HIS T-?- , ' MB , fmh. Sent FREE. v Wjgj S Cigarette in HBjrayrft f--i J CM-- - J fW.?,3?'? Secret Operatori 'FXltfJ hand! X2E9 lly J; fhFrt PostToastieibox-toPi- . JtV! melvin pSSvIsTI fco?5'1001 THtrr,,Vil PRIZES MANY OTHER SHOWN SWELL fjj i!irM,SOU'-DN-TATRK- THE FINEST THING M?ti flmktTO FOOL 1m! V UTHtRE IS FOR aWAKFASTty , r COMf ON BOYS AMD Cl' TRFAT! 1 0E A SECRET OPtR1 A REAL BREAKFAST w MY Mtw uw.A,D.otD(, Million, toto...forPoBtToarttesaMiifi H Post Toastle- - ZZSZTZZ Clll secret operator? .ook the tender hearts of the corn, where most of containing srccut in- - SSl the flavor is stored. And these jolden-brow- n struct,oni...also naum FT flakes are toasted -- rTVl or all my wonderful wt f2t doubte-crls- p to keep , r" ' tmisi ton send mi the i p!' their crunchy good-- lir-h- t couro" BtLOW' 1 f i? ness longer In milk or llMB tMI tQAJTIU fACMC- I- I cream. Get a package f kg tea act now, J I'CS; r&rnBzkes p by General Foods. K I t7,I..,MCreek, W j ASK TOR POST T0ASTIIS w- ' I encloie 2 Port Toasrie packa(te-to- Pfe K i IN HOTELS. RESTAURANTS -- fSWH lfW&o1 AND DINING CARS IjZU0 T0VS ! Nne St or R. F. V ON EVERY I A Memorial Forest in North Carolina I ! Honors the Soldier-Poe- t Who Wrote "Trees" fiHLA I A tree whose hungry mouth Is pressed UMhV JtfiiK j jlf;ffW;'MVl! fiWrl Against the earth', sweet flowing breast; f Ik I , J J Lkt W kkEinlMMi And hit. her leafy .rm. to prar. fMkMjf'J f Mi M it,; flPnUlmU M A tree that may In Summer wear fj I J I&fffJ W Ww i'flH? A nest oi robins in her hair, f f JJfl f ffiXt fj V$ ; f 1 J I ft S& Upon whose bosom .now has lain; II I $ W 1 1' J t 'j frfifif: N&f jMtt? Who Intimate!, live, with rain. B j .! J tM f i i'tfi ( ii-- J Poems are made by fool, like me. j pr M III te--- tsr- JMlmmwi . . mv MffflifMOIPwn Iffit : wiMi W iff 4 J III flS'twJ ra.!i; ; li 1 VfmmuM to By ELMO SCOTT WATSON HAS been reprinted in ITnewspapers and other . publications hundreds of times. It has been set to music and you've probably heard it sung as a solo or played on some musical instrument hundreds yes, thousands of times. And, as the time for the celebration of Arbor day ap-proaches, you will be hearing it again and again. For, of all the poems ever written on this subject, it is probably the best known and best loved. It is Joyce' Kilmer's "Trees." If Joyce Kilmer had never done anything. else but write that one poem his fame would be secure. But because he did write it, he has recently been honored with a memorial that is unique. Down in Graham county, North Carolina, in the heart of the Nan-taha- la national forest, there is a tract of 3,840 acres of one of the most beautiful remnants of our nation's virgin forests. Within its confines are magnificent ex-amples of more than 100 species of trees native to that region. Since last summer visitors to that tract have found there a plaque which reads: JOYCE KILMER MEMORIAL FOREST Dedicated July 30, 1936. Joyce Kilmer, 165th Infantry, Rainbow Division, soldier and poet, author of "Trees," was born in New Brunswick, N. J. December 6, 1K86; killed in ac-tion in France July 30, 1918. This memorial was initiated by Bozeman Bulger Post, Vet-erans of Foreign Wars, and was selected by the United States Forest Service. Twenty years ago Joyce Kil-mer was a young writer on the Sunday staff of the New York Times. He had attended Rutgers college and Columbia university and had met and fallen in love Virgin timber io the Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest, Nantahala National Forest, North Carolina. (Photograph, courtesy United States Forest Service.) fantry at Camp Mills, Long Is-land, and he was senior regiment-al statistician when his outfit sailed for France in October, 1917. It was a job which would keep him close to regimental headquarters what the army called a "soft berth." It was ex-actly for that reason that Kilmer was dissatisfied. He wanted to be in the front lines where there was action and his insistence led to his transfer to the regimental intelligence staff. As sergeant on the intelligence staff he displayed the same fidel- - ity and courage that he had shown as a newspaper man. On July 30, 1918, that fidelity and courage took him into the scarred and shattered timber which they still call the Wood of the Burned Bridge. His outfit was trying to murmuring pines, and the hem-locks'. As his tree 'lifts her leafy arms to pray,' the poem moves in perfect cadence inspired by the same reverent spirit as Bry-ant's stately 'The groves were God's first temples,' where 'in the darkling wood amidst the cool and silence, man first 'knelt down and offered to the Mightiest solemn thanks and supplication.' "It is fitting that a monument to Joyce Kilmer should take this Wordsworthian form of A broth-erhood of venerable trees,' such as distinguishes the area which we dedicate today. This monu-ment is not needed to perpetuate the memory of Joyce Kilmer. Through his poem his name has become immortal and his mem-ory shall abide on earth as long as the English lanpuapp is n liv. his now-famo- us "Trees", which was written for his friend, Mrs. Henry Mills Alden, wife of the venerable editor of Harper's Magazine. It was published in book form under the title of "Trees, and Other Poems," in 1915. Other poems were dedicated to his friend and "boss," Alden March, Sunday editor of the Times. On that April day in 1917 when the news of the sinking of the Lusitania was flashed across the Atlantic, March called Kil-mer to him and said that he want-ed a poem to be used as a page feature in the Sunday Magazine. At first Kilmer demurred, saying that he could not write anything good enough for such a subject, nor for such prominence. But March insisted and the with Ahne Murray of Norfolk, Va., who shared his interest in poetry. They were married in June, 1908, and in that year he became instructor in Latin in the Morristown (N. J.) high school. The next year he became edito-rial assistant on the Standard Dictionary where he served for three years. During this time Kilmer won considerable recognition as a poet and was a regular contribu-tor to the Literary Digest, Book News Monthly and other literary periodicals. His first book of poems, "The Summer of Love," appeared in 1911 and the next year he became literary editor of the Churchman. For some time he had been a contributor of book reviews to the New York Times and in 1913 he joined the staff ing speech. It is established pri-marily to show to all the world our nation's appreciation of one whose memory has become a priceless heritage of its people. A Sylvan Cathedral. "Such appreciation is best ex-pressed in the form which he, living, loved most no useless shaft of insentient stone; no shrine of personal glorification instead we have this vast sylvan cathedral with the incomparable beauty of its changing lights and shadows in all . their varying moods. Surely it would be his wish that it might serve the cit-izenship of the nation for which he died. locate enemy machine gun nests. Not more than 30 feet away from Kilmer was Maj. William J. ("Wild Bill") Donovan, who later commanded the 165th. When it came time for them to move forward, Donovan called to Kilmer. There was no response. Donovan looked closer and saw Kilmer huddled on the ground. A sniper's bullet had stilled for-ever the voice of the man who had sung of "Trees." They buried Joyce Kilmer among the war-blaste- d trees of Bois Colas the kind of trees which were far different from those he had in mind when he wrote the poem that has been his memorial for nearly two dec-ades. But now he has another memorial which will, literally and figuratively, "keep his memory green." If 'L"f$&i&lfZ'i S? T GA. V OA" yDAHLONEGA cARTEASVIUe f t3 LOCATION OP X J JOYCE KILMER MEMORIAL FOREST j ESTABLISHED IN 1930 ATLANTA IN THE Prp.redbyOS.r.ns NANTAHALA NATIONAL FOREST Rpgiort flj Atlanta 6. ' NORTH CAROLINA "Therefore, that this wish, though unexpressed, may be ful-filled, and to the end that this mon-ument may serve our nation best, the Forest Service of the De-partment of Agriculture herewith reserves it as a primitive area, dedicates it to the spirit of Joyce Kilmer, and to the use of the people of the United States for their enjoyment, instruction, and inspiration until time shall be no more. "Here, in these solemn shades, generation after generation of our people, imbued with reverent love for unspoiled Nature's charm, shall come to sacred ground, exempt from common use, and, with Shakespeare of old, find 'tongues in trees, books in running brooks, sermons in stones, and good in everything'." "I have learned with much in-terest of plans for the dedication of the Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest," wrote President Roose-velt in a letter which was read at the dedication. "It is particular-ly fitting that a poet who will al-ways be remembered for the tribute he embodied in 'Trees' should find this living monument. Thus his beloved memory is for-ever honored and one of nature's masterpieces is set aside to be preserved for the enjoyment of generations yet unborn." Western Newspaper Union. It is the memorial forest in North Carolina which was dedi-cated last summer with cere-monies at which the speakers in-cluded Joseph C. Kircher, south-ern regional forester of the Unit-ed States Forest Service; Paul A. Williams, chairman of the Kilmer Memorial committee; Charles McDonald Puckette of the New York Times; Rev. John B. Kelly, chaplain, and Lieut. John Mc-Clo- y, U. S. N., commander, of the Bozeman Bulger post of the Vet-erans of Foreign Wars; and E. A. Sherman, assistant chief of the United States Forest Service, who delivered the dedication address. In it he said: "The Forest Service rejoices at this opportunity to with the Veterans of Foreign Wais in paying tribute to the memory of Joyce Kilmer. We may justly claim him as belong-ing to the veterans and foresters alike. On the field of combat he made the supreme sacrifice as a patriot; in 'Trees' he ha3 be-queathed to humanity one of its rarest gems of human, ex-pression. It seems destined to rank with Longfellow's apostro-phe to the 'forest primeval, the next morning Kilmer apologetic-ally laid on his desk the manu-script of the poem "The White Ships and the Red." It was a brilliantly imaginative poem which was destined to be heard around the world and to stir the feelings of men in every land. In it Kilmer envisioned the wreck of the Lusitania, red from the horror of the deed, going down to the bottom of the ocean, there to join the ghosts of those which had been sunk by storm, ship- wreck and iceberg. But Kilmer did not limit his indignation against those respon- sible for sinking the Lusitania to writing poems. On April 23, 1917, just 17 days after- - the United' States entered the World war, he left the Times and enlisted as a private in the Seventh regiment of the New York national guard. A Front Line Fighter. Shortly before the regiment left for Spartanburg, S. C, Kilmer was transferred to the 165th in- - cf that newspaper and began writing news stories, interviews and feature articles. An Heroic Reporter Indicative of the heroic stuff in him was an incident during this period of his career. He had tried to board a train to New York and was thrown off and seriously hurt. In the hospital the doctor told him that he must be put un-der an anesthetic so that his broken bones might be set. "But I have a Sunday story to write," he said. "I've got it all in my head and the editor needs it. Wait until I do it." So he sent for his secretary to come out from New York and dictated the story before he was wheeled in to the operating room. Although highly praised by his fel-low newspaper workers for his grit, Kilmer made light of both the accident and the incident. During his career as a reporter and feature writer Kilmer con-- turned his poetic work, including Latet aneui k v snake lurks la .Nun blanche (ft night. kfif generil&h Vient de paraltr. Malad e du sickness. PayM Mieux vaut (F.) Better late iS MSeg.,ItU(Bt Pollsson. (p i Femme couvent rled woman. ' " |