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Show THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH Mi tzli v J JUST as necessary as pencil and a notebo smart start in school, th; jacket-and-ski- rt duo is that every stude have! Wear it with tailors or sweaters, as a suit; with scarfs, beads or i ets, as a frock. Either sign No. 1233-- B will be stand-by- . It make, and when hom-S- s very little. Flannel, wool crepe, and thin tweed are par 6tyle. It looks especial in pastels or plaid and p binations. With nipped-flare-skirt and a trio ol it's just as becoming as r and useful. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1 (lgned for sizes 8, 10, 12, 11 a: Size 10 requires 2!i'yardjof terial without nap. Send orde SEWING CIRCLE PATTEK 149 New Montgomery San Francisco Enclose 15 cents In coins Pattern No Sia. Name Address THEIUEi m Hi BEmGlHIIll Read These Important ! Quivering; nerves can mkeyocl cranky can make your lift J jealousy, self pity and the Ml Of ten auch nervousnew 3 functional disorders. So take M ( E. Pinkham'a Vegeubla CoWi calm unBtmng nervea and l I "irregularitira." For over M l giving Hnkham'i Compound mt of thousands of grandmother!, J daughters "in time of need. 1 ;y il if ? lorstslondbastlo" j 1000 V 1000 ROOMS :g 4on.p.r.o,$l,,,, i HOTEL ST. FRAt' ov.riooki-- 8 J :;,e UNION SQtt 4c, CREATING (g f 5 TO 0 B j S ndbetwwj'jj les u it create tributea to l ererrone touched bT f y ' whichi.iet.p..I4lfbr; interest o i fr working in the every day of the T- - w I wealth to me "d '' I THE SUNNY SIDE OF LIFE 1 Clean Comics That Will Amuse Both Old and Young j BIG TOP By ED WHEELAN HitJwDTo TAUONGNEA) twe DOS CHASED THe $EEIN HAL'6 'SUDC FORUFEIRE SJ&Pe THE SD&DEMLV... TERRIFIED CWMPANZEi ONTO SKOPJE MAPS A T,PAMTiC iAP FOR it JjilDPeNLV n rr"TtLZir('rwiriJ hippodrome tpack t z ., - i (tar Cy BEATRICE WHITNEY STRAIGHT (Guest conductor for L. L. Stevenson.) I love New York for its beauty: 1 hate it for its brutality. Unlike many New Yorkers, 1 don't think of it as a grand and eliciting place to live. To me, it is a place to come to on a boat through the dawn, when skyscrapers loom through the early mist. Then it is a city of promise. But it is not a place to linger long. It is a city to taste and be o(T to leave across a bridge; stopping, to look back at the re-- ! splendent magnitude of its skyline; listening, to catch its rhythmic, sub-dued roar. New York at a dis-- , tance is wonderful especially at dawn or dusk, the shadowy out-lines of its buildings dotted by lights that blink off and on; its rivers, with their ferryboats, and pleasure ships, and wharfs, and sound, and smoke; its bridges, the most beau-tiful in the world, swinging so eager-ly and so gracefully onto the island, approached by a lacework of park-ways. Although born here, I do not, like most native New Yorkers, have a composite picture of the city that merges the impressions of various ages. I left here when I was 11 and I have a picture of the city in which my childhood was spent. Later, I came back for a year; uuu u v v u s a t. t l v a t& w which I was a busy and serious young student. Away again, and now back to live outside of the city; and I have pictures of a New York to which I dash on hurried visits and for rushed appointments. Usu-ally, they are in connection with the Chekhov Theater studio at Ridge-fiel- d, Conn., where I live and work as assistant director, as a teacher of talented young drama students, as an actress; the most thrilling and, to me, the most important experi-ence of my life. This New York offers no leisure hours to wander as one pleases. New York can become, threatens to become, a horror until one stumbles upon some wonderful per-son, some funny little shop of a specialist in wigs, or costumes, or shoes, or some of the many things needed for stage productions may-be a secondhand shop full of mar-velous things, hard to tear one's self away from; an auction sale; a quaint shop in Chinatown or on the Bowery. Except on Sundays. Then it's a different New York. New York on Sunday or a holiday is a city of great dignity, of peace, calm and une can walk instead of run. One can choose what one will do, and do it slowly. One can enjoy the moments instead of longing for the end. In the winter, though, New York at its best. The lights are bril- - liant in the cold. The keen air Is fresh and clean. Plays, music, movement-y- es, the winter is its time. And the early spring. In Central Park, the tulip trees; the many nurses and the children; the dogs and their funny masters, so incon-gruous; foreign old men with their ny toy boats on the round pond in rfei,P0,rk,,.their Pride in the Wully fashioned little ships that col-- Jdeor pass so gracefully in the i dri.ye along the Hudsn river " hf rf over island, looking the busy Jersey shore and brSs!0Vdy 83 the view from the . P'ctme that lingers from my child-Jood-- a city that held the magic of waies at the opera; red and yellow hirl,glgs that whistled jn an who so.d the coloTed'ba,: Sgth:rmy'Serkat-a- nd ac1 :yS;helheir ,S1 : People SeT": ViUage: restaurant of a country each night, sit- - miC 8nd after elevated looking into Cwins"5 "eing UVCd j tmges my Jove wilh that 'BeU Syndicate-W- NU Service.! LALA PALOOZA Maybe One Doctor hn't Enough By RUBE GOLDBERG """if oh mister this is C Hl8k f IS THERE A DAE0 5 HSE j S'MATTER POP He Will Have to Ak a Riding Master By C. M. PAYNE - Bll 8jrnillcu. WNU Sarvtc MESCAL JjE Br s. l huntley A Sure-Fir- e Deal if We Ever Saw One j fCeOES A DADGUMMEDurN ,0rr BUT WHAT s 7"" J' IP TMEyN MoTQt ' " a is Dispel the Sbadov As the morning sun bn :e darkness from the world, ;k today to brush aside the from some unhappy Stevenson. ' POP Allies' Target By J. MILLAR WATT GOSH? r NEARLY GOT ( j '. I I ' 1 SMOT DOWN .' VY&LL - I TOLD YOU NOT E T0 PUT THAT "L" ON ER&'' ' ' fd' " Inc. 'WNU Setvif FATHER GETS SQUELCHED "Did you tell your teacher that I helped you with your Latin last night?" "Yes. dad." "What did he say?" "Said he wouldn't punish me this time as it would be a shame to make me suffer for your ignorance." Proper Spirit Magistrate You've committed six burglaries in a week. Prisoner That's right If every one worked as hard as I do we'd be on the road to prosperity. THE SPORTING THING ARMSTRONG I Hr" "H went and loit nil new silk trunkj.' ' ' J 1 BATH TOY By CLUYAS WILLIAMS MS RWK65 KWTRS COMPU1X SttHOSfUL WA. WCK DM BEEH RtWRP HH A mK uVf Careful, Mister Bored Victim So you didn't land him then? Angler You haven't been listen-ing to me, I only had a fishing rod. not a crane. Not Bigr Enough Fair Traveler Why do you punch that hole in my ticket? Station Official So you can pass through. k 1uts Wife Oven |