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Show THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH L'ehter NtW Bllt b ' weigh from iH mart ll previous models tar" 1 I i Ja auaem it f n r - PETER TELLS JOHNN Y CHICK ALL THE NEWS UAY H0W thin you are!" ,x" W claimed Peter Rabbit, as he and Johnny Chuck sat on the latter's doorstep In the far corner of the Old Orchard and watched Redtail the Hawk sailing up in the blue, blue sky over the Green Forest. "What did you expect?" grunted Johnny Chuck. "Did you expect me to be fat after sleeping all winter with nothing to eat?" "No," replied Peter. "But you were so dreadfully fat the last time I saw you, that you looked as If a long breath would burst your coat right open, and now your coat looks as if you might feel lost inside of it I suppose it's very nice to sleep all winter, but think of all you have missed." "Br-r-r-- r. I haven't missed much If it has been any colder than it is this morning," replied Johnny Chuck with a shiver. Peter's eyes opened wide. "You don't call this cold, do you?" he ex-claimed. "Why, bless your heart, this is warm. It isn't winter any longer, for sweet Mistress Spring is here. If you call this cold, I wonder TCm. Cm. "My, how thin you are!" ex-claimed Peter Rabbit. what you would call real winter weather?" "If it was any colder than this, I'm glad I slept through it," retort-ed Johnny. "Has anything happened since I went to bed last fall?" "Has anything happened!" Peter exclaimed. "Why, something hap-pens every day in winter just as in summer. So many things have hap-pened that if I should try to tell you all it would take me a week. The most astonishing thing was the way Farmer Brown's Boy caught Reddy Fox." Johnny Chuck's face brightened up right away. "You don't say sol You don't mean to tell me that Red-dy Fox actually was caught!" he cried. Peter nodded. "I certainly do," said he. "That's good news, Peter," re-plied Johnny. "Either Reddy Fox must have grown stupid, or Farmer Brown's Boy must be very smart." Peter's eyes twinkled and twin-- i kled as Johnny Chuck talked. "Yes," said he, "Reddy was caught, and Mrs. Peter and I saw him caught and carried off by Farmer Brown's Boy. As nearly as we could make out, Reddy was frightened to death. The last we saw of him, he hung stiff and still over the shoulder of Farmer Brown's Boy. Poor Reddyl It did seem too bad." Peter paused and then he began to chuckle. "What are you laughing about?" demanded Johnny Chuck. "I was thinking of the way Reddy celebrated that night with a feast on one of Farmer Brown's chickens," replied Peter. Johnny Chuck's face fell. "What's that?" he cried so sharply that Peter laughed right out. "I said that Reddy celebrated that night with a feast on one of Farmer Brown's chickens," repeated Peter. "But I thought you said that Red-dy was dead!" cried Johnny. "I didn't say anything of the kind," retorted Peter. "I said that he was caught." Then he told John- - ny the whole story. When he had finished, Johnny Chuck sighed, "I thought," said he, "that I should have one less worry this sum-- : mer, but if Reddy Fox was as smart as all that, I guess I shall have to keep a sharper eye on him than ver. But I'm rather glad, after all, that Reddy wasn't killed. It wouldn't seem quite the same without him about. Now, tell me the rest of the news." So Peter told him how Mrs. Grouse was caught in a snare and set free again, and all about the hard time and everything else he could think of. When he could think of nothing more, he bade Johnny good-b- y and started for the Green Forest to see if any of the other sleepers were awake, while Johnny hustled around to try to find a bite to eat. Softly Draped Handbags Tuned to Stunning Fall, Winter Costumes By CHERIE NICHOLAS draping, as you see. The supple goatskin that fashions this bag It most attractive not only to the eye but to the touch. The mock tor-toise that makes such a good-lookin- g trim Is outstanding In the news lC .R j when It comes to adding the touch that tells to this season's smartftft handbags. Sleek, smooth, quality-kin- d broad-cloth, the fabric that fraternizes with most every costume makes the good-lookin- g bag to the right. In this instance, the designer takes the ever-popula- r underarm handle bag and artfully drapes a pleated flange through a graceful span of mock tor-toise. Speaking In general of what's what in new handbag fashions, the most exciting Innovation in many a season is the advent of little bulb-ous pouch bags done in silhouettes. These pouch bags certainly have cunning ways and they are staging a display of breath- - taking novelty. Made of practical rKSIGNERS are on the qui viv this season to create handsome handbags that shall measure up to the fashion glory and the new ele-gance of the stunning costumes which go to make up the fall and winter style picture. In assembling your fall-wint-wardrobe, keep in mind that this year your costume will be only as smart as the handbag you carry with it. That's how important hand-bags really are. You will have no trouble in finding as handsome hand-bags and as versatile as ever fancy might picture. Be sure to make your selection with meticulous care, for this year's handbags make a de-cided departure from the stereo-typed styles of yore. The three voguish Jenny handbags shown In the illustration are typical broadcloth, faille and various wear-able media, they carry on in a modest way by day. When it comes to the dressy cocktail party and gala after-flv- e occasion, however, the lit-tle pouch bag puts on a spectacu-lar display that fairly bubbles over with all the glitter and intriguing fussiness imagination can devise. Just now it's the whimsical pouch bag of black satin that holds forth in the fashion spotlight. Women are buying these bags to go with the satin hat and with the n gown that is so style-importa- this fall. These black satin bags are perfect with afternoon and evening clothes The party bags fairly scintillate with the glitter of sequins or tiny steel or jet beads. Most of the box bags have straps to sling over the arm. The newsiest news of all Is the little shoulder strap bags that become a decorative part of the frock when dancing. Released by Western Newspaper Union. of the new movement toward the feminine look, achieved through soft draping. These bags are styled as American women prefer them, with elegance and stark clean lines, and in fabrics that mean fashion and wearability. With your perfect dawn-to-dus- k trotteur, the bag to the left will be ideal. It is spiced with the new soft look via uniquely quilted and gath-ered supple goatskin. You'll take real pleasure in thus bag because it is so roomily built to take care of your feminine possessions, and it sure is a winner in "looks." Simple enough for tailored cas-uals, feminine enough for all your frills is the handbag centered above. It tells you that the under-arm bag has lost its strictly tailored look, has been lifted out of it this season with soft pleats and deft Iron Across Lengtn Wl.en ironing, press with the length rather than across the width of fabric wherever possible. But If a skirt, slip or nightgown is cut on the bias, then iron on a slant, along the grain or straight of the materi-al. This will prevent the stretching and sagging which mokes hems un-even JaP ivi. I Baseball ,smoree than ai.v where elu "4I ceptionaliy'wet Z Pauy due to a J 1 Keeps Mouth Shut The reason a dog has so man friends is that his tail wags instead of his tongue. HfiTGRAPHIC BIBLE I Bv LEWIS BROWNE WNU Service, i i McClure Newipap" Syndicate. .wwwwwwi lff jOu clX utio M GjlEAtW T W2f $AMAUfAM o--?af I Tatenxr f4--Jjtos.M mtlu Xoifea rJUDbA Ofyuf THE REMNANT RETURNS FROM EXILE who returned were THOSE souls indeed. To get to the old homeland they had to journey many months across the desert. And when they got back, only sham-bles greeted their gaze. Disap-- i pointments and hardships fol-- ' lowed close on each other's heels from the very start. Jerusalem was a heap of ruins, and the fields roundabout were choked with wild growths and weeds. Houses had to be put up and cisterns dug; the fields had to be cleared and tilled. Seventeen years they struggled along in that fashion, and then al-most all the zeal and idealism they had brought with them from Baby-lonia seeped out of their wearied souls. They were discouraged and miserable. Perhaps they cursed the day they had ever left the pros-perous land of their exile. And then once more the proph-ets reappeared. One was an aged man named Haggai, who had played in the streets of the old Je-rusalem in his childhood. A bitter famine was sweeping across the land, and to both Hag-gai and Zechariah it seemed that it had been sent as divine punish-ment. They believed it had come because the people had neglected God's temple. For themselves the people had provided stout houses, but for God they had built only a rude altar. Through all the streets oi Jeru-salem went those two men, Hag-gai and Zechariah, with their bit-ter complaints. They beseeched and cursed, they pleaded and re-viled, until at last the settlers be-gan to rebuild the long-ruine- sanc-tuary. The wretched Hebrew peas-ants who had never been deport-ed but had remained in Palestine, offered to share in the holy labor-bu- t they were spurned. ficial in the Persian court, a Jew named Nehemiah. Learning of the desperate plight of his brethren in Judah, this Nehemiah asked the king of Persia for permission to go back as governor of his people's homeland. The permission was quickly granted, for the king lika Cyrus long before him well knew how important it was that the bridge called Palestine be held by a people who bore him good will. So, armed with all the authority of the great Persian emperor, Nehe-miah started out on the three months' journey to Jerusalem. His first undertaking, once he ar-rived in the ruined city, was that of rebuilding the wall. He realized that until the city was protected from its enemies the inhabitants could never be at rest. According- - ly he drafted all the able-bodie- Jews in and around Jerusalem, and set them to work. It was a difficult undertaking, chiefly be-cause the Samaritans would give, the builders no rest. Two divisions of Jews had to be organized: one to build and another to flght. There was endless spying and conspiring and deception. Nehemiah hurried the work with all his might, for the Samaritans had carried their agi tation against him as far as the court of Persia, and he feared he might suddenly be recalled. Finally, though laboring most of the time under fire, Nehemiah's men completed the wall. It ex-tended much farther than the one it replaced, for it enclosed not merely Jerusalem, but also several little nearby villages. In effect it was the foundation of the restored Jewish state. The rebuilding of the city wall was, however, but the beginning of Nehemiah's work. Within the com-munity the morale was at its low-est ebb, and to this the leader had next to turn his attention. The poor, who had had to neglect their farms while working on the wall. .v.iuiitu cauls looKea aown on them as an inferior lot. Those peasants, especially in the North, in what once had been the realm of Israel, had intermarried with the heathens who had been set-- ; tied there by the Assyrians 200 years before; and they had become ignorant and debased. Even those who had been left behind in the South, in Judah, had intermarried and lost caste. The people just re-turned from Babylonia acted very much like country folk who, after many years in the big city, return to the village of their birth and snub the neighbors among whom they were reared. But the days passed many days Even years. And nothing hap-pened Whereupon the hearts of the exhausted Jews in Jerusalem turned to -- all. They lost all faith in God and his prophets, and bit-terly did they complain as thev struggled along in their wretched little land. Fifty years of neglect had made the place a wilderness and now recurrent drouth and fam- ine made its redemption unspeak-ably difficult. Only a tiny minority still clung to God and his promise. Thev were called the "Pious," and they refused to give up hope. The chief protestant was a prophet whom we know as Ma-lach- and though priestly ideas had taken fast hold on him there was still much of the old prophetic spirit ablaze in his preachment But in vain did he raise his voice for the day had almost passed when a prophet could command the respect of the mob. The Word of God had lost its power in Ju dah, and only the word of some earthly authority could carry anv weight in the land now. NEHEMIAH COMES TO Tin RESCUE T"HE needed word of authority came just in time, n was brought from Babylon by a high of wcic now Doing crushed in the fists of the money-lender- The priests were lazy and dissolute; the lay-men scoffed at God and his wor-ship. The Sabbath, which had at-tained such importance in the ex-ile, was now neglected and for-gotten. The taking of heathen and half-bree- women as wives was on in every family It was clear that unless a complete and drastic reform was brought about immediately, the career of the whole community would soon be ended. Nehemiah and another leader a scribe named Ezra, realized this and fell to work. They assembled the whole people in Jerusalem and then read them the law. They de- clared peremptorily that all who had taken heathen wives into their homes would have to send the women away. Outstanding debts "e to be canceled; the priest, hood had to purge itself; the Sab-x.t- h laws were henceforth to be stnctl, enforced. Thus the life of he community was swept clean rom end to end by the From a lawless reel! e Bod less populace, the Jews band of puritans. And the com-wn1- ,f " Savwl-ny- way for a And now as never elVt IT din'exf, homelnd. Sf the" came in a ste?dv fabyIon,a they iy am; probab-Bac- k The ? ther ,ands' too. there u itrre to take UP ferent fr' J a life dif-- I"31 Whieh cestor. had an-- - her nknon two centuries with a iaH nmef3 Were fi,led from thTf or" 'dcas 8'ned Whom nadSr' Pei),es ao"g -- ere no longer ZZT: They With crude l,::besmen had traTe eVa" world. L see" the 'hey were "civilized." snappy facts I RUBBER lorgest inflatable rbh "ere the M pneumaj used ,o conl w beaches ,,, ,h, vasion The voriou, w 'he t.res came Iron. 35 iZ states. 1 35.7 pounds of synthet,c rJ used up in dri,, nltej oi 35 m.ph.4l pJJ used while driving ber ot miles at 50 m. p. Sponge rubber, a mJ discovery, mqybe(ow,L ju MRS. ALLKN'S HUSBAND GIVES HER A SURPRISE WEST MONROE, LA. Mrs. Carl C. Allen of West Monroe, Louisi-ana, has an interesting story to tell about how she discovered Fault-less Starch. Here is what she wrote: "Last week ,my husband brought home a box of Fault-less Starch. I decided to use it, thinking that all starches were about the same. You can imagine my surprise when I egan ironing. My iron fairly Hew and I was finished in no time. My clothes were so bright, with no rough starch blotches to mar their sleek-ness. I felt I just had to tell you how wonderful your starch is. My husband was just as proud as I when he saw his shirts. I wish all women could just try your product." Now there is a thoughtful hus-band. That box of Faultless Starch really meant more to Mrs. Allen than a box of candy and here is why: SAVK 468 MINUTES A YEAR Let's say it takes ten minutes to make hot starch when you have to cook it and stir it over a hot stove. But you can make hot Faultless Starch in a minute. That means you save nine minutes each time you make it. If you wash only once a week, in one year you would save 468 minutes, or seven hours and forty minutes. Would you rather have a box of candy or a box of starch that saved you bet-ter than seven hours a year? SAVE 26 HOURS A YEAR And that isn't all! Many people tell us that Faultless Starch makes it possible to save half their iron- - ing time. Let's be conservative and say that Faultless Starch ,might save you half an hour each ironing day. In a year you would save twenty-si- x hours of hard iron-ing time! Which is best a box of candy or a box of Faultless Starch? Why go on starching and ironing the hard way when you can do it the easy way with Faultless Starch. Or, better still, ask your grocer for a box today. You deserv Faultless Starch, too. Adv. BFGoodrJ BUY VICTOR! BONDS! (1) They are the safest plaail world for your savinp (2) They are a written pran the United StatesolAmw you back every penny y (3) They pay you back $4 Inn you put in, at the end oils . . . pay you interest at tiei 2.9 (4) You may turn them us your cash back at any M 60 days. The longer yoa Ml the more they're worth. (5) They are never worth la money you invested md can't go down in pnet H promise from thefinanrijj est institution in thera United States of Amend BUY VICTORY BONDS This advertisement contribute operation with the Drag, Cort Allied Industries, by the MM DR. CALDWEL SENNA LAXATTVt CONTAINED IN SYRUP I And Your Strength and Energy la Below Par It may b caused by disorder of IddV ney function that permits poisonous waste to accumulate. For truly many people feel tired, weak and mikerabl whn the kidneys fail to remove excess, acids and otber waste matter from tb blood. You may suffer nagging backacha, rheumatic pains, headaches, dlxxineea, Setting up nights, leg pains, swelling, frequent and scanty urina-tion with amarting and burning is an-other elgn that aomething is wrong with the kidneys or bladder. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment ia wiser than neglect. Usa Poait'i Fit!. It la better to rely on a medicine thst baa won countrywids ap- - revel than on aomething less favorably E nown. Doan'g have been tried and test-ed many years. Are at all drug stores. Get Doani today. irVWWaTTWaB"! Upset Stomach Helmed In 5 minutes or double money bach When excess stomach cil rautfes painful. suffocaV Ing 8. bout stomach and heartburn, doctors usually prescribe the faatsst-actin- medicines kr.own for symptomatic relief medicines like those In Hell-an- Tablets. No laxative. i brings comfort in a Jiffy or double your money back on return of botti to us. t6c at all druggists. "My0M VoThish Befitrel' It your nose ever fills up with etufly tranWBJ sient congestion- - WaM next time put a little rf ol in eaco f nostril. Quickly con- - gestionis relieved, brtW right'" Is to relieve distress. Follow directions in the FJ vick5 mim Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulslon relieves promptly be-cause It goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender. In-flamed bronchial mucous mem-branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the un-derstanding you must like the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis ijMHere's a SENSIBLE way p3 to relieve MONTHLY I (female pain) Lydla C. Plnktuun't Vegetable Com-pound la famous not only to relies periodic pain but also accompanying nervous, tired hlghatrung feelings when due to functional monthly dis-turbance. Taken regularly It help build up resistance against such symp-toms. Pinsham s Compound help na-ture Follow label direction Try HI COLDS CHEST TIGHTNESS T quickly loosened by Penetro tljy Grandm&'sold-tim- o muttonsue "OHy idea developed by modern science ic to a roun ter-ir- ri tan t, vaporising IgfejiSw Balvotliatbringaquick.comfortr rQBHr ing relief. 26c, double 35c. KlHtTRtfl penetrdB icHEi Blouse Favorites Sheer lingerie blouses of loveliest texture, and exquisitely detailed with lace rerister as topflight fash-ion with the young set this fall to wear with the dress-u- p suit. Shown at the top is a charming "come hith-er" blouse ki batiste by Judy Bond, a young college girl and stylist who Is combining a career and school-ing with high success. The other blouse in judiana rayon crepe is the wanted kind for college wear. Its highspot style details are the triple- - stitched convertible closely set pearl buttons and french cuffs. Comes in white and voguish colors. Furred Cloth Coats Make Fashion News The short cloth coat with In-triguing fur trim is taking over in a tremendous way for fall. The top news Is luxurious wool coats with gorgeous borders that either trim the flare hemline or are applied in a tuxedo manner down the front. Im-portant is the style message of fur leeves in cloth coats, such as the belted wool shorties in neutral hades that are fashioned with waist deep sleeves of black Persian. In-teresting also is the cloth coat with a fur yoke. Contrasting the voluptu-u- s fur trims Is the use of fur in liscreet ways, as for instance, the cloth coat that is bound all around the edges with Persian or beaver or other smooth peltry. There is also indication that one type fur will trim iiiother. Designers are doing won-derful things with fur, not only in trimming but In accessories, and fur hats are being turned out in end-less versions. Color Contrast Extended To New Evening Dresses The Idea of color contrast is associated In our minds for the most part In connection with sports clothes and daytime dresses. It's in-teresting to note that this color technique is carrying on in the realm of formal evening gowns. In one instance a noted designer Intro-- duces a panel that extends from Ibe right shoulder to the floor hemline of the dress. The panel is made up of lime and red, flashed against a black background. ON THE HOME FRONT USO Hostess Oh, I recognize you. Sergeant You're one of the three men I gave a pie to last week. Sarge That's right, ma'am. There were three of us. I'm the only survivor. What a Fit! Bill Why didn't you wear your new shoes today? , Joe They're so tight I figure I'll have to wear them a few times be-fore I can get them on. Sequin Ornaments on Combs Sequin flower motifs on combs are among the hair ornaments that are best sellers. Some are designed especially for top hafrdress and oth- - i ers for top-kn- hair-do- . |