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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH . I QPWING CIRCLE PATTERNS JowOied 3rocL in Stripe I CaSuJ tailored SkirtwahU I Dress-U- p Frock A rJ TTVFR cummer "dreSS-UTO- " THIS crisply tailored shir) A er is sure to play a star) all your summer activity buttons to the hem, has 1 sleeves and perky peplumj front, Pattern No. 8174 is for sizes It 20; 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 16 i of 35 or The Summer Issue of FASHM complete and dependable jmdti iiins smart cloth' fnr mrm Special features, free pattern m i m uuu ' ' -- v --J - frock to fashion in a bold stripes material used in contrast. A tiny bow tops the youthful key-hole neckline, a wider bow ties softly at the waistline. A honey of a dress. Pattern No. 8161 comes in sizes 12, 14, lb', 18 and 20. Size 14, 3U yards of 35 or SEWING CIRCLE PATTER 709 Mission St., San Franclsct, Enclose 25 cents in coins hfl pattern desired. Pattern No. Safl Name --B HhHF Sft ' 'oHE R--i' &U-U- J Unlike an old horse, n engine can be made yon You can't look an engine inW but you can look at the jM smokes it burns a lot of oil m ably needs new Scaled PoWB Rings. There's a Sealed PoB Set specifically engineered forM truck or tractor engine, wbattM make, model, or cylinder vaM tion. See your Sealed PowerH Dealer. Save oil, save gas.reswjj Send a postal for illus-- jm trated, informative new booklet on 7 ways to save lWt oil. It's free and mayy'7Tr saveyoulotsof money, fLJU Sealed Power Corp., Wj2B Dept. W62, M'js- - ffiP INDIVIDUALLY WffiM ENGINEERED J 1 I CRACKLE! ANt VOpfM ricekbIpieIi DC Be sure you get America's favorite r5 1 I --Qm the one and only Kcllogg't Rice KrisP"" W wv I THIRD STRIKE CALLED! I B ,A K KOFOED be big enough to hold the two of us." He turned on his heel and strode back to the bench. The inf.elders took their positions and High Pockets stood in the mid-dle of the diamond with the ball in his hand and remembered how he had fallen off the fence and how those Northern Michigan fellow had pinned back his ears, and knew in his heart that he wasn't lucky enough to get one past McGee. He better, though if he failed he could not excuse himself to Sally.. She wouldn't listen to that bad luck btuff any more. She would say he was given the greatest break of his life and had not been man enough to take advantage of It. Besides, High Pockets felt that if he let Mc- Gee hit, he'd be delivering grocer-ies for old man Hemingway back in Ishpeming next Summer instead of drawing salary checks from the Yankees. Connelly was signaling Kelley didn't know what the catcher was calling for. A curve? A fast ball? A dipsy do? What did it matter, any-way? Whatever he threw McGee was going to hit. The plate umpire took off his THE sun slanted into the bull pen High Pockets Kelley was warming up, and caused beads of perspiration to stipple his brick-colore- d forehead like raindrops. He threw the ball listlessly because there wasn't a chance in a million that he would get into the final game of the World Series. His team-mate, Slats McKeevcr, had held the Giants to three hits, and the Yan-kees led one to nothing going into the final inning. "Something always happens to me," Kelley said, "and it is seldom anything to write home about. Ai far back as I can remember, I have been the unlucklest guy In the world. When I was only seven years old, I met Sally Ryall. . . ." "If you call that bad luck," norted Pete Howard, "get me a load of It." r ain't it? Loukit this series now. Here we come to the last game, and every pitcher on the staff except McKeever and me is as healthy as If they had the cholera. And what happens? Slats makes 'em eat out of his hand while I'm here in the bull pen. The boss is wavin' for you. Luck!" Howard laughed, but there was no mirth in it. "If you gab less and look more, maybe you wouldn't feel that way. McKeever's lost his stuff. Moore singled and Wilson walked and there's Lake at the plate now. If he gets a piece of one, goodbye ball gamel Uh-hu- he walked, too. And the boss is wavin' for you." Kelley stuffed his glove in his hip pocket and pulled his cap further down over his sunburned forehead. High Pockets True put an x r " little zip on his Week's 'ast baU "That's right Best but y o u o n 1 y got the start of Fiction a," he laid. "W e ' r from Ishpeming, Michigan, and u lot of houses out there have board fences along the back yard. I tried to make a hit with Sally by walkin' on one of them and fell off and busted a couple of ribs. When I got my first Job In the Northern Michigan League, she came to see me work. I tore a nail off a finger of my pitch-I- n hand and they knocked me out of the box In two Innings. But that wasn't the worst of it. We had "What happened?" he asked, dazedly. signed a new first baseman named Frederick Longstrrth McGee. . . ." High Pockets banged the ball viciously into his glove. "Yeah, but look what luck does to me. Fred wasn't supposed to report until the next day, but he's just dumb enough to get his dates mixed and showed up In time to meet Sally. What's Clark Gable got that he hadn't got? Not a thing. And me and with a pan that stopped prac-tically every clock in Ishpeming." "So you lost Sally to him, eh?" "Not yet. If my luck in love is as bad as it Is In everything else, I probably will. When we came up to the majors, McGee was signed by the Giants. Five minutes after he put on the slidin' pads. Smith's legs went bad, and there was McGee the regular first basernan. The Yankees took me and all I had to beat out for a job were Jones, Pearson, Tal-bot, and Wirte." "You complain too much," said Pete, "look at me. That Connelly will go on catching till I've got a beard way down to here. All I get to do is warming up these bums." High Pockets considered that un-important. He had his own troubles. "Sally talks that way, too. She works for a psychiatrist named l, and he says I'm obsessed by the belief that luck is the domi-nati-factor In my career. Well, "Good luck," he echoed scorn-fully. "If I strike out the side, I'll bet Connelly misses the last pitch and the winning runs come over." McKeever was still waiting at the pitcher's box with all the infielders around him when Kelley shuffled up. "Somebody's makin' an awful mistake," said High Pockets. "Les-ne- r knows how unlucky I am. Does he want to lose this series?" Slats glared at him. "If the rest of the staff wasn't on the waitin' list of the hospital for Joint diseases, you wouldn't even be here. Forget that luck stuff. It's not avimportant as the hop on your fast one." "That's what you think." Kelley said. "But I'll take a double order o luck. My girl says there ain't any. Laugh that off. And for a real break Frederick Longstreth Mc- Gee is battin' next. What a guy! He could trip over a cat and fall into a gold mine. This sure is a spot for a guy who ain't pitched much more this season than Shirley Temple has." McKeever's gaunt, red face ex-pressed the deepest disgust. "Well, you better come outta this game with somethin' better than a bad luck alibi, or New York won't mask and bellowed, "if you can pull yourself out of that trance, Kelley, how about working at your trade? I don't want to stay here through the whole football season!" Well, there wasn't anything else to do. Then High Pockets wound up, his mind on Sally . . . and bad luck . . . and the instant the ball left the tip of his fingers he knew it didn't have anything on it but the stitches, and it was straight as a ruler and big as a balloon. He saw McGee pull back his club . . . and then there was a whack of wood against leather . . . and that was all he remembered. High Pockets woke up in a nice clean hospital bed wit a nurse tak-ing a thermometer out of his mouth. Pete Howard stood nearby. "The doc says you're all right," said Pete. "It's lucky you got a head like a wrestler, or they'd be tuning up the harps for you now." High Pockets twisted his neck. There was a little ache in the back of his skull, but not much. "What happened?" he asked. Howard seemed embarrassed. "Well, McGee nit a line drive that bounced off your noggin into Stone's hands and Lou made a triple play unassisted." 'Kelley sat straight up in bed. "Holy Moses! The first break I ever had in my life, and we win the World Series with it! I'll never crab any more. Wait till I see Sally!" "I wouldn't bother, if I were you," Pete said, moving toward the door. "Women are awfully funny, Sally said nobody ever got a worse break in luck than Fred McGee, and before she marries him she's going to tell Dr. Golenpaul he doesn't know what he's talkin' about." A Creamed Tuna in Potato Nests! (See Recipes Below) First Aid for Lunch "If only I had a good list of main dishes and desserts for company luncheons," said a friend of mine recently, "but it always seems I get stuck with things and can't think about something the girls really like." A good solution for the above problem Is to keep a card file of complete menus LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU Chicken Loaf with Mushroom Sauce Green Peas with Pearl Onions Tomato Salad Orange-Hone- y Rolls Beverage Lime Chiffon Pie Recipe given. and pour Into a greased loaf pan. j- - r ror sucn occa- - '.A sions, Be certain ! fon(ls before ,hP ) company d a I e 'y comes lnK so mtM you wiU be thor' vS'y oughly familiar with the prepara-tion, and then everything will run smoothly. If you don't want to plan the menu completely, then select just the main dish and fill in the salad and vegetable with whatever is in season. Tuna a la King In Potato Nests. (Serves 6) 2 caps milk 4 tablespoons floor 4 tablespoons butter teaspoon salt teaspoon pepper teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 2 cups canned tuna fish 5 tablespoons chopped plmlento S cup tiny mushroom caps Scald milk in double boiler. Make a paste of the melted butter and flour and add to hot milk, stirring until thick and smooth. Add sea-sonings and cook 15 minutes. Flake tuna fish Into large pieces and mix with white sauce. Add pimlento and mushrooms. Potato Nests: Peel 4 medium- - Bake in a moderate e oven for 35 minutes or until firm. Unmold carefully on platter and garnish with parsley. Pour mush-room sauce over loaf. Mushroom Sauce. 4 tablespoons butter 4 tablespoons flour 2 cups milk teaspoon salt Vi teaspoon paprika cup cooked or canned mushrooms Melt butter and blend with flour and seasonings. Add milk gradual-ly and cook over low heat, stirring constantly, until thick and umooth. Add mushrooms and cook two min-utes longer. Serve hot over chlcke loaf. Lime Chiffon Pie. m teaspoons plain unflavored gelatin H cup cold water 4 eggs, separated H teaspoon salt 1 cup sugar 4 tablespoons lime Juice Green coloring Grated rind of 1 large lime 1 cup whipping cream, whipped Baked pie shell Soften gelatin in cold water. Place in top of double boiler, the egg yolks, Vi of the sugar, salt, lime juice and rind. Cook over boiling water until thick r sized potatoes. iut into tiny strips lengthwise. Heat in a small amount of fat but do not brown. Remove from fat, sprinkle with salt and ar-range In nests inside large muffin tint. Press potatoes firmly against tide of pan and bottom. Bake in a hot (450-degre- oven for 15 min-utes. Serve hot tuna fish mixture in crisp, hot potato nests. Lattice Rhubarb Pie. Pastry 2 cups cut up rhubarb Flour 1 cup augar Line pie pan with pastry. Wash and peel rhubarb; cut in small pieces. Flour pieces until they pjNiSlj Mix well and with lattice strips C?4jfjv2i of crusts and jii::,gii bake in a oven for 10 minutes, then in a oven for 30 minutes. A combination of yellow and green is attractive for working into a luncheon combination, especially when it Involves favorites like chicken and lime chiffon pie! Chicken Loaf With Mushroom Sauce. (Serves 6) 2 cups diced, cooked chicken 1 cup soft bread crumbs Ya cup chopped, cooked celery 2 tablespoons finely chopped pimlento 1 tablespoon minced parsley H teaspoon salt 34 teaspoon paprika 1 eggs, well beaten 1 cup milk I tablespoons butter or chicken fat Combine ingredients, mixing well and smooth, stir- - ring constantly. tTTv"' 4 Remove from "V -- Tv heat, stir In gela- - W)V tin and cooL VBflfc)' When slightly V thickened, fold in V stiffly beaten egg whites to which remaining sugar has been added. Turn mixture Into baked pie shell and chill In refrigerator for one hour. Spread or flute whipped cream over top. A simpler combination than either of the two given thus far Is this one of baked tomatoes and banana tarts: Baked Stuffed Tomatoes. (Serves 6) 6 medium sized tomatoes IK cups shrimp or crab meat, flaked K cup thick cream sauce M teaspoon mustard 1 teaspoon salt Fine bread crumbs Butter Paprika Scoop out tomato centers and mix half the pulp with shrimp or crab-mea- t, cream sauce and Fill tomato seasonings. shells with mixture. Cov-er tops with fine bread crumbs, dot with butter and sprinkle with pap-- rlka. Bake In a hot oven for 20 minutes. Banana Cream Tarts. (Serves 6) 4 bananas 2 tablespoons sugar V teaspoon vanilla extract cup whipping cream 6 baked tart shells 6 tablespoons shredded coconut Fold sugar and vanilla Into whipped cream. Slice bananas Into tart shells. Cover at once with whipped cream and garnish with coconut. Rei.ed by Wetten Newspaper urn.. LYNN SAYS: Serve Meat in Ways That Tempt Make appetizing luncheons out of leftover scalloped dishes by add-ing pieces of leftover meat to them. Pork with corn, beef with green beans, lamb with tomatoes, etc., are all good appetites satisflers. Veal la King takes on special glamour if it's dressed up with sliv-ered almonds and mushrooms. This may be served in patty shells or a noodle ring. To make bread crumbs flavorful for use as toppings, grind them fine and brown them in meat drippings When you're serving roast pork or pork chops with dressing arid that special touch to the dressing Uaves8!"8 " Ch0PPed !plnacn When making biscuits, do some hmg different and roll the doughu in a rectangle; spread with orange marmalade and roll as for jellv rou OA and baked slices u, oiled for pinwheel biscuits. par 3gs$8m When setting out upon i ping trip, include an extra) stockings in your handbaj. can never tell when a r occur. To remove a hard-wate- r I from the bottom of the I rub it with a cloth dipped! egar water. A quick way to cool starch so it leaves no scum pour it over ice cubes. Take time to sweep up broken glass carefully and empty it into a tin can. Use a damp cloth or moist cotton to pick up the tiny slivers. When footsore after a hard day's shopping, sit down and soak your feet in warm salt water, dry with an absorbent towel, and mas-sage briskly with ice-col- d cologne. A mirror adds immense charm to a room. It reflects and gives vistas; it increases the sensation of space and repeats the colors of the room. In short, the room comes to life, becomes animated inrougn me eyes oi a mirror. One can make a wood stain sim-ply by dissolving a piece of roof-ing tar in gasoline or other petrol solvent. The shade can be varied by using more or less tar. a That old bathtub can be given a modern touch with a little painting. Use the proper bathtub enamel, a special prepa-ration which has expanding and contracting qualities. It does not crack or peel, but costs a little more than ordinary enamel. If the tub is in very bad shape re-move all of the old enamel en-tirely. 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APT .V k 11 .. r. n T Vertical gradually 23Weasellikc " T OHO M I N 0 U SHH 0 1 Boat hook aquatic 2 Plane surface anlal Fr "flip v ' Tt 7 7 3 Small cactus 24 Mans name jl 25 Youth Lk j 1 .! 1J 4 Ether com- - pound 27 Hotel j--4 5 Slang: chum 29 Frozen water LliLLL41ii 6 Above 30 Mineral iiWjLEI-- J 7Woodenpln 35 To apply Lh 1 "71 8 To be swal- - 36 Official's 1 --M' ll.-lowe-up scarf PH 9 Where King 37 Impaired lslEl I,PlRlE Arthur got by use bis sword 38 Physician 4 fifoal Pa&mwul UpL A flustered woman, her arms full of packages, approached the department store floorwalker. "Oh, dear," she said in an an-guished tone, "I'm looking for my husband. I was to have met him here two hours ago. I wonder if you have seen him?" The floorwalker did his best to look obliging. "Possibly I have, madam," he replied. "Is there any distinguish-ing characteristic about him by which I could identify him?" After a moment's thought, a mghtened expression came over the woman's face. "He's," she replied hesitantly J imagine he's purple by now." Suppose You Had Six Months More He handicapped himself all his life because all his life he had been on the wrong side of the fence in his thinking. In other words, he was negative in his thoughts and in his outlook on life, rather than positive. A person like that can't be very successful or happy, as you very well know. And he wasn't young he was past forty. And yet I watched a miracle happen in that man's life, watched him transform from a man who was negative about everything into one who was positive about everything. "I owe everything I've done to some advice I got from an old friend I had admired from child-hood," he told me when I asked him to outline his method. He told me to make believe that I had just six months more to live, just six months more. It was June when I saw him. 'Just pretend you won't be here January 1," he advised. Then he said, 'In that case, what would you do with those remaining six months?" I thought for a moment, for I hadn't ever been asked a question as as that. Then I told him: 'Why, believe me, I'd livel I'd crowd as much into those six months as I possibly could!' " It gave him a new life really! What a wonderful thing it would bo for everyone if he or she could imagine the same thing and try living a full and complete life for just six months. Why no one would ever be content to live a less happy, less complete, less full life! |