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Show NEEDLEWORK PATTERNS Flower Basket Designs on Slips Kitchen Towels With Cute Rabbit 5i fk c&k ::'0 5133 f Gay Rabbits for Towels CUTE as a button are those ASgay Peter Rabbit figures to liven a set of kitchen towels. Stitches are simple and can be quickly embroidered in bright col-ors. If you like, they'll make amusing quilt squares for a child's bedspread. To obtain tr.m Icr di'slgns tor seven "peter Halibit" licures i Pattern No. 5102) color chart for embroidering, amounts of flosses specified, send 20 cents in coin, your name, address and pattern number. SEWINO CIRCLE NEEW.EWOItK 5J0 South Wells St. Chlraeo 7. IU. Enclose 20 cents for Pattern. No , Name - Address Embroidery for Pillowcases LOVELY flower basket designs on pillowcases. An ideal gift for a linen shower or wedding gift. The transfer con-tains 15 "baskets" enough to work out two complete sets of pil-lowcases as shown above. To obtain transfer of 15 basket motifs, color chart for worklnc Flower Basket Designs (Pattern No. 5133), send 20 cents In coin, your name, address and pattern number. WANTED Green and Dry Prairie Bones Truckloads or Carloads HIGHEST PRICES PAID Write f o.-UTA-BY- PRODUC-TS CO. 463 South 3rd West - Salt Lake City 4, Utah WHY BE A SLAVE TO HARSH LAXATIVES? Healthful Fresh Fruit Drink Has Restored Millions to Normal Regularity! Here's a way to overcome constipa-tion without harsh laxatives. Drink juice of 1 Sunkist Lemon in a glas' of water first thing on arising. Most people find this all they need --stimulates normal bowel action day after dayl Lemon and water is good for you. Lemons are among the richest sources of vitamin C. which combats fatigue, helps resist colds and infections. They supply valuable amounts of vitamins Bi and P. They pep up appetite. They alkalimzt, aid digestion. Lemon and water has a fresh tang too-cle- ars the mouth, wakes you up, starts you going. Try this grand wake-u- p drink 10 mornings. See if it doesn't help youl Use California Sunkist Lemons. rw't'RTff'J 9 it f'M To hold your loose uppers and low- - pm ers comfortably secure all dayand I 1 every day, try dentist's amazing dls-- I I covery called STAZE. Not a "messy' MM powder! STAZE Is pleasant-to-us- e JHU paste. Get 35c tube at druggist fi today Accept no substitute I BE sm 4aa m tmm Holds Hit flay or Vg&gy STAJaC Your Money Back 1 GNA?l CRACKLE! ANV VOP SA. gjgj BICE KRISPIES Be sure you get America's favorite rice cereal, PQ the one and only Kellogg' I Rice Krispies! ' JUST how important is rhythm timing in sport'.' A ihorl while back, my (rtend and critic, former Gov. James M. Cox of Ohio, suggested Uits subject as a timely theme. It was the governor's idea that rhvthm is an imDortant factor, not only in sport, but ;dso in every detail of life. The test-imony s e e in s to bear this opinion out completely. We first put the matter up to Eddie Dyer, the Cardinal manager, also a former football Gv, Cox star. Rhythm," Oyer said. "Is hard to explain. But it is certainly important. Important In football Just as important In base-ball. I would say that it meant the team play between mind and mus-cle, as far as sport goes. You must think and act In one direction. You can't think one way and act an-other. "Certainly, such ball players as Musial, Marion, Moore and Slaugh-ter all have rhythm. They have al-most a perfect blend of brain and action what you might call the split-secon- d variety. There is never, any sign of being jerky or jumpy in what they do. "I would say the first move must come from a clear, untangled, smooth-thinkin- brain. Then the muscular side must take over at once." To round out the advice, I switched the debate to my friend Frank Crowninshield, a patron of all the arts and of most sports, one of the most direct thinkers I have ever known. Crowninshield is better known as an editor, writer, critic and collector of art. But for over 50 years, he also has been one of the keenest of all sporting fans and fol-lowers. Everything that happens in the world is his stage. Rhythm in Everything "Have you ever thought," he writes me, "that the two prime es-sentials in sport are rhythm and timing? And they belong together. But they are just as dominant in the arts, poetry, dancing, music, archi- - tecture, painting, acting and sing- - ing. "Absence of rhythm and timing," he writes, "is just as fatal In all the arts as It Is in baseball, shooting, bowling, fishing, running and all the others. Did you ever watch Bobby Jones? Did you ever watch a bird dog In the field? Did you ever read Shelley's 'Ode to the Westwind,' or Keat's 'Ode to a Nightingale?' They all have the same basic qual-itiesperfect rhythm. Nothing hur-ried, nothing rushed." We passed the problem on to P. Hal Syms, card and sport expert. "Rhythm," he told me, "is the basis of any golf stroke. It is also the basis of winning bridge. It is the foundation of everything you do well; in sport, business, art or cards. "What Is rhythm? It must begin, of course, In the brain. Yon must set your plans In advance. You must be ready for whatever hap-pens. There should be no room left In the brain for panic or hurry, for overconfidence or despair. "Every part of life Is competition competition against yourself and your opponent. But you must be set and ready for whatever hap-pens. You must never be caught off guard. Again, I say, this belongs to the brain. "It is from the brain or the mind that rhythm starts. If you are pre-pared here, you are then able to send your message from the brain to your nerves and your muscles. When they respond, as they should If you are in good physical condi-tion, you have what I call rhythm.1 I still say this applies to golf, base-ball or football, just as it does to bridge. Bridge and Boxing "I hav had nights at bridge where I saw that I was running on a low rhythmic scale. I knew my coordination was poor. On such nights, I cut out of the game as quickly as I could to wait for an-other night." "I put the same problem up to Jack Dempsey. 'I see what you mean,' Dempsey said. 'But I can't explain it. We call it reflexes. When you are young, you see an opening and you let fly. Split second. When you are older, you see the same opening but you get there too lat When I was around 24 years old my mind and fists worked together. They were a team, I guess. Maybe that's what rhythm is. Maybe you might call it smooth action between the mind and the fists or whatever you use in certain games.' " I can't think of a better descrlp-tioivo- f rhythm. Any poet must have rhythm in his brain and soul. But poets don't have to blend this factor with physical action. There can be no set definition of rhythm as ap-plied to sport, art, business, music, poetry or anything else. In my opinion, rhythm means smoothness of action, the team play, the coordination of mind and muscle, where the directing fore is mind or brain. I iIf Robert Taylor walked in that door and asked you to marry him what would you say?" vSSBJ C '" I'm sorry lady- - hut tins is the largest love seat I we have." BlCY By Ernie Buthmiller wfc I VJPj fJ7 WHAT'S THE I I FM EXPECTING SOME 1 I I VlDEA , SLU&OO ? GARDEN SEEDS IN TH' fBdJ - : rn mail and i dont WANT TH' 60105 r REGGIE By Margarita !! LOOK T "1 ITS BEEN J HOwV f 3 JS XT rCL 1, S FLYING FOR AN Vrjo YOU GETi (PET CANARY!!) y vHot N ? Gems of Thought jVl ENTAL pleasures never cloy; unlike those of the body they are increased by rep-etition, approved of by reflec-tion, and strengthened by enjoy-ment. Neither a borrower nor a lender be, for loan oft loses both itself and friend. Shakespeare. The sunshine of life ts not a sud-den, blinding glare. It is made up of very little beams, each one of which shines brightly all the time. Bear in mind that your happi-ness or your misery is very . much of your own making. Dr. T. L. Cuyler. GIAR FELLERS ,IM EfaX iOoeam coHi, whyNT" I store, not. A I ?2?m5 a J U I ifflWlfa 1 s C0NES When Jack London was report-ing the Russo-Ja- p war from Korea, an official called and said the peo-ple of the town wanted to see him. A platform was built and London rehearsed a speech. When he as-cended the platform before a huge crowd, the official asked him to re-move his false teeth. London shruggingly obliged, whereupon the audience broke out in cheers, There was no speech. London kept taking out and putting in his bridge to the applause of the multitude! By Len Kleii 1 i -- -- I I " s v 7rrS DOESN'T LOOI) &8A J KVj pure 'Sour p IL |