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Show I I THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH . H ETHER it is Eddie Dyer's T Cardinals or Leo Durocher'i Dodgers who will be called on to meet Joe Cronin's Red Sox this fall, there is one basic idea you can keep in mind neither National league team is going to surrender in ad-- : vance No other teams in baseball have been so well seasoned under fire from April into the final September stretch. There has been no resting spot for either club no loafing time or any recess in the day-by-da-battle for the top. Both Car-dinals and Dodgers by now should have i mm Si steel - shod nerves Stan Muslal under the pressure that has kept both teams hustling to the limit in an all summer dog fight that has been one of the besl in many years. Both Cardinals and Dodgers are loaded with dead-gam- e ball players out to give all they have- - such men as Pete Reiser. Peewee Reese, Ed Stankey, Dixie Walker, Stan Musial, Marty Marion, Country Slaughter, Whitey Kurowski, Terry Moore and others from both scrappy camps. Their hatting records show no such power as the Red Sox com-mand. Howie Pnl let may be their only 20 - game winner. But there is more than enough class on either team to give anyone a battle over the sprint route that a world series calls for. While neither Musial nor Walker has been able to tnrn on Ted Williams' power, both have been outhitting the Red Sox star through the greater part of the year. The averages tell you that Reiser, in condition, is one of the most valuable ball players baseball can show when you consider his worth at bat. in a pinch, in the field and around the bases. The averages and the records of the field also prove that Musial is quite likely to out-hi- t Williams by a rather wide margin; not in the way of home runs, but in league leadership. Musial is one of the finest hitters we've seen in many years. His lifetime average is close to Williams', who has slipped a trifle from .356 to something around .353, which isn't too soggy for sev-eral years. Outside of Musial and Walker, neither Cardinals nor Dodgers has other g hitters to match Pesky, Doerr and York, slashing Ted's three aiding musketeers. Eddie Dyer on Pitching After all, the pitching can play a star part in any world series, as pitching usually does. We were talking with Eddie Dyer, the Cardinal manager, about this section of the world series argu- - ment. "In the first place," Dyer said, "the Cardinals haven't yet won the National league pennant this season, The Dodgers are a tough team to catch and shake loose. They don't seem to discourage easily. But if the Cardinals do manage to break in and get a shot at the Red Sox, I have a rather hazy idea our pitch-ing staff can worry them a lot. "We have some that Williams and a number of others might not like too well. And if George Munger can work back to his old form in the next few weeks, we'll have our share of good riglit-- j handers to match any staff and that includes the Red Sox staff." No one can be sure yet just how good the Red Sox pitching is. There have been too many games where a Red Sox pitcher could dish out a flock of hits and runs, and yet breeze home. We were rather astonished to see that Dave Ferris and Tex Bughson, two Red Sox mainstays, had allowed more hostile hits than any two pitchers in their circuit. Both had been tapped safe-ly well over 200 times, where Spud Chandler had allowed only 151 hits and Hal Newhouser only 173, far below the Ferris-Hughso- n totals. The Red Sox have wrecked the American league through a killing margin in runs, base hits and run batted in. Their stampede has beeii based on raw power, on attack, not on defense. j Hughson, undoubtedly one of the oest pitchers now at work, has had a rather spotty year, being slightly over the .500 mark with a great g machine at his back. Ferris has been their star workman, but even the able Ferris has absorbed his share of manhandling more than once. lied Sox No Cinch Bet The Red Sox will be favored to win, but anyone who makes them .psided favorites can be labelled a trifle curious in the cupola. As all round good as the Red Sox are, ind they are good enough, up and :own the line, they are no mvinci-Dle- , overwhelming force against ei-ther of the two fast, game outfits. The main burden of proof is also n broad Red Sox backs who are xpected by too many camp follow-i- s to win a four or five game romp. HJ in junior high!" WZ . C. "Here I am for my music lesson, professor and I usual, too tired to take it!" SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS for 3J( junior 2rrocL J-Ja- S Side J)nlevesl 8049 pTj JSC Matronly Figure 11 ld WET. yoUK tall wardrobe won't be complete without a smartly tai- - PwAl lored shirtwaist frork This one, nJHI designed for the slightly larger tgfi jU woman, has a deeper notched jl collar, slenderizing paneled skirt. Short or long sleeves wear it ev- - Side Opening erywhere with confidence. ( J NE of the prettiest tj.unior Pattern No. annl Is for sizes 34 36 38. frocks you 11 see it s bound 42. 44. 4. 4B and so. size M, short to cause sighs of envy. Large but- - sleeves. 4',ii yards of 35 or tons are used for the unusual side I 8KWINR ( IK(,.K ,.ATTERn dept. closing and trim on skirt and pock- - 7oa Mis,on st San Franclsco Callf. ct Picture it in a soft solid toned Em.IoiC 25 wnt ln colM for each fabric highlighted with bright but- - pattern desired. tons. Pattern No. Size Nume Pattern No 049 comes In sizes 11, 12. 13, 14. lli and 18. Size 12. 3' yards of Addresi 33 or I No more worry UT YfcAST GETTING STALE! New Fleischmann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast keeps full-streng- th for weeks on your pantry shelf F YOU BAKE AT HOME you can make s bread any time ... at a moment's notice rtiu7m with New Fleischmann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast. pKlWlilffl'sM Always dependable New Fleischmann's Fast jfjSStfJtM Rising keeps fresh for weeks en your pantry & JW M shelf ready for quick action whenever you 'jm OKfYtUff jm want it. Just dissolve according to directions ml 'r jj on the package. Get New Fleischmann's Fast 8Mjat'" - ijf Rising Dry Yeast today. At your grocer's. JS i ' ITT AND JEFF By Bud Fisher 1.V T nF MvNPBll1-600- 7 JUST FELL I SAW HIM itZjULM$'i S OR ?ASS T j Atvopiteop? ' If sunshine fades your colored clothes, you are an accessory aft-er the fact. Hang colored gar-ments in the shade after launder-ing to preserve their colors. The lint from white clothes is apt to cling to the clothes of suc-ceeding tubfuls, and shows badly on dark pieces. Pull a wire strain-er, about 5 inches in diameter, through the water in the machine and rinsing tubs and you'll be sur-prised at the amount of lint you get A tape measure, marked on both sides, is the. most prac-tical kind for use when sewing. A yard stick is needed for marking long lines and taking skirt lengths. A six-inc- h ruler is useful as a gauge for spacing buttonholes. Less time is required and there is less danger of doughnuts slip-ping back into the hot fat if a wire egg whip is used to lift them instead of a fork. Fasten the strings of baby's bonnet to the bonnet with snap fasteners. Then the strings can easily be removed when they need washing and the bonnet docs not. Before soaking a cooking pan in cold water, allow it to cool a few minutes after it is taken off the stove. Rapid cooling may warp aluminum, chip porcelain, or crack iron utensils. Mil REGGIE By Margarita AFELLOW JUST ) W CAN I KEEP fZA fcERTAINLY REGGIE WV JT7 111 ll m FROM OVER-SE- f HIM 7 rf, BRING IN THE Zty ' JFfW 1 r W TER By Arthur Pointer V ulvar Display of Wealth Rack in the Gay Nineties The climax of all the vulgar dis-plays of wealth which took place in this country in the Gay Nineties was the Bradley Martin ball at the Waldorf-Astori- a on February 10, 1897, says Collier's. Given for New York's Four Hundred, the fancy-dres- s affair was one of the greatest society news stories in history, even receiving pages of publicity in London and Paris. As this ball cost $369,200 and was held at a time when thousands of Americans were destitute, the Bradley Martins were severely censured for their extravagance. Unable to endure the notoriety, 'hey left the country and settled permanently in England. Vapors Color Hair Through long daily contact with certain industrial vapors, human hair has been known to develop various unusual colors. For example, the hair of work-ers in copper smelters and brass foundries has turned green, while the hair of those in cobalt mines and indigo works has turned blue. VLAR FELLERS By Gene Byrnes 5YCU 7.AHTA JO&A S ; THIS IS AV KF' I $GEt3?A 4 OFFICE BOY L GOOD' I WANT N HlSHLASS JEWELRY STORE TnuAuTX DO YOU' VTS CONSCIENTIOUS. V AND I WT WANT A SHIRKER. nfSSXoA 1JE2& YES I INDUSTR.IOU5, INTELLIGENT I A CHISELER A KID WHO IS ( A j tj Ji g--- j |