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Show LAYTON JOURNAL KATHLEEN LAYTON. UTAH. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 17. 1919 , Failing Marriages Bell JUleaaad ' Oy WNU Syndic! WNU By KATHLEEN feature arnjpfim features NORRIS Pigskin Privlews By INEZ GERHARD RADIO, If you say Mary Margaret everybody knows McBride is understood. The fabulous M. M., far handsomer than her pictures indicate, told me shed been forced Into everything she had done K MERICA comes first with me in everything. Ninety-nin- e times in a hundred she stands ,N head and shoulders above the rest of the world. In the hundredth case I past as lightly over her shortcomings as 1 can and hope and know that coming generations will correct them. So one evening some week ego I was made really unhappy by the quite innocent and unaffected talk of a certain French professor. We happened, as we sat about a friends fire, to get on the subject of European marriage and the entirely different attitude in which young persont oversea approach thia tremendous subject. And aa I listened, 1 had uncomfortably to admit in my soul that theira la a wiser attitude and a wholesomer plan than oura and one calculated to build better hornet and children, better communities and better men and publicity, newspaper work, radio, Bhe must have been an excellent reporter; she is one of the best interviewers on the air, yet has the women. Accept Marriage Naturally Marriage with our women, he is an accepted state. It la aid, not an experiment. The girl comes a wife just as definitely as he is a French woman, blonde or dark, ahort or tail, hardworking, or aomewhere between. Married, she and her husband can afford so much or ao little; he needs her help in the ehop or restaurant or farm, as a secretary or with the hospitality that maintains hia position. They want and are expected to have children. he aaid. They face the facts, to not do deny or attempt "They elude them. They make the most of what they have. Our women like the quiet certainty of marriage, with its plans, protection and be- MARY MeBRIDR MARGARET rare gift of making her program sound completely spontaneous. She says she chooses guests whome she finds interesting, feeling that they must interest others also. And she accepts only those sponsors whose products she believes in; those plugs are completely Isincere. 4 i well-to-d- o James Hilton, whose Novelist is on CBS is celebrating applying .Hallmark Playhouse .Thursdays, for U. S. citizenship by writing his first novel with an American locale, lit wont be Hollywood, where so many of his books have been dramatized, v and so many of whose stars have been on his proHe feels it is not truly gram. representative of America. x If you look closely at the fire The Man you'll see an airplane in the sky. It got in accidentally was patrolling the area for any spreading of the fire. in Columbia's 1865) Let's get It straight about my reaction to the great open spaces of Arizona, said Jane of RKOs station Greer, west. It Isnt true that I tainted when I saw my first rattlesnake. 1 merely screamed so that people came rnnning Vom Flagstaff, 39 miles away. And when I saw a big tarantula tn the toe of my slipper, I was leaving my tent anyway. . co-st- William Holden is a great doors man. . But now he is under rt orders to fctay out of the sun. He in The yi plays an escaped killer t,Dark Past an dhas to preserve a prison pallor played without bene-- . . fit of make-u- p. as The new March of Time, On Stage, shows what only Insiders usually see what goes on behind the scenes of two successful plays now rnnning in New York. They are Anne of the Thousand Days, starring Rex Harrison, and Red Gloves, starring Charles Boyer, both of whom sppear in the picture, along yith many other famous people of the theatre. ' , Mutual's delightful Twenty Questions. now in its fourth year, stars three members of one family Fred newsVanDeventer, the caster; his wife, Florence, and their Their skill and inson, Bobby. genuity are likely to make their famous guests on the program seem tongue-tied- , while the audience, knowing the answers, laughs and listens. well-know- Walker and Kyle Rote back In action. Tulane haa one of the best teams in the South. Tulane and Vanderbilt look to be two southern leaders next fall North Carolina will have the brilliant Justice and the able Art Weiner back, but there will be many gaps to fill. Carl Snavely will fill them well. He usually does. These three additions to the Irish late are hooked up with a far stronger Navy team, Southern California. Purdue, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan State and Washington no easy march. This is better than the average schedule. It has no deliberate soft spots that so many others have. It will certainly be total of eight hard game. Notre Dame, like Michigan, North Carolina and ethers, will lose good men and retnrn good men. But yon can gamble if yon like to gamble that Frank e Leahy will have n g squad with fast, runners and nt least two good passers. You can also be fairly sure he will have a good line. What about Armya schedule? It has a number of soft spots, but it also haa somo rough-anrocky bridges to cross. One of them ia sure thing. Michigan. That's Others can be Stanford, Pennsylvania and Navy. But outside of Michigan, there is oc trouble ahead. This forces too much pressure on the Michigan game. A defeat here can play havoc with either teams final ranking more with Army than with Michigan. d Army will have n fine and uncertain line strength with anch stars as Yeoman, Henry, etc., missing. Her ends will bo her strongest point. Navy, again, haa no chance to beat her schedule, the toughest in football The 1949 menu Includes Southern California, Notre Dame, Army, Pennsylvania, Duke, Princeton and others of heavy calibre. But the 1949 Navy squad should move well up in the years ranking. Oklahoma will be strong again. Bud Wilkinson has a winning grip on the situation with n team that can exchange class with anyone around. flrst-clas- d Television may have Hollywood 'cared, but there is nothing wrong 'with the motion picture industry that pictures like A Letter to Three Wives wont cure. With a perfect cast, an excellent story, fine direction, this 20th Century-Foproduction has everything that takes paying customers into theatres and gives them the worth of their money. From Colorado (set in with Doak thja . hard-hittin- Columbia Broadcasting 8y tern seems to be aiming at the .slogan Yon name em, weve got em. shortly after Bing Crosby switched to CBS, Red Skelton followed; come fall, hell Join their Sunday night parade. scene THE MONTHS of September, Oc- tober and November still lie some distance to windward. But things are happening now that will affect the coming autumn euch Esarranging football scheduler pecially the schedule that Notre Dam will face. It might be mentioned her that 'Notre Dame, after all the hullabaloo, d i d slightly better than all Southern Methodist, Tulane and North Carolina offer three of the better games of the year. MethSouthern odist was Southwestern champion last fall and prob- will be again Grantland Rice ably n On an Arizona location trip Guinn Williams won a .22 target rifle by placing first In a flying tin can event He donated his prize to s raffle for the benefit of s veterans hospital Won over Dick Powell, among others. , William L. Shirer was later and later getting home to Sunday din per following hit broadcast Mrs. Shirer was irked, till she found that he was staying to talk things over with John B. Kennedy. Now she jusi sake Kennedy to dinner. ,.. that w gain mart , , , companionship. It is not with us a springboard; it is a deliberately chosen new, way of, life. We give up much old ways, old freedom, old amusements. But we feel that we gain more. "Alimony is low, among the great body of Frances sober and industrious people of the great middle class the people whose scheme includes villas, cars and country holidays and a couple of steady family servants, whose position is quite as definite and respectable aa those of their employers. No Need for Pretense Youngsters," she said, "approach marriage with care and with the help of family interest and advice. Their parents know the young man, his background and his record. The girl knows what money she will have to spend and her mother and father advise her as to outlay. Everyone knows everything, so there is small need for display or pretense. "Once married, she is married. Her house, her linen, her children and her hospitalities are to her. Her husband comes first He must be comfortable; he must be made to feel himself loved. He has faults; so hat she. But tradition and training save them both from many pitfalls that your young married persons know and of which they become victim. "The families and friends do not durdrop in on them unexpectedly ' ing the first year. They are not expected to take group of young friends to expensive night clubs and foot the bill. Children are expected, and with the coming of children the woman finds herself more Important than before. She is wife, mistress, mother, housekeeper. That she remains balanced and equal to and doing her duty means that everything else in the household goes well" He told me that psychologists do not do a good business In France, in the Scandipavia or among Belgian, Swiss and Polish wives. These are women with a job, a position and affectionate home ties to keep them balanced. Weigh these three elements and you will see what is lacking In the lives of so many thousands of our young married women. Our young wives dont know where they stand. And too often the husband is as unfit for partnership and aa confused aa the wife. She wants amusement; she wants her sitting room torn to piece and done over; she wants a fur coat What the wants has no reference at all to what money the hat to (pare for it She and ter husband go to cocktail parties and vening bara, quarrel come home sense of frustration. k wtth retf-ate- back-fiel- e Ivy Leagui Returns There has been a tendency in re cent years for other sectors to look with a certain amount of scorn on Ivy league teams.' Part of this was justified, although scholarship requirements in the league are weU above the average, no matter what you hear. As far as 1949 is concerned, the colleges and universities will have no apoligiea to offer any section in the Matter of football ranking. Last fall Cornell and Darthmouth would have been an even match for most of the leading teams of the Midwest, South, Southwest or Far West This will be true again this year. Few of the better teams So any section will have backs to match the Big Red or the Big Green. I mean such backs as Johnny Clayton of Dartmouth, a passer of the Ber telli type or Frank Miller an A Jerry Fleischmann of Cornell Lefty James and Tusa McLaughry had two fine teams last fall They would have been even bets against any team in the Big Nine except Michigan which is favored over many. This new season they can be joined by Princeton and Harvard. Princetons outlook Is good. So junior 5roch SIas Quaint Smart fj Shjfeil Slirlwaister JOUY RELIEF AT LAST For Your COUGH Creomuhioo relieves proroptl jr because it Roes right to the teat of the trouble to help loosen end expel germ laden and aid nature to soothe and EIllegal rai raw, tender, inflamed broochial mucous membranas. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of CreomuUion with the understanding you must like the way it qukldy allays the cough or you are to have your money back. Dynamite is the Paul Bunyan of the modem farm. Like the giant lumberman who could uproot tree and do other remarkable things, explosives, properly and carefully used, can perform tasks about scores of the farm, according to F. S. Eldred, manager of the explosives and pow. der division, Olin industries, East labor-savin- fTEMDIO tirio Must Be Carefully Used to Prevent Harm e, CREOMULSION g for Coughs .Chest Colds, B ronchitis Alton, IlL Farmers today are finding they can save much labor and time in digging ditches, blasting out stumps, making post holes, cleaning out water holes and even planting tree by the us of explosives, Eldred saya. But caution is the watchword," he warns. Like fire, dynamite is an excellent servant and a terrible master. When the farmer uses it with full knowledge of the great work it can do, as well as the fearful damage, he has a giant farm hand who can almost perform miracles." s TAMPING FOSE 1 Figure Stumps are a bugbear to fanners. Each la problem in itself. The farmer must study the type of stump, whether it has roots that run along Just under the ground, or has great tap roots. Then he must carefully plan bow to blast out that with Again dynamite. tump caution" ia the watchword. If not sure, the farmer should consult an explosives expert But the typical way to blaat a stump is to place the dynamite aa near as possible under the center mass, or under the largest roots. If there are two large roota, it may be necessary to plant the explosive under both. Figure 1. ahowi the proper way of loading to remove an evenly rooted stump. The charge is under the center of the stump. Sometimes there are stumps with central downward roota, called tap roota. In such a case, as shown in Figure 2, the charge is placed down alongside the tap root on the aide that will bring it as near possible to the center of the stump. g Another great task labor-savin- SPLIT CARTRIDGES Figur$ 2 can be performed with dynamite. That ia the digging of ditches. Dynamite can be easily carried through the woods, swampa and other country impassable to horses or machines and, once there, can quickly do more work than dozens of laborers or several machines. FUSE r W- rS : Luscious Bran Muffins . . . nith Raisins! labor-savin- g ivy-cover- Both can be first is Harvard's. class. Brown can also move up. Pennslyvania is never weak. Georg Munger loses Chuck Bednartk and a few other good men, but if you keep track, year after year. youU find the Red and Blue a rather rugged barrier. Colombia is definitely belew 1918 form, even with the redoubtable Lou Little in charge. Columbia Is never flooded with material, and no team can lose 12 of Its beat men from n small squad such men as Rnsaerow, Rossldes, eta and hope to have Bincb left. It will take the full genius of Lou Little to win n game hern and them. CBISP AMD Dynamite Is Magic Worker on Farmland make-believ- POPS ALWAYS SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS NORRIS Standby CTANDBY season after season is the shirtwaist 8 dress. Comfortable and attractive, this version has extended shoulQuaint Style ders, neat belted waistline and a A QUAINTLY old fashioned full skirt. Try a colorful striped junior style thats as smart as fabric. e e paint. Puffed sleeves are short or elbow length and finished with gay Pattern No. 6313 Is (or atxes 14, 16. 18, 10; 40, 42, 44 and 40. Size 10, yards bows, collar is edged in tiny ruf- of 39 Inch, or lace. fling Send an extra twenty-Aeenta lor Well-Manner- 1404 well-manner- 11-1- Pattern No. 13, 14. 16 and or 8404 cornea In sixes 11. 13. 18. Size 13, 41 yards o( 3d your cony ot the Sprint and Summer FASHION-t- t'a Ailed with tewing in n. book. lnilda the Free patters print and Tasty Kellogg's a mouth-wateriretain flavor combination! 2 tablespoons I cup sifted flour shortening K eup sugar teaspoons or molasses baking g . powder FIRST AID to the pattern desired. Pattern x w- - AILING HOUSE ng WIe-Poo- ssMt cup retains cup milk Blend shortening and sugar thoroughly; add egg and beat welL and Stir in Kelloggs milk. Let eoak until moat of moisture Is taken up. Sift lour with baking powder and salt; stir In retains. Add to first mixture and stir only until flour disappears. Pill grassed muiflo pans full Bake in a moderately hot even (400F.) 29 to marvelous 20 minutea. Make All-Br- two-thir- 8KW1NO CIRCI.lt PATTERN DEPT. 610 Sooth WeUa 81 Chicago 1, UL Encloaa 33 cents tn tolna lor each lus-clo- us All-Br- ... ds muffins. flsierleas areal faarees oateral laxative ear aa I tayakaoMMml by Roger C. Whitman When we moved QUESTION: Into our apartment, we purchased from the previous tenant the inlaid linoleum on the kitchen floor. The quality is excellent, but the color n Is a dirty in a marble-Ize- d pattern. Is there any product which will stain or dye the linoleum (not paint) so that we can get a deep blue tone and still retain the marbleized effect? ANSWER: I do not know of any stain or dye for that purpose. But you may be able to get the effect that you want by stippling in two colors, or else by applying a finish. For the stipspatter-dash- " pling, first cut a large sponge in half. Apply an oil floor paint of the background color that you wish on the floor. When this has dried, paint a section of clean board with a second color that you will use for stippling, press the flat, cut side of the sponge on this fresh paint, and then press this on the linoleum. The pattern of the cut sponge thus will be transferred to the floor. For a spatter-das- h effect, use a stick and a brush with a rather long bristle. Dip the brush into the paint and wipe off the excess. gray-gree- Strike the brush ferrule against the stick to that the paint will come off in drops on the floor. (The floor should already be painted with the background color.) Try these methods first on pieces of boards to get the knack. See that the linoleum is absolutely clean and dry before you start to paint, no grease or wax. Reducing Lamb Loeaes Fortifying sheep rstions with and iodized sslt is promising means of cutting down lamb losses on some farms. co-bs- lt -- I2h s? TO 24 Lei the Ads Guide You When Shopping WATER oa EARTH TAMPING Figurt 9 But always the words "safety first" must be kept in mind. The fanner should know hia explosive, know the type of soil in which he is operating and should not trust his own Judgement If there is ever any doubt ha should consult an expert Ditches are dug by dynamite not by placing one charge, blowing out a hole then using another charge. Figure S shows the dynamite planted stick by stick at regular intervals so that whole sections are blown out at the same time. In this way, the earth does not fall back into a part of the ditch already dug. One of the advantages of digging ditches with dynamite is that there are no "spoil banks." THE 10-M- y f CAMELS ARE SO I AND THEY HAVE SUCH TEST CONVINCED ME- WONDERFUL -I WIO FLAVOR Knowledge Is Valuable To Those Purchasing Eggs U. S. department of agriculture marketing specialists report that knowing whera to buy eggs and how to keep them ere the only two ways that consumers can be sure of having a quality product at al times. The homemakers first step in this direction is to buy from retaiieri or wholesalers who keep eggs undei proper conditions. Her next step U to keep the eggs cool Io n recent test of hundreds ot people who smoked only Camels for 30 days, noted throat specialists, making weekly examinations, reported NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROAT in!TATlCM due to smoking CARTELS , |