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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM, UTAH Never Pour it blaz spreads with flour .2e When meltinr .1 small meit nhouS: be sct in the tl double boiler. 01 Red and yeiw blue, purple; green. White fij of these colors $ j Earthworms are beneficial to the soil in which they live and no effort should be made to remove them. If considered troublesome, lime water will bring them to the surface. Rub up the nickel faucets with cleansing tissues every day. Such rubbing up will lighten the weekly cleanings. Try adding a few drops of lemon juice to rice the next time you cook it. It makes the rice beauti-fully white and keeps the grains whole. , Keep linens white by packing them in an old pillow case which has been soaked in bluing until it is a deep indigo. Gather clover blossoms this summer, dry them, and scatter about the linen closet to impart a delicate fragrance. Green peppers used for salads are better if first parboiled. Boil the peppers for five minutes, pour off the water, then place the pep-pers in refrigerator until ready to use. Cleaning is hard on the hands, so equip yourself with extra rub-ber gloves and wear them every time you do this kind of work. Rub some cold cream under your nails before' starting work you will be delighted to see how quickly you can clean your nails after a good bath. PATTEBNSjk Pretty Frock and Panties. If 11 lTV CUCH a pretty picture a 2 to 6 M II UJj & year old in this darling frock 111 with whirling skirt. There are I ill panties to match. I J Pattern No. 8447 is In sizes 2. S. 4, 8 J ' " "xS, and 6 years. Size 3 dress takes 2 yards jr . fs. h material, panties ft yard. I 8404 X , Ordinary Glass Can Now 34-- V7 Be Broken as Desired CLASSI DEPART, GUERNSEY HIGH GRADE OUEvi, under one year springer heifers SneW FRED CHANDLEB? FEATHERS FEATHERS WANTED, t yStJo; A Perfect Fit. Y"OU'VE no idea of the amount of expert designing that went into creating this slip and pantie set. The result? Perfect fit. Pattern No. 8404 Is In sizes 34, 36. 38. 40. 42, 44, 46. 43 and 50. Size 36 slip and panties take 3T'i yards material. Due to an unusually large demand and current war conditions, slightly more time Is required In tilling orders for a few of the most popular pattern numbers. . SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 149 New Montgomery Street San Francisco Calif. Enclose 20 cents In coins tor each pattern desired. Pattern No Size Name Address pONSTIPATS? I GENTLE RE! If your constipate to lack of "bulk" in; and you have noma; tines, why resort to po purgatives? Theyir,; pally by prodding j testines into action s lng water Into tte other parts ofyourto Try kellocg's its Instead of workinjs Works Ctii the contents of jk helping you to a? ural elimination. all-bra- n Is a last;! fast cereal It'a sold grocers. Eat it rep drink plenty of Kt "Join the Regular": byKellogg'slnBatti f SNAPPY FACTS v ABOUT J) RUBBER Recapped tires will render satisfactory service If the tire carcass Is In good con-dition, good workmanship Is exercised, inflation rules are observed and speed is kept te 35 in ph. Have your tires recapped at a reliable shop. Scientists have developed the fact that when a car Is driven at 50 mph there Is a centrifugal force of two tons trying to pull the tires apart. That our standard of living Is affected In many ways by the shortage of rubber will be appreciated when It is known that normally about 50,000 Items were made with rubber. BEGoodrich IN THE ARMY they say: m CAMEL'S full a "ARMY BANJO" for shovel f FLAVOR AND EXTRA niVC for discover f: gvy F "BOUDOlR'for squad tent Tf "CAMEL" for the favorite cigarette f4j f with men in the Army HSKCWiw' firstmthe sapyicE 'KM,Mi& .ft The favorite cigarette with men ' SfV"'Mf '' ' "J 1 intheArmy,Navy,Marines,and fOS 'WS the Coast Guard is Camel. V J I (Based on actual sales records in ' MT J' ? TLJ V Post Exchanges and Canteens.) I YOUBET J, FOR STEADY iSSv h!THESE OVERAUSV utmeIKoSSlfcTJ , P'fI 0$$hf lTA1CES 9l9i I, WW WOM fl I COOL WATER-TM- EN ADD ONE QUART OF & Mi AND GRIME (WS& felOTrMl JUMPING ! lUH WATER WHIU STIRS, n&U, A WASH R.6HT00T WttAAtfS TOO S5' y2msSVS WMim(mIftSliS IlisP iIPP AI V fiCE Jt&&d.i OOL. ED BRADLEY still looks with much astonishment upon the optimism of mutuel players at the horse tracks. "They apparently never heard of the word 'Dercentace.' " he said. "And that is a big word to know about I have done fairly well In my time where the percent-age was three, four and. five points in my favor. Roulette is only a trifle over 5 per cent against the player." "But at the track big crowds, all ex- - wwmnmmtit. in-n-pecting to win, Grantland Rice come bravely out bucking 11 per cent I wonder where I'd been able to pack all the money if I had had 11 per cent working for me from the start, In place of some-thing like an average of 4 per cent. It has been rumored that Colonel Bradley never went hungry on the 4 per cent edge. "No one can beat percentage," he said. "Not for any length of time. The mutuels are all right for those who expect to pay something for a day's fun or for a few thrills. But they are not what yon'd call a aafe way of making money of making a living." Entirely Right The Colonel happens to be 100 per cent right. From the $500,000,000 (at? least) that will be bet this sea- - son, $30,000,000 will go to various state treasuries. Different tracks will pick up an-other $20,000,000 of which quite a chunk will go back to the collector of Internal revenue. In the course of spring, summer and fall the embattled mobs, who charge the mutuel windows with such optimistic dreams, will leave some $55,000,000 in their morbid wakes. And this doesn't include the tidy donations left with thousands of bookmakers. One answer to this is that if said public didn't lose this chunk at race tracks, It would soon find another way to pay its price for thrills that come from the gambling fever, fever now at its height. What else can be expected with around 15 billion dollars in added money chucked out upon the air? Great Outfields We get this query from a sergeant who is out to settle another of those acrimonious arguments about the all-tim- e "greats" of baseball: "What were the greatest outfield combinations?" Here are a few to consider Old Cubs around 1906-0- 7 Sheck- - rd, Hofman and Schulte. Tigers Cobb, Crawford and Veach. Red Sox Lewis, Speaker and Hooper. Yankees Ruth, Meusel and Coombs. Cardinals Muslal, Moore and Slaughter. There may be others just about as good, but none better. From this list the greatest defensive outfield was the 1912 Boston outfit that car-ried Duffy Lewis, Tris Speaker and Harry Hooper. The two strongest assaulting out-field brigades were Cobb, Crawford and Veach plus Ruth, Meusel and Coombs. Mexican Baseball "Mexican baseball," according to Dudley Roberts, a leading golfer and a keen baseball fan, would be a riot in the United States. - "It would outdraw all the race tracks, all the present ball games, all our football games and all the big fights." he said. "What has Mexican baseball got that we haven't got?" I asked. "Just one little trifling detail," Mr. Roberts replied. "Mutuel ma-chines and bookmakers who oper-ate batter by batter and inning by Inning. You can make a bet on ev-ery man coming to bat, the result of any inning or on the full game as the odds change from time to time." ' "So far the race tracks have ent-dra-baseball through weekdays In the United States. Can you Imagine what weald happen If the ball parks could follow the Mexican system and Introduce the machines and the bookies?" We can alse imagine what would happen to Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landls. We have a vague Idea the Judge wouldn't care for this Mexican sys-tem In American baseball. Not very much. "Mexico is the only place I've seen," Roberts continued as he be-gan to pack for another Mexican trip, "where the ballplayers often ride the spectators harder than the spectators ride them. Ballplayers there understand the art of making certain gestures that can be rougher than words. "You know the verbal beatings some of the ballplayers take In this country. I'd like to have a few of these Mexican ballplayers handling this heckling contingent We might have a few riots, but there wouldn't be much more heckling. Gems of Thought I KNOW of no more encourag-ing fact than the unquestion-able ability of man to elevate his life by conscious endeavor. Thoreau. But whether on the scaffold high, Or in the battle's tan, The fittest place where man can die Is where he dies for man. --MICHAEL. BARRY That which made her fairness much the fairer, was that it was but the fair ambassador of a fair mind. Sidney. When there is love in the heart there are rainbows in the eyes, which cover every black cloud with gorgeous hues. Beecher. By VIRGINIA VALE Released by Weitern Newipaper Union. ONE of the fifteen magazine now working in "Cover Girl," starring Rita Hayworth, will begin her real movie career with a complete wardrobe. The Cover Girls are contributing a dollar a week apiece for 13 weeks, to be set side as a "career starter fund." The full amount $195 will be matched by the first star, making $390. The first Cover Girl who re-ceives a bona fide screen offer iter finishing her role at Columbia will win the entire amount, to be pent on wardrobe. Joan Leslie, ed with Fred AsUlre In RKO Radio's "The Sky's . the Limit,' made her film debut five years ago child actress in their "Laddie"; she was Joan Brodel then. She moved right along, play fwiffirs At. JOAN LESLIE lng opposite Gary Cooper In "Ser-geant York." and Jimmie Cagney in "Yankee Doodle Dandy." A year go Astaire saw her dance and said: "One of these days she's going to be my partner!" Leslie Howard, young daughter of a famous father, is all set to carry on a famous name. Remember how very good she was In her radio ap-pearances? She makes her film de-but with her father in "Spitfire." Another daughter of a famous par-ent, Mary Hayes, daughter of Helen, makes her bow with her mother, this month, In a special Girl Scouts' radio program. Walter Brennan, Hollywood's only three-tim-e Academy Award winner, celebrates his 25th year as a film character actor while he's appear-ing In Samuel Goldwyn's "North Star." And his youngest daughter makes her debut, as his grand-daughter. Real French - Canadian troops make their film debut in the Com-mando raid sequence of the Merle Oberon-Bria- n Aherne film, "First Comes Courage." We're told that Commando tactics never before re-vealed to the public are demonstrat-ed by the 300-me- n tank force which performed for the cameras at Beecher Bay, Vancouver Island, B. C It was looked on as excellent combat training for the troops. Open house for servicemen In Hollywood is a daily routine of hospitality In the Harry Sherman studios; an average of 30 soldiers, sailors and marines has been watch-ing Albert "Decker and Claire Trevor In "The Gunmaster." Sherman has also opened his sound stages for par-ties for men In, uniform; the other night 150 soldiers were invited to in-formal festivities at the end of the day's work. , Jennifer Jones, who landed the lead in "The Seng of Bernadette," Hearing completion, has Joined the all-ata- r east of "Since You Went Away." Claudette Colbert plays the young mother; Shirley Temple and Jennifer are her daughters. Wendell NUes was unable to get overseas passage with Bob Hope, so he stayed home to be actor-announc- er on Johnny Mercer's Music Shop, the summer replacement for Bob's program. Mercer Is going to double from his radio show to write Metre's Zlegfeld Follies." If those red and blue ration cou-pons have been bothering you, be sure to see the latest Lum and Ab-n- er picture when it comes your way. The famous Jot 'Em Down Store of Pine Ridge, Ark., is the scene of all sorts of mlxups with the coupons, sugar and coffee tickets, and Lum and Abner's duties as air raid war-dens and ration board and tire in-spectors as material ODDS AND ENDS Jon IturbiS making m film for Metro, in which ho portray himself . . . Louis Armstrong, No. 1 trumpet men, is the laundry best friend used a dozen handker-chiefs for mopping purposes one morning recently, while recording for "Jem Session" ... Betty Hutton ha flayed a girl who earn her own living in every onm of her picture to date, . . . Lupe Voles had her first ease of stage fright when she had to handle a eery young baby in "Mexican Spitfire' BUssed Event" the fact that the baby would work only two minute at a time mem ell that saved herI J One Bit of Tough Detail That Smith Didn't Mind Two men worked side by side in a War Production board office. They never spoke, but each watched the other. One man left work daily at four o'clock. The other toiled on till six or later. Some months passed. Then the harder-workin- g of the two ap-proached the other. "I beg your pardon," he said, "but do you mind telling me how you can clean up your work every day at four o'clock?" "Not at all," said the other man. "When I come to a tough piece of detail, I mark it, 'Refer to Mr. Smith.' I figure that, in a depart-ment as large as this, there is sure to be a Mr. Smith. And I must be right; those papers never come back." The harder worker started to re-move his coat. "Brother," he said, "prepare for action. I'm Mr. Smith." Origin of "hi, The term "two bits" in San Francisco in j mints were in existent wire was chipped up fo Lone Warrior Young Private Jones slunk on to the parade ground ten minutes late. The sergeant glared, then said, with icy sarcasm: "So you have decided to come on parade. We were afraid you had signed a sep-arate peace,'" Strategy Chloe I hate that sailor. Zoe Why? I thought he was cute. Chloe wrote him he gave me a pain and to return my photograph, or I'd complain to the captain, and he sent back 15 and said to pick mine out be-cause he'd forgot what I looked like. Benefited Father When I was a boy I had only one suit of clothes and one pair of shoes a year. Son You have a much better time of it now that you are living with us, don't you, dad? A woman when launching her first ship was a little nervous. She turned to the shipyard manager, standing beside her, and asked: "How hard do I have to hit it to knock it into the water?" Could Be "I'm something of a mind reader. 1 can tell at a glance just what a person is thinking of me." "But don't you find it embarrassing?" Point of View Two flies were strolling along the ceiling. Suddenly one of them paused. "You know," it remarked, "hu-man beings are very silly." The second fly shrugged. "People are .silly?" it echoed. "How do you make that out?" The first fly tapped the ceiling with its foot. "Well, take a look," it chirped. "They spend good money building a nice ceiling, and then they walk on the floor!" There was a man who com-plained he had lots of books but no bookcases. He'd never liked to borrow bookcases. Only Half of It Nervous Employer Thomas, I wish you wouldn't whistle at your work. Office Boy I ain't working, sir. I'm only whistling. Ordinary glass is now made so that it will break in any desired manner, says Collier's. For in-stance, pitchers, jars and other containers for the home are man-ufactured so that they will break in large pieces, lessening the. danger of glass fragments getting into food. Some glass ceilings, like those in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, - are constructed to shatter in powder form to elimi-nate the danger of injury from falling pieces. In the Bi;H Nothing deters a god what is right. Seneca. Flag at Half-Ma- st The United States flag should never be flown at half-ma- st except when national mourning is official-ly declared for a national figure or a catastrophe affecting the whole country, says Collier's. A state, city or organization flag should be used to mourn a person of only state, city or organization prom-inence. ASH ME ANOTHER I A General Quiz 1. What does chicanery mean? 2. Why are macadamized roads so called? 3. Who was the tallest President of the United States? Who was the shortest? 4. How many lines has a son-net? 5. What is the status of children born in this country of alien par-ents? 6. How many states meet where the Ohio and Mississippi rivers merge? 7. Why is a stiff hat called a derby? 8. Who was Jean Lafitte? 9. Give three words that are pronounced alike, are spelled dif-ferently and each has a different meaning. 10. Why is the name of Peter Stuyvesant remembered? The Answers 1. Trickery or sharp practice, especially in legal proceedings. 2. That type of road was invent-ed by John Loudon McAdam, a Scottish engineer. 3. Abraham Lincoln was our tallest President, at six feet four inches. James Madison, five feet four inches, was the shortest. 4. Fourteen. 5. They are citizens of the Unit-ed States. 6. Three Illinois, Kentucky and Missouri. 7. That type of hat was first worn at the Earl of Derby's race track. 8. An American buccaneer. 9. Do, first note in the musical scale; doe, a female deer, and dough, soft mass of moistened flour. 10. He was the last Dutch gover-nor of what is now New York. |