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Show ft THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH CRANBERRIES & HOW TO COOK TH cranberries, old rcciue, "? k' how to Ci.n. how to copy, write Post free,.' York 8. Offir. n Npw Yor 1TIEJ6,,H0A Needlework Variety MINCEMEAT MUT Moist and tender mA. . SMILING little pansy faces in and embroidery such lovely guest linens! Have a set of towels, pillowcases, and rcarf! Doubly charming Pattern B58 hns transfer of 6 motifs 7x9 to i J 13 inches; crochet directions. Send 20 cents in coin, your nam, ad-dress and pattern number, Sewlnf Circle Nredlecraft Dept. P. O. Bo 5740. Chicago 80. III. or P. O Hoi 1(1. Old Chrises Statioa, New York II, N. Y. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No. Name Address Kellogg', All-Bra- i 1 cup All-Br- 'Acupsugi cup milk i e 1 cup prepared lcupsUu mincemeat flour 2 tablespoons 3 teaspooi shortening baking teaspoon salt 1. Combine All-Bra- n, mil mincemeat; soak about 5 n 2. Blend shortening and sugi egg and beat well. Stir in A. mixture. 3. Add sifted dry ingredient only until combined. 4. Pill greased muffin pans Bake in mod. hot oven about 25 min. Yield; 12 r muffins. America's most famous natural 7ii(m. laxative cereal f sva tor diets of in- - III hit J sufficient bulk -t- ybowlfu, IfiUHM Mother Knows f$fn RESET ieasyi LOOSE f I '""s like prnty SCREWS t?: lwdcn.in mm CIUIAOM Mil Willi 'f Mivm PL J in ' of LIFE? Are you going througn th tional middle age1 period to women 38 to 52 frs.) V make you suffer from not feel so nervous, nlgbstrunK Then do try Lydla E PU Vegetable Compound to reli' symptoms Plnkham's Cot also baa what Doctors ca machlo tonio effect I LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S w H f IF PETER PAIN CW6S JJOU W5TK pijy -" contain Jll RUBIN SOH"B THE ORDINAL BAll MB ANALGESIQUg J, " " I i By INEZ GERHARD DALL made a hit in hi JOHN picture, "The Corn Is Green"; in his fourth, Alfred Hitch-cock's "Rope", he got the big break that every actor yearns for. He has his first sympathetic role in a long time in "Deadly Is the Female", for United Artists. But his is no over-nigh- t success. He learned his trade the hard way, X"2' r -A JOHN HALL through six years of work in stock companies and little theaters, then as a walk-o- n in two Broadway plays, finally in a good part in a third one, which brought him his Hollywood contract. He stands six feet one, has brown hair and blue-gra- y eyes, wants to do a good com-edy. John Ford, director of Argosy's "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon", maintains a quarter-millio- n dollar rest home and country club In San Fernando Valley for war veterans. During World War II, he headed a Navy photo unit of 0. S. S. The club is operated by a trust fund, and can neither be sold nor com-mercialized. "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" is action-packed- ; don't miss it. Leon Janney, playing the villain-ous role of "George Stewart" in CBS's "This Is Nora Drake", would be recognized by movie fans if he could be seen. He was a child star in "Our Gang" comedies and in more serious pictures. Madonna Josephine Davis was born at St. Paul, Minn., in 1912, appeared In recitals when 6, got plenty of laughs, and de-rided to be a comedienne. Made her debut in vaudeville when 7, in films when 22,, in radio, on the Rudy Vallre show, , when 29. Starred in her own radio show, 1945-4- 8. Now has her own film company, Joan na.vi Prnriilrtlnna One of Hollywood's best acting roles of the year was won by a paralyzed veteran who'd never acted before in his life. Arthur Jurado was chosen from among 32 paraplegic veterans to play a lead-ing dramatic part in "The Men." Movie-goer- s will get their mon-ey's worth if they like Jane Rus-sell when they see "Montana Belle", distributed by RKO. They will see three of her as herself, disguised as a boy, and wearing a blonde wig. Olga Druce, director of "The House of Mystery", (MBS. Sun-days) recently received a citation from the government of Haiti for her recent series of broadcasts exploding hitherto unexplained voo- - doo rites and other superstitions generally associated with the re-public. She was commended for promoting good will between Haiti and the United States. Press agents are always linking Patricia Neal's name romantically with male stars; first she knows about the "ro-mances" Is when she reads the papers. She's sure they won't couple her with any of the actors in "The Rock Bottom". her new picture, however. "They're all married but one", she said recently, "He's Dun-can Richardson, and he's only five years old." Mary Margaret McBride is spearheading a campaign to get bandleaders, entertainers and the public to donate musical instru-ments for the Mandahl Boys School, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands a school for boys who have been deserted. Wendell Corey nearly leaped out of his skin when his d daughter almost stepped on a huge tarantula. (He was having a one-da- y holiday from "Holiday Af-fair".) Lucy said calmly "Aw, it's only a oP black widow spider!" ODDS AND ENDS . . . Lucille Ball is being considered for the Sophie Tucker role in the movie version of the singer's life, "Some of These Days" she's about one-thir- d as fat as the famous Sophie . . . It's no coincidence that Elea-nor Parker's name in "The Rock Bottom" is Susan, the same as her baby daughter's the script called for her to be called Lucy, a name she dislikes, so she got it changed . . . The Geraldine Farn-u-you'll see in "The Men is the daughter of Franklyn Farnum. , -'. J X -- - r. , v yi . . h-- . '. ' HERE HE IS.. . . Here's a pic-ture that speaks louder than any words could. It's that man of the hour, the guy you've been waiting for Santa him-self. pBy JIM RHODYFTTjJ Jjfc. Yule Gift Hints Most people fail to realize it, but shopping for the sportsman is one of the easiest tasks of the Christmas season. If you know that friend of yours hunts or fishes, likes outboard motoring, or simply goes to field and stream with a camera, your gift problem is almost immediate-ly solved. It is an incontestable fact that no gift makes an outdoorsman hap-pier than one he can use in pursuit of his outdoor sports. Knowing that, it is a simple and relatively inex-pensive matter to select a gift that will delight the recipient and, at the same time, impress him or her with your own good sense and good taste in selecting appropri-- ' ate Christmas presents. Suppose you are buying a gift for a friend you know is a fisher-man. Vou can thrill and delight him uiHVi nn p vnnnrl i tlire of AS little 11411 t im f"-'- i - ' , This Inexpensive cover for casting rod handles and reels Is an example of the type of Christmas gifts the angler will appreciate. as 65 cents simply by purchasing a well-know- pattern fly, or, if he is a plug-caste- you can add to his equipment and win his st thanks by equipping him with a new casting line, prices of which start, in the better grades, at around $1.10. Of course, if you are financially able and want to get into the higher-- cost bracket of Christmas gifts, there are the new glass fly and casting rods, automatic fly reels, casting reels, creels, boots, land-ing nets and all the other myriad items of an angler's equipment. Good fly and casting rods may be purchased for as little as $16, and many good reels, both for the fly rod devotee and the plug caster can be bought even cheaper. This is a point, however, that should be stressed: Be sure you buy something the sportsman can use. Ask some questions, toss out some hints, so that you won't be buying deep sea angling equipment for the fresh-wate- r angler, nor a 25-l- test casting line for the light-tackl- e enthusiast. For the gunners, there are guns in all grades, shells, gloves, caps, endboots, hunting garb and an al-most endless list of kindred items. The Christmas gift buyer may rest assured that the fishing-or-huntin- g gift recipient would rather have a 65 cent streamer fly or a new plug pattern, or some shells, rifle am-munition, camera film, or a pair of hunting gloves than all the usual Christmas gifts he receives. AAA The one-celle- d animal never grows old and never dies, unless it is eaten by another animal or meets with an ucident. To propagate, it simply di-vides itself in two, AAA MAHONEY 11 sis&i 4 f( - J S'rs f THE 8 IVY LEAGUE SCOOLS-VALE- T, Nv- -i " lii-i'i.V.- V PRINCETON, PENN, CAKTMOUTH, COR- - WHEN THE BROOKLYN DODGERS NELL,COLUMBiA,HARARD AND BRONN- -, T(?AVEL BY AIR, EACH PLAYER - HAVE PLAYED 644 FOOTBALL GAMES ) IS INSURED FOR $25,000.' V AMONG THEMSELVES SINCE 1872. SPORTLIGHT Brooklyn Hurling Is a Mystery By GRANTLAND RICE BURT SIIOTTON doesn't become up with any soft job next season. He had a young pen-nant winner this last fall and his team will have another year's ex-perience to work on. There are a lot of things for which there is no substitute. One of these is experi-ty'j- $ ence. This should yf - be a tough squad t0 nandle over 154 IT t-- tf games with its --JL catching, pitching, r jL infield, outfield, fikW f speed and youth. Wnat e,se can you v lkj?iJ ask for? Two things, when it Grantland Rice COme9 to a world series: A big hitter, such as Joe DiMaggio, and a relief pitcher, after the fashion of Joe Page. The Dodgers are a better team over a 154-ga- stretch than they are at the shorter world series. It may be that by next fall big Don Newcombe can work two world series games at top speed or that some other star will airive. The two Dodger pitching prob-lems or mysteries are Ralph Branca and Rex Barney. Here are two young pitchers who have ahead. This is the same treatment Tommy Byrne, another potential great, should employ. Byrne with control could be a stand-ou- t, pos-sibly the best pitcher in his league. Even as wild as he was, Byrne won 15 and lost seven for a mark of .682. But the left hander is po-tentially a winner. Pitching Problems Even this far ahead it is easy enough to see that the main prob-lem next season will be pitching. It was terrible pitching that wrecked the Red Sox through July Fourth and left them 12 games off the pace. That's a big gap to make up. The Red Sox made it up at the fag end of the stretch and then had nothing left for a killing fin ish. Next spring Joe McCarthy will be In far better shape than he was last spring especlall" for pitching. He will have young McDcrmott, a likely look-ing kid, ready to go. He will have Ellis Kinder who was called to action too late thi last summer. And he will havt in Mel Parnell a probably winner. The Red Soy don't care too much for the .i .i : 4i t i everything except one ingredient. That happens to be a winning mar-gin. Together they won only nine more games than they lost this past campaign, and that's not enough for what should be two big pitchers. One main trouble is that neither is sure of his control. At almost any given moment either might start dishing out passes and blow the game before it can be saved. There is only one way this weak-ness can be cured. That's by hard work. I recall many years ago Christy Mathewson telling how he cured li is wildness. "I put up a stake at the pitching distance," he said, "and worked any number of hours throwing one just to the left of the stake and then one just to the right. My target was a matter of Inches. I felt I was improving when I could plant 'a curve ball or a fast ball on either side of the stake and yet fairly close. After that the plate looked bigger than a bar-rel. But it called for a lot of pitching in practice." If Branca and Barney could put in a good many hours pitching for control pitching to hit a tin cup there would be no great trouble lumg nicy iuuk lu lliauj quarters this last season for permitting the wounded, wrecked and crippled Yankees to beat them out. They will have to show a bit more fire next year in place of riding along on their averages. Av-erages don't win pennants or World series. Casey Stengel may have as many pitching problems as he had through the last campaign. In Ras-ch- i, Reynolds. Byrne, Lopat, San-for- d and possibly Porterfield the Yankees have good but erratic starting strength. And in Joe Page they have the equal of two good pitchers. Without Joe Page this Yankee staff would have been nil. But if Porterfield's arm returns, and if Byrne can locate something even approaching control, the staff will be good. In 1947 Joe Page saved and won the pennant. In 1948 Page was of little help and the Yankees lost. In 1949 Page re-turned to his former form and the Yankees won again. If Joe keeps his weight in check this winter and reports fairly firm next spring, the Yankees will have a winning staff. Both Detroit and Philadelphia have the pitching if other weak spots can be cured before the 1950 season begins. Mistletoe Kiss Began as Myth Practice Symbolized Expulsion of Evil The origin of the yuletide custom of kissing under the mistletoe ii shrouded with gome uncertainty, but it is believed that the original practice was symbolical of assur-ance that never again would the mistletoe be used as an instrument of evil, as it was in Scandinavian mythology. The Norsemen believed that Balder, the god who personified the sun, was disliked by Loki, god of mischief. According to the leg-end. Loki planned to destroy Bald-er, but Frigga, Balder's mother, obtained a promise from all living things that they would not harm Balder. But she forgot to extract such a promise from the mistle-toe. Knowing this, Loki made an ar-row from the mistletoe and gave it to Balder's blind brother, Hoder, and told him how to use it. The occasion was a demonstration that all things so loved Balder that nothing could harm him. Hoder did not know the mistletoe would prove a lethal weapon. The arrow killed Balder. Frigga was desolate, but won a promise from Odin, chief of all the gods, that If every living thing would weep for Balder, he would be re-stored to life. Frigga had everyone weep for Balder but Loki. Dis-guised as an old witch, he declined to weep. As a result, Odin permitted Bald-er six months of life and six months of death, which explained the sum-mer and winter seasons to the old Norsemen. Frigga was given care of the mistletoe so it would never again bring sorrow. In Reverse A hunter claimed that his dog had the most sensitive nose of any animal in the world. He liked to tell of the time that he flushed a pheasant. The bird dashed for some underbrush and the dog was ordered to go in and flush it again. The animal, unfortunately, picked up the bird's back scent and followed it swiftly for miles and miles. Finally he reached a tree. He looked up into the branch-es and barked loudly. When the hunter caught up with the dog he followed the dog's gaze and saw the nest from which the pheasant had been hatched two years be-fore. He never did explain how the pheasant's egg got into that nest. Retriever "One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine," counted the visitor in an English woman's home, "my goodness! What a big family." "Yes'm," agreed the woman proudly, as she held the family group picture up for closer inspec-tion, "a fine lot of children, Hi 'ave, thank 'eaven. An' we've managed to nyme them so that heach child 'as a nyme beginnin' with a haitch." "Really?" said the visitor. "What are their names?" "Well, this un's Enry, that's Arold, the one on the left his Ugh, the one next to 'im his Erbert, then Ubert, the little chap his Orris, and the two girls are Arriet and Etty. The tall boy in front was always picking things hup so we nymed 'im Holiver." Record Salmon "",?' ' &t "if t w :i ' Fisherman Erne St. Claire, Portland, Ore., is shown with his record king salmon, which he caught near the mouth of Oregon's Nehalem river. AAA Observe your Came and Tuh Laws, They are provided in the best interests of the sportsmen. AAA Keep Safe AT CHRISTMAS TIME Christmas this year should be a safe Christmas safe for everyone from the tiniest tot to the oldest grandparent. Too much emphasis cannot be put on safety in decora-tions, especially in the use of electric lights. Too often a set of defective lights Is the cause of a tragedy or near tragedy during the holiday season. Sockets for miniature electric tree, lights must be deep so the metal at the base of the plug is completely covered and tinsel and trimmings canot touch it If buying new lights this year. b sure to get those with deep sockets so none of the metal will be ex-posed. It might even be a good in-vestment to replace all shallow-socke- t strings of lights with deep socket ones. It would be well for every family that expects to use lights this year to check them closely and make necessary replacements in time. Regular illuminating bulbs, 15 watts or higher, must not be used on Christmas trees. They can get hot enough in a few minutes to set the tree on fire. HQVYgEna - By Harold Arnett CUPBOARD COVER rK------- ? AN OPEN CUPBOARI? !' !i' eJ CAN BE NEATLY COVERED ,', t BY USING A WINDOW I' Jjf SHADE. SCREWEYES IN - ' U X EACH END OF THE CURTAIN , fTgCl ,' fAS. SLAT, SLIDE ON LENGTHS 1 jfff U OF COKD FASTENED TO ft j LSVI ' Ji) SCREWEYES DRIVEN INTC ? ijrjvA' Tj THE INNER SIDES OF THE L J CUPBOARD NEAR. THE -- wmunc - Fi yX. TOP AND BOTTOM. MWyftV STENCIL ON A DESIGN fflLferfT TO ADD BEAUTY. 1 &WI!LlLm rT--n, , , ABRASIVE STICK i iFyr"0 J? A POLISHING STICK. CAN BE yif MADE BY OBTAINING A TjAi BLOCK WITH A HANDLF "ZiP&jSr FASHIONED AT ONE END. 0-Jt- GROOVE THE CENTER LENGTH - rp&JW WI5E- - ENDS OF THE ftr PITI ABRASIVE PAPER ARE HELO hom-- J fllJZi J IN THIS GROOVE BY MEANS op A LOCKING BAR AND LJIIIUP UIU " REMOVABLE BANDS. Christmas in Mexico (I Unless he is very much Ameri-canized, the Mexican child knows nothing of the Christmas tree. Mexican parents search the mar-kets for little trinkets, toys and sweets for the Pinata a jar made of coarse, red earthenware and shaped usually like a clown or dancer or other amusing figure or object. On Christmas Day the Pinata if suspended from the ceiling. Wildlife or Cats? According to experts on the sub-ject, constant restocking of our lands with house cats is making inroads on our wildlife. The use-fulness of cats around the house is not denied, but when thousands are dumped along the highways and have no means of existence ex-cept by preying on wildlife, they become a major problem in wild-life conservation. Those cats which are surplus and unwanted should be destroyed |