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Show TIIE BULLETIN, mwr.il AM CANYON. UTAH - HELPS ENGINES 3 WAYS A Smoother Engine Idle. l&fAl Improved Gasoline Economy. feSfei Increased Electrode Life. JsiSX ttcauM of lt low rate of lt'oJe ero.lo J. w Auto-lit- . R..i.tor Spa Plug permits 1 wid.r initial sap letting! and makes th... NVj advantage pomblt. Qj? ' I 2 ' TUNE IN "SUSPENSl"-TELEVISI- ON TUESDAY RADIO THURSDAt--C Ait Mofitr, Sne Knowi . . . Clabber Girl is the X baking powder with the balanced double action Ln . . . Right, in the mixing bowl; Light from the oven. 1 smokirs Pipe prefer Prince Albert for Its cool, Uap cooking comfort like the way Mom rolls up fast and easy Into extra-tast- y clgartttHl I (sMOWeCOMfOST) I ' IN A PIPEFUL OF eiJ A'mfh Land wm the New vt humidoz top, p.a. J fSWS SO FRESH ' f MUCH-- ty$$ I', "Crimp cut Prince Albert hat been a favorite in my pip' S ? yen," layi Al EarL "Rich-Urtin- g P. A. imokot mild t cool-e- aiy on the tongue." Right, All P.A.'s choice tobtw U specially treated to insure against tongue bite. ! " .' Jtaiv i w "mn " J I- -"' i ;'l LIKE THE WAY J ' . I ; J NEW HUMIDOR, . . M ' ! TOP KEEPS EAS-Y- ) yfifc Ipa. fresh FOR, TASTY, In. fJ "Yeseir! Prince Albert's crimp cut is greet for fait, My ing of cigarette.," says Paul Fillman. "And tb trim P. A. 'maltin's' smokes are mild, cool and extrs tfJ Yes! For more smoking joy, roll 'em with P. A. i ,LiTiTzn!i MORE MEN SMOKE T THAN ANY OTHER TOBACCO I i THE NATIONAL joy SMOK-E- UJt IN P. A. --QRAwo 0i, opRYj, ,.tBrorJ r I "It It'.b.CUMOU, tOW. do., k... rJtl0nJ, inctntnn kMp nmfl A iJtionjl feeiliHn. ipnccTrnjn&E Mt H STTdDIRV Jr, -- ' . -- '' " , ' 'v,':! , ''. -- . ' ' ' - u.l..i:.... .::.: l... - '""Vtj j, j.: . ....... !1 .'. - '..v. : ' Haven for Refugee Monks . . . Nine crosses, pointing upward from as many towers on the Russian Orthodox monastery near Jordanville, N. Y., stand os a symbol of freedom of religion for the monks and priests who recently have joined founders of the order of St. Job in this country after fleeing persecution in Communist-dominate- d Czechoslovakia. The Russian Orthodox monks who founded the church 13 years ago, and the refugees who joined them last year succeeded in completing their edifice in time to celebrate their Christmas on January 7 in accordance with the Julian calendar upon which all feast days of that church are based. Some of the refugee monks in these pictures asked that their names and their histories be guarded in fear of reprisals on their relatives still living in Communist Russia. But even that fear does not inhibit the fervor that continues to uplift them in their new sanctuary of freedom. MMMMMiMMMMMMIMIlllMIMWIiWWW.llIWlpUIl'M , . ml W r--S:: " I -- 1 til VffiSr Ur Youthful and aged alike, these seven of the refugee monks are shown at their simple dinner in the monastery. They, too, must remain anonymous to the public. The monks do all the work on the 600-ac- re dairy farm surrounding their monastery, living solely on the proceeds. Bishop Seraphim Ivanov (bottom left) is the leader of the group of 14 monks who reached the monastery a year ago after being forced out of Czechoslovakia. In the basement of the monastery (bottom right) the monks were able to set up their first church altar for their Christmas celebration. Here, one of the priests holds a relic of the order up for veneration. mm hj ijiutiiiirJ'wwi'w'.Mp)i.wi.w';)!w s f tS-f- j ."7i SiPDLPTEESg-- . A THE AMAZING TANK STAR TCOM i iSlt AlcRON TOOK HOME TWO GOLD FIOM I L&p25icf THE LAST CXVMPCS WltJNING THE l Air T 5WW AfO PADDLING A LEG ON T 1 I . j.jf , RELAV. A COMPCTiTIVt 9WIMMCR FOP CVEB 7 I ; . ' '" .V '.' YEA2S JIMMV WON THE tCNC AAO LONG" 1 1' 11 : distance Championship when hi was 13. A i s J y AND THE 400 SCO AND 1,500 METERS AT THE 1 U5.CHAMPJeHtP5 WHEN HE VAS 15. ijjy f ''E I94S 5ET AN ALLTIME ATTENDANCE BCCOkD TZSS?J 051:0 "O015 fl BOTH MAJOR AND MINOR LEAOtXS.THE Cjr OUT Cf A BdWTT TYCC MAJOCS PLAYED TO 20,fr 524 FANS AND Btn .FSTA AT 8ETTE:i? THE MINORS TO 42,822,646 FOB A GRAND JTF -- 3THAN I0OMPH.1 TOTAL OF 63,672.170!! mmmL . SPORTUGHT j Cellar May Be Their Destiny By GRANTLAND RICE ' BASEBALL community, ex-tended, A is like any other big community. There U wealth and poverty living fairly close together. On either side of the opulent first-divisio- n Yankees and Cardinals in St. Petersburg, there are two strong tail-en- d contenders at Tampa and Clearwater. They are the Reds and the Phillies. There is a broad rumor to the effect that Chi- - cago's Cubs expect to leave their old pals this season and move higher up, into fourth, fifth or sixth place. If this happens, the Reds at Tampa and Phillies at Clear-water should be the logical candi- - summer that he feared the Phil-lies' youth around 1950 or 1951 since owner Bob Carpenter is quite willing to spend any amount to get The Red-Philli- es Finish Neither Bucky Walters of the Reds nor Eddie Sawyer of the Phillies care to be labelled a tail-en- d contender. But what teams can they beat out? The Phillies have a possible and even probable star in young Richie Ashburn, who batted .333 last sea-son and was the fastest man the league has seen in some years. Ashburn was Injured after playing 117 games, but he is O. K. now and more than keen to prove his first year was no fluke. The second year is al-ways the hardest. He easily may be one of the game's fu-ture stars. The Phillies have another kid in Curt Simmons, an expensive left-hander who is only 19 years old Simmons won seven and dropped 13 games last season. Robin Roberts won seven and dropped nine. Rob-erts, only 22, is another possible star, maybe better than Simmons Waitkus, from the Cubs, will strengthen the Philly infield. This team can be dangerous if it gets better pitching than it picked up through 1948. It is the type of team that won't win any pennant or finish in the first four, but it can beat a lot of ball clubs and should be an improvement over last year. The Reds have a great ball-player and one of baseball's finest citizens In Bucky Walt-ers but, like the Phillies, their strength is too spotty. It could be a different story il Blackwell could hook up with Van-de- r Meer, Wehmeier, Gumbert and Raffehsberger. They have a good power hitter in Hank Sauer with 35 home runs to his credit last year, and a good third baseman in Grady Hatton. Both the Reds and Phillies have good ballplayers scattered here and there but too many others who are not too able. But the fact that teams as good as the Reds and Phillies should be scrapping it out for last place proves the balance of the National League. You wouldn't think that six clubs will beat out this pair and maybe six elubs won't. Thafs only the way it looks as March buds are waiting to show and March winds are getting soft-er in the sun. Grantland Rice dates for the bottom spot This seems to be rather a shame. Eddie Sawyer of the Phillies r i Bucky Walters of the Reds are tv.o popular managers and they have a number of good ballplayers ex-cellent ballplayers. Here are a few who could help any ball club: Reds Ewell Blackwell, Johnny Vander Meer, Ken Raffensberger, Herman Wehmeier and Harry Gumbert all good pitchers; Ray Lamanno, Ray Mueller, Virgil Stall-cup- , Johnny Wyrostek, Hank Sauer, Danny Lltwhiler and Frankie Baumholtz all good ballplayers. The Phillies Robin Roberts, Schoolboy Rowe, Blix Donnelly, Curt Simmons, Ken Heintzelman, Hank Borowy pretty good pitch-ers; Ed Waitkus, Dick Sisler, Gran-ville Hamner, Richie Ashburn, Del Ennis, Johnny Blatnik and Bert Haas pretty good ballplayers. This doesn't Include a num-ber of lively-lookin- g rookies who could help quite a bit. But, unfortunately for the Reds, Ewell Blackwell, their crack pitch-er, is just recovering from a sore arm and a kidney operation. The Phillies have too many young pitchers who still need more experi-ence. Blackwell's early absence and his dubious fate is a heavy blow to the Reds since the six toot, six-inc- h star is one of baseball's best. He would be good for between 22 and 25 victories, even with the pitchers who need experience. Pitchers of this type are just a trifle rarer than a green rhinoceros or a blue tiger. Branch Rickey said privately last Barrinq an earth- - ViN- - "I " X 'OVy Quake, your waul JtlUlm&i 'r' ' Vu'f PICTURES WONT MmmitimimS -- n ..r L-- jA have that annoy-- fxST"vI --n A'"jCv ttl;r ino tenoancv to Ct tMr'" I hang crooked if I yx ftV 'Wh pieces of sand- - xW11' V'pf r: paper or emery tNOi '. CLOTH ON THE BACK v S4-- " "J? fZMW ' ' - ANO AT THE LOWER . - , tWj CORNERS OF THE PICTURE fc Ls ' TSo C' V as shown in the circle. T h ' THIS IS A MUCH BETTER C " 1 L i 7 REMEOY THAN RUBBER, THE Xi--T L ' "' SURFACE OF WHICH HARD- - A hw - ENS TOO SOON. !i--fl I'M s- - I 'VM 'P V0UR PEN C0MES L0SE FROM ITS CAP iCll rj- - SPOTTING YOUR VEST POCKET WITH INK V TRV F,l-IN- 0 THE ENO OF THE PEN (NOT jSStor.r THE PEN P0INT 0F COURSE) TO ALLOW JllJ X; V; THE THREADS TO GET A FIRMER GRIP WHENV0U SCREW ON THE CAP. SUCH r;-- K . 'IWTfT.' . V- 7h TROUBLE USUALLY IS CAUSED BY . ''. , - ' .V.VV WORN THREADS. |