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Show RD I, u 1 MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE. DELTA. UTAH SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Scltoof Jroch for IJouna &ts home dressmaker. rio news free Sdmi.i book. pattern .''"isii h 25 cents. prUlti SEWING CIKCLE PATTi S30 South Wells su rk,RN EFl Enclose 25 cents la , "'. pattern desired. colo (or ajj Pattern No Name Address JJI ' 8360 2 yn. ' ' School Dress BUTTONS in pairs accent the of this exciting school dress for s. Try a pretty candy striped fabric, used in contrast for the shaped yoke, and make a self bow to perch at the neckline. Pattern No. 8360 comes In sizes 4, 8, 6, 7, 8, 10 and 12. Size 5, 2s yards of The Fall and Winter FASHION otters a wealth of sewing information for the Many Doctors V1 recommend a,J SCOTT'S EMULSION U - " It yos etth colds often because you , S don't get enough - . , J A&D Vitamin tood-,o- be tnm for tnt way Sen;', Emalsion helps build you up and ward off colds, build .tamins 'j resistance. Scott's ia a H;iiH & ENERGY FOOD rich in natarol ASD ViUnin and energy. building natjnl oil. Good tasting. Eai, u digest Economical too. Boy today at your drug store, fMORE than just a tonic it's powerful nourisdmenll Planning for the Future? Buy U. S. Savings Bondi! I '.J' v- - j Quick relief with l t ') ,1 MENTHOLATUM i' v 4 i j, J Don't let coughing wrack I tttti his chest-r- ub on time proved i 'sStSsF 1 1 Mentbolatum. See how quickly I , $f I Mentholatum's famous com-- Y ASES i, f jVwT i bination of menthol, camphor 1 TIOHT SORE 4st otei 'nSre(ents e'P 'el-- 1 sen withut unl" MUSCLES ' V ' con8est'on i.SibtiX V ing tender skin. Its sooihing I P'JS ' LESSENS vapors comfort inflamed I SkJ CONSeSDOAjVc bronchial passages, ease I, fNO COV&HlN&tS coughingspasms.35and75(. f PERSONAL TC'JCH PTHZ ou t I our home-tow- newspaper by iny "outside" publications. . and for you and your inKreils. j your subscription paid up and kP j )'( ;, mI... " "' f ; Rub in gently-warmin- g, soothing Ben-Ga- y for fa relief from muscular soreness and pain. Ben-Ga- y tains up to 2Vi times more methyl salicylate an I menthol-famo- us pain-relievi- agents known to e i Y doctor-th- an five other widely offered rub-in- ins on genuine Ben-Ga- the original Baume Analgesiq ; Also for Pain due to RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, and COLDS. j ! Ask for Mild y for Children. . a I ' , v y " ' ' ' . t ".w ' . i Glorify the Savory Turkey! (See Recipes Below) Thansgiving Topics THANKSGIVING IS ONE of the important feast days of the year, and in a sense it's the beginning ( of the holiday season. Let's make it hearty, gay, full of thanks and cheer. Since everyone expects a big . feast on the table for the special oc- - MS) THANKSGIVING MENU Baked Oysters Roast Turkey with Apple-Sausag- e Stuffing Mashed Potatoes Baked Sweet Potatoes Broccoli au Gratin or Baked Squash with Peas Cranberry Salad Relishes Finger Rolls Beverage Pumpkin Pie Recipe Given. in nuts and pineapple, making sure of getting an equal distribution. Re-fill shells with this mixture. Cut the marshmallows into small pieces and spread over the tops.' Bake in a hot oven until brown. Broccoli an Gratin (Serves 6) Use one pound of broccoli. Select stalks with dark green, tightly casion, plan it carefully and start working on it in advance so every-thing can be picture perfect. Plan an all white or ivory cloth and nap-kins. as a simple background for the table. Have your glasses sparkling, silver shining, and the china washed to spic and span neatness. IF YOU WANT to have a first course, plan an easy soup like cream of mushroom or asparagus or celery, a clear soup made be-forehand. Here's a baked oyster dish that makes a nice appetizer: Baked Oysters Use four to six oysters for each serving. Open the shells, cover oys-ter with Thousand Island dressing and sprinkle with a sharp grated American cheese. Bake until heated through and the cheese is melted and browned. Serve in the shells with crisp crackers. closed buds. Cook in boiling, salted water until easily pierced with fork. Drain. Make one cup thin white sauce, using one For the turkey, allow from three-quarte- rs to one cup of bread crumbs for each pound of bird. Here's an inter-esting stuffing tablespoon butter, one tablespoon flour and one cup milk. Place broc-coli in buttered casserole, pour over the white sauce, top with buttered bread crumbs and grated American cheese. Bake until cheese melts. Baked Squash With Green Peas Select small squash, split and bake until tender. Fill with cooked green peas, seasoned and buttered, and sprinkle with crumbled bacon. Pumpkin Pie (Makes 2 pies) S cups steamed and strained pumpkin or 1 large can of pumpkin 1 cup light brown sugar 1 cup white sugar 2 tablespoons molasses Y teaspoon powdered cloves 3 teaspoons cinnamon S teaspoons ginger 1 teaspoon salt 4 eggs, slightly beaten 2 cups scalded milk Mix ingredients in order given and bake in crust-line- d pie plates. Set pie on bottom shelf of oven for 10 minutes, then move pie to middle shelf and reduce heat to moderate and bake for 40 minutes or until a silver knife comes out clean. As a variation for pumpkin pie, add one, teaspoon of grated orange rind to the filling before baking, if desired. Finger Rolls (Refrigerator) H cup sugar 1 tablespoon salt 2 tablespoons lard 1 tablespoon butter 2 caps boiling water 2 yeast cakes H cup lukewarm water 1 teaspoon sugar 2 eggs, beaten light 1 pounds flour Dissolve first four ingredients Into boiling water. Let cooL Dissolve the yeast and sugar into the luke-warm water. Combine first two mixtures, add the eggs. Add one-ha- lf of the flour and beat thorough-ly, for 10 minutes. Add remaining flour and beat until mixture blisters. Brush top with melted butter, cover and place in refrigerator until mix-ture doubles. (Four to six hours). Shape into rolls. Let rise for two to three hours before baking in a hot oven for 10 to 15 minutes, 'or until golden brown. Released by WNU Features. which you'll like for variety: Apple Sausage Stuffing (For 12 pound turkey) 1 pound pork sausage links 12 cups bread cubes 2 tablespoons minced onion Salt to taste 1 teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons minced parsley 6 tart apples, diced 2 tablespoons sugar Cut sausage in thin slices. Saute and add other ingredients. Toss lightly and stuff bird. To Roast Turkey Allow 30 minutes to each pound for roasting time, using a moderate oven. Baste frequent-ly. If turkey becomes too dark, cover with water-moistene- d cheese-cloth. Cranberry Salad (Serves 8) 1 pound cranberries 2 navel oranges 2 cups sugar 1 package lime-flavor- gelatin cup boiling water 1 cup diced celery 1 oup chopped nutmeats Put cranberries' and oranges through food chopper. Add sugar and let stand for two hours, stirring frequently. Dissolve gelatin in boil-ing water. When cool, add the fruit mixture, celery and nuts. Pour into a mold and chill until firm. Baked Stuffed Sweet Potatoes (Serves 6) 6 medium-size- d sweet potatoes H cup chopped walnuts 2 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon salt 1 dozen marshmallows 1 cup shredded pineapple Juice of 1 orange Bake the potatoes until tender, then scoop them out of the shells. Mash the pulp well, adding the butter, salt and orange juice. Stir With the blandness of veal as a main dish, you can properly add contrast with an onion soup as first course, and a cottage pudding with chocolate sauce as dessert. Whiteflsh is so mild that it can easily be served with a piquant shrimp sauce, spinach or beets as a vegetable, and a tart lemon des-sert. With a simple baked ham dinner, serve oven browned potatoes and green peas with butter sauce, lem-on or pineapple ice or sherbet com-pletes the menu LYNN SAYS: Give Contrast to Menus With Careful Planning Certain food combinations are so good together because of contrast in flavor, texture and color that the meal seems more satisfying. Here are some foods you'll like for fam-ily or entertaining: A sweet potato casserole with ham loaf makes a delicious main course. Creamed cabbage adds fur-ther contrast, and an apple dessert adds just the right finish. inn e ner s I FICTION cwab? J " WSk I SQUALLS I 0!; X&frjr By MAUD McCURDY WELCH lm P ' ,3" Gramma's experience in squalls with her seafaring husband pre- - the pared her admirably for the role she was called upon to play when ?'of Nedra and John called off their marriage. to bring these two stubborn kids to-gether would come to nothing at all. It looked plain enough that John and Nedra had no intention what-ever of making up their quarrel. . . . Next morning Mother Nature her-self decided to take a hand. They awakened to find the ship tossing in a sudden gale, thunder roaring in demoniac fury, lightning flashing with every split second, the waves tearing at the ship as if possessed of the fury of a thousand devils. Nedra dressed hurriedly, went into Gramma's room to find her also dressed, as early as it was. "Is it a hurricane?" Nedra asked shakily. "I don't know, dear. I think I'll just go and try to find out." "Don't stay long. I'm beginning to be frightened," Nedra pleaded. "I'll be back in a jiffy. There's nothing to worry about. At least I think not." She'd hardly disappeared before there was a loud knock on the door and John came in. "Nedra, Nedra darling, I had to find you, I had to tell you in ... in case anything happened, that I still love you, and I always will." "It's been the desire of my life to travel on a fruit-boat,- " Gram-ma said fervently. Nedra stared at her for a mo-ment; then yielded. "In that case we'll go." So it happened that in a very few more days, Gramma and Nedra found themselves on a fruit-boa- t bound for the intriguing destination of Trinidad. And on their very first morning on deck, they both saw a tall, dark young man standing at the rail, gazing moodily out to sea. Nedra's heart almost stopped. She clutched Gramma's arm and drew her around to the other side so quickly that she almost lost her ; , : iff n --ry s ( 1 f J i h u3 . r "k "XJEDRA had been crying. Sitting ln ner chair Dy big window in the living room, Gramma went elimi on knitting. In one quick glance t pU she'd seen that the girl had tried lent to hide the tear-stain- s by an inex- - the! pert dabbing of powder around her he pretty blue eyes, is. U After a minute Gramma said cas- - Jesst ually, "John left early." "And not a minute too soon," pel Nedra returned quickly, sinking jicat deeper into the fireside chair and jca( turning her face away. "Ho, so you two had a quarrel." T(j Gramma knitted a little faster than j before, owirj "No, a conflagration, an explo-- witlj sion, a dissolution, a parting of the riate ways." Nedra's voice was both ate angry and vehement, and a little yfl tearful too. "As bad as that?" Gramma In- - jawr quired mildly. ta "I gave him bis ring. It's all ft ol over," Nedra swallowed a sob i 2-- i: quickly. ;p ai Gramma made a little clucking ft. fr sound but she went on plying her needles industriously. A, At last Nedra burst out unhap- - 2.5 pily. "Well, aren't you going to l console me, or congratulate me, 956 whichever the case may be?" cor Gramma stopped knitting for a wii;! moment, looked up. "You and John attle.i have quarreled before. They are )elta! something like the squalls we'd ?c. ft! sometime meet up with on the Saint :se fr Lawrence when I'd made a trip ' with your grandfather on his steam- - ltJn17i! er. He was a you know. Well, there'd be a terrible LarJ lot of noise and wind, and then the , Sal most beautiful .calm you ever saw. i wad It's natural for people in love like am a you and John to quarrel once in a t. dfl while." 1270 Nedra sat up. "Darling, you're 17S, an incurable sentimentalist. John . r and I are sensible and modern and Lanj analytical about love, as all young gajl people are nowadays. We've ,had I 0 several bitter quarrels since we be-- rom came engaged, so we've simply had - goiri to face the fact that we're not com- - n NE patible and that marriage would be wat a mistake." ated -- It Was sensible of course to face ft. w y,;s before it was too late." "and "Its the modern way," Nedra id in sa'd 'n a srna desolate voice. be , "But love is not modern," Gram- - and ma observed quietly. Then she d to added, "but of course someday' :tle. you'll meet the right man." resisl The sudden white horror of Ned- - the ra's sweet face was like a shock, reaso "There'll never be another man, i3j never!'' she exclaimed passionate- - iled m1 , . State y' as rose a room. (l ' on Two or three days passed. One day at noon Nedra was lying on a E. Hi chaise longue in her room, listlessly State turning the pages of a magazine :ation when Gramma burst in, excitingly :ation, waving two important looking tick- - jj ets. "Listen, darling, we're going . . plaaes. We're shipping on a fruit-bo-for . . . for . . ." she studied the tickets for a moment, "for Trin- - 1 idad." Jfaj "Where on earth is that?" Nedra ti4 asked indifferently, still pretending f- - to be interested in her magazine. I Gramma lifted her shrewd dark ) brows. "My dear, I don't seem to have the slightest idea, but if we "77 3 stay on the boat long enough, I imagine we'll find out." 'iM Nedra sat up. "Now, look, you I absurd darling, if you're taking me J on a sea voyage because you think """ j my heart is broken, that's out. Girls 'j these days when disappointed in Indee': love, dont waste time languishing. They go in for careers, maybe poli- - 11. W; tics or something." "We were silly to think we could," Nedra agreed softly. The next moment he had her in his arms. "And I ' still love you, John. The moment I knew the ship was in danger, I thought of you." Nedra's voice was a happy whisper. He bent his head and tilted her chin, "Which only goes to prove, dearest, that love is something that escapes all logic and reason and analysis. We can't argue ourselves out of it just on the pretense of being realistic." "We were silly to Uiink we could," Nedra agreed softly. "The only reason we quarreled," John went on, "was because of my absurd jealousy, because I love you so very much." "No," Nedra contradicted ador-ingly, "it was my bad temper." John shook his head quickly. "You have the temper of an angel, and we'll never, never quarrel again in the future . . . if . . . there is a future left to us," he finished brave-ly. Neither of them was aware that the wind had ceased its wild roar and the deceitful sea had suddenly become as calm and benign as summer day. Still holding each other in a close embrace, they hardly heard Gram-ma when she came back and saw them together. "Just a squall," she murmured softly as she went into her own stateroom, a happy smile wreathing itself around her lips. breath. "Hey, what goes?'.' Gram-ma asked in Nedra's own jargon. "That was John," Nedra ex-claimed breathlessly. Gramma straightened her neat black toque and got herself better organized. Then Nedra's voice came suddenly accusingly, "And you knew it all the time. You did this on purpose." She whirled around angrily, "I'm going to my cabin and I'm going to stay there." Nedra kept her word. She stayed in all day, even though after she'd had her dinner, Gramma reminded her that there was nothing on earth more beautiful than a moonlit eve-ning at sea. "What do I care about a silly old moon," Nedra retorted in a voice that shook with tears. TT SEEMED a stalemate, so Gram- - ma went on deck alone and soon found John, his boyish face looking tired and drawn even in the semi-ligh- t. Gramma slipped into the chair beside him, and he said "Look here, Gramma, a man can't go a thousand miles away, more or less, to forget a girl and stay on the same boat with her all the way." "Why don't you two youngsters make up?" "We decided that if we quarreled before marriage, we'd do the same thing afterward. We're trying to be logical and modern but . . ." his voice trailed away sadly. "Well, someday you'll meet an-other girl," Gramma said lightly. "That'll never happen . . . never. Don't even mention a thing like that." John's voice was hoarse with pain. But just the same, it looked more and more as if Gramma's plotting .First Illinois" Illinois' first newspaper. noi, Herald, was m kaskia in 1814. The second no.s Immigrant, appeared neetown In 1818. Raskask ' the state', leading city i over and now lies at ft Tk, with a population of les, than 2 I recently was moved away fromV Fire-Fli- es Use Light Signals to Find Mates Man uses light signals in mod-ern warfare, but fire-flie- s have been using this method of signal-ing for thousands of years. Fire-flies have their light appartus on the underside of the abdomen. The intermittent light flashes are signals that enable these beetles to find their mates. This luminous organ is controlled by the nervous system, enabling fire-flie- s to sig-nal at will to attract a girl friend. ad by NANCY PEPPER WEEK Now, that your longer skirts and petticoats have forced you out of socks and saddles and into nylons and heels, we're declar- - r ing a frfr' Jk nylons" week. We f?5$f appealed to our hi x? style scouts for ideas on nylon pres- - jwSsJ I H fJ ervation and they've Imw II I I come through as 19 ft, J usual with flying "y colors also with fewer runs. If nylons are one of your economic problems you might want to try out their ideas. Preventative Measures No more snags and runs from rough desk and chair edges in school, if you take a piece of sandpaper along with you and do a competent smoothing down job. Then the only disaster you need fear when you get up to go to the blackboard is not knowing the right answers. First-Ai- d Equipment Carry col-orless nail polish with you wherev-er you go to stop those runs ln their tracks. Use bright red nail polish to identify your stockings with your initials at the tops to avoid con-fusion with other nylons in the fam-ily. Nail polish is good for the nails, too in case you forget. Proven Precautions Wash your new nylons before you wear them and wash after each wearing. One teen tells us a pinch of salt in the first rinsing strengthens the fibres. We only have her word for it. Don't hang them over the radiator to dry. If your nails and hands are rough, put on a pair of cotton gloves be-fore handling your nylons f, ..! Il. II Nil J to ? . d i 1 dt .'r- - Grace Noll Crowell J IRTI I AW f STAND before a jeweler's plate glass pane: bJ " LlyaM 1 1 That crystal-dea- r conductor of the light. C" Y O jssk j0t I watch the sunshine pierce the gorgeous stain Ad S lLTA j tfllf itfl of rare sems dustered Aece Defore my sisht; ; Crimson and purple fires banked in gold, v." ' i And diamonds splintering the air, J E Deep fires of brilliant beauty to behold V ; 1 Displayed for any who may pass them thefe. I think of God whose gracious hand prepares ZZ His living truths for all mankind to see. v They shine as cleaily as these jeweled wares, W-- I To ever be revealed by you and me. yCjyJ l Lord, shine through me as jewels shine through , It Ox glass, ZZZZjZIIIlZ: That men may see thy beauty as they pass-j! mows' |