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Show - - . MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH ea ALWAYS POPS vSll lM CRISP AMD I'lUlL-- jtBKDU RELIEF AT LAST FcrYcsr COSJSn Creomulsion relieves promptly because it goes right lo the seat of the trouble to help loosea and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsioo with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOSfiULSION for Coughs.Chest Colds, Bronchitis SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS junior roch JJa6 (Quaint s$ir martiij Slijied Sliirlwai&ter 'well-Mannere-jl t d Standby fi ' A f4. fCT CTANDBY season after season is f JT OtO the shirtwaist f)"'T ' 8 dress. Comfortable and attractive, this version has extended shoul- - Quamt Style ders neat Delted wajstiine and a A QUAINTLY old fashioned fu skirt. Try a colorful striped junior style that's as smart as fabric, paint. Puffed sleeves are short or elbow length and finished with gay Pattern No. 8313 is for sizes 14, 16, 18, bows, collar is edged in tiny ruf-- $: scinch. 44 and size 16 4,4 yards fling or lace. Send an extra twenty-fiv- e cents for your copy of the Spring and Summer Pattern No. 8404 comes In sizes 11, 12, FASHION it's filled with sewing infor- - 13, 14, 16 and 18. Size 12, 4i yards of 3S mation. Free pattern printed inside the or book. s - ?f ' i 'J EASyv Luscious Bran Muffins , . . . with Raisins! Tasty Kellogg's All-Br- and lus-cious raisins ... a mouth-wateri-flavor combination! 2 tablespoons 1 cup sifted shortening flour cup sugar 2 teaspoons or molasses baking 1 egg powder -- fran teaspoon salt cup milk eup raisins Blend shortening and sugar thor-oughly; add egg and beat well Stir in Kellogg's All-Br- and milk. Let soak until most of moisture is taken up. Sift flour with baking powder and salt; stir in raisins. Add to first mix-ture and stir only until flour dis-appears. Fill greased muffin pans two-thir- full. Bake In a mod-erately hot oven (400F.) 25 to 30 minutes. Make 9 marvelous muffins. : ifaKyoirif America s most r famous natural l Mil fln&tittj laxative cereal "flM jffl to a bowlful today! jtdj.Utitiil i SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 South Wells St. Chicago 7, 111. Enclose 25 cents In coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No Size: Address Rub in gently-war- ; f ' ing, soothing Ben-Ga-y ...It acts last! Ben-Ga- y f- - ' contains up to 2 Vt times i ; I more methyl salicylate v? - J and menthol pain-re- - f - - - " lieving agents known to every doctor than five , i other widely offered J? , rub-in- s. Get genuine y JySv' Ben-Ga- y, the original V&T """3) j&f? "' Baume Analgesique, for speedy relief 1 ' ifV Also for Pain due to RHEUMATISM, MUSCLE ACHE, ' - S : and COLDS. ' Y L&k&t Ask for Mild Ben-Ga-y j f V for Children. . wSvTAI--- " V V-ON-l Let the Ads Guide You When Shopping TWiniHiiimMiiiiliMMMiyiH'iE iamti Ull'Mlli mM ' j WE 30-D- I ITTfnfhd'Pl U TEST CONVINCED ME UlUltildlL CAMELS ARE SO MILD iWT'fW j I AND THEY HAVE SUCH UMJ3&lidlteU?H I WONDERFUL FLAVOR Ur : : , 4 W t'f X( J T BONDER YOU SMOKE ii I '1 ELS THE MORE ' 'i?i&S?M''' Vlt5o2sA THAT RICH, FULL M sf4Ti FLAVOR-IT- 'S ft"' ?XL-- In a recent test of hundredsof people who smoked only K Camels for 30 days, noted throat specialists, making weekly pJfflA IS examinations, reported t ffH ' fl NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROAT IRRITATION kpc due to smoking CAMELS ""4 Sinking Hill Puzzles Canada HALLONQUIST, SASK.-Ther- e's a sinking hill in this dis-trict, forty miles southeast of Swift Current, and it seems to be disappearing fairly fast. One old timer said that in 1909 the hill was normal except that livestock shunned it. In 1911 the hill began to crack up and portions sank from six to eight inches. Now a valley three-quarter- s of a mile long and 50 feet deep has devel oped. One engineer surmised that a vast bed of quicksand may lie underneath the ground. Others suspect underground water ero-sion. Pigskin Previews rpHE MONTHS of September, Oc- - tober and November still lie some distance to windward. But things are happening now that will affect the coming autumn such as arranging football schedules. Es-pecially the schedule that Notre Dame will face. It might be mentioned here that Notre Dame, after all the hullaba-loo, did slightly better than all f J? right Southern Methodist, Tulane and North Carolina offer three of the better games of the year. Southern Meth-odist was South-western champion last fall, and prob-- Grantland Rice ably will be again this year with Doak Walker and Kyle Rote back in action. Tulane has one of the best teams In the South. Tulane and Vanderbilt look to be two southern leaders next fall. North Carolina will have the bril-liant Justice and the able Art Wei-n- er back, but there will be many gaps to fill. Carl Snavely will fill them well. He usually does. These three additions to the Irish slate are hooked up with a far stronger Navy team. Southern Cali-fornia, Purdue, Indiana, Iowa, Mich-igan State and Washington no easy march. This is better than the average schedule. It has no de-liberate soft spots that so many others have. It will certainly be total of eight hard games. Notre Dame, like Michigan, North Carolina and others, will lose good men and return good men. But yon can gamble If you like to gamble that Frank Leahy will have a first-cla-ss squad with fast, hard-hittin- g runners and at least two good passers. You can also be fairly sure he will have a good line. What about Army's schedule? It has a number of soft spots, but it also has some y bridges to cross. One of them Is Michigan. That's a sure thing. Others can be Stanford, Pennsyl-vania and Navy. But outside of Michigan, there is nc trouble ahead. This forces too much pressure on the Michigan game. A defeat here can play havoc with either team's final ranking more with Army than with Michigan. Army will have a fine back-fiel- d and uncertain line strength with such stars as Yeoman, Henry, etc., missing. Ber ends will be her strongest point. Navy, again, has no chance to beat her schedule, the toughest In football. The 1949 menu includes Southern California, Notre Dame, Army, Pennsylvania, Duke, Prince-ton and others of heavy calibre. But the 1949 Navy squad should move well up in the year's ranking. Oklahoma will be strong again. Bud Wilkinson has a winning grip on the situation with a team that can exchange class with anyone around. Ivy League 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 re-quirements in the league are well above the average, no matter what you hear. As far as 1949 is concerned, the colleges and univer-sities will have no- - apoligies to of-fer any section in the matter of football ranking. Last fall, Cornel 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 in any section will have backs to match the Big Red or the Big Green. I mean such backs as Johnny Clayton of Dart-mouth, a passer of the Ber-tel- li type or Frank Miller and Jerry Fleischmann of Cornell. Lefty James and Tuss 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 Har-vard. Princeton's outlook is good. So is Harvard's. Both can be first class. Brown can also move up. Pennslyvania is never weak. George Munger loses Chuck Bednarik and a few other good men, but if you keep track, year after year, you'll find the Red and Blue a rather rugged barrier. Columbia is definitely below 1948 form, even with the re-doubtable Lou Little in charge. Columbia is never flooded with material, and no team can lose 12 of Its best men from a small squad such men as Kusserow, Rossides, etc. and hope to have much left. It will take the full genius of Lou Little to win a fame here and there. s- - he f; Released ay WNU Features. By INEZ GERHARD IS." RADIO, if you say "Mary u Margaret" everybody knows "Mc-aBrid-is understood. The fabulous M. M., far handsomer than her pic-- u ijtures indicate, told me she'd been forced into everything she had done publicity, newspaper work, radio, ce She must have been an excellent ill, greporter; she is one of the best in-terviewers on the air, yet has the jo Ut v ' j d'sht' - i ou dS.-.j4v.- t l III m ,r licksi - , HEK I JEY MARY MARGARET McBRIDE ED'f ' chectrare gift or making her program ?orfir',ound completely spontaneous, She Uw'iays she chooses guests whome she ,slnds interesting, feeling that they nust interest others also. And she iccepts only those sponsors whose iljiroducts she believes in; those en-- 1 biusiasitc plugs are completely B Hi Slincere. "n 'tjj a Novelist James Hilton, whose J I jrHallmark Playhouse" is on CBS ' "Tiursdays, is celebrating applying or U. S. citizenship by writing his 'ffiCSirst novel with an American locale. Acti' won't be Hollywood, where so gjiany of his books have been ramatized, and so many of leiot 'nose s'ars have been on his pro-- y miram. He feels it is not truly epresentative of America. warm:' surface Colombia Broadcasting Sys-,gct- o. tem seems to be aiming at the lust btiiogan "You name 'em, we've Fo'oigot "em-- shortIy a,ler Bin& mal Crosby switched to CBS, Red Skelton followed; come fall, he'll Join their Snnday night parade. 5N$;Television may have Hollywood :ared, but there is nothing wrong ands ufjtj, the motion picture industry if timeiat pictures like "A Letter to Three won't cure. With a perfect an excellent story, fine direc--iwp-this 20th Century-Fo- x produc-illVb- n has everything that takes pay-na- g customers into theatres and ves them the worth of their N,R) oney. houl lb tuibinjlf you look closely at the fire se a reene in Columbia's "The Man Jiffertfcom Colorado" (set in 1865) you'll -'e an airplane in the sky. It got 'proved accidentally was patrolling the aed. ea for any spreading of the fire. 'fifti; "Let's get It straight abont pte&jmy reaction to the great open am: ipaces of Arizona," said Jane 1 " Greer, of RKO's "station fjjirest." It isn't true that I nted when I saw my first )l",esnake. I merely screamed gziko that people came running j;H!rom Flagstaff, 30 miles away. Knd when I saw a big- - taran-";ul- a In the toe of my slipper, I ixwiff" leaving my tent anyway." Villiam Holden is a great man. But now he is under lit, .Miiers to stay out of the sun. He an escaped killer in "The .fffrk Past" an dnas to preserve a lijtitfison pallor played without bene-- of make-up- . MONTI The new March of Time, "On 1 p'tage," shows what only Insid- - W usua"'' ee what goes on U5eh' the scenes of two suc-- sj Ifl' ssy P'ays now running in aew York. They are "Anne of Cv"e Tnons!,nd Days," starring dist"fe Harrison, and "Red riodic dsSloves," starring Charles Boy- - ike yu,r, both of whom appear In the lorn i:'ic,ur5. "long yith many other comPc mous people of the theatre. r eff' wrtonffutual's delightful "Twenty Ques- - M'S S?S'" now ta its fourth year. stars :e members of one family Fred ".'Deventer, the news-Ste- r; his wife, Florence, and their fiTJijfr Bobby. Their skill and in- - UT'ViUity are Iikely,to make their fJJS guests on the program seem J?ue-tie- while the audience, rent! wing tjjg answers iaughs and by ""' $ permit . F' j",n an Arizona location trip Guinn "w '"""'liama won a 22 target rifle by v. maturing first in a "flying tin can" owe" He donated his prize to a 'ouchj;le for the benefit of a veterans' etS'"' )ital' Won over Dick Powell, nd """.wg others. t hins v, ,lduntilliam L. Shirer was later and bl,t' '.' Betting home to Sunday din-o- n c..'; following his broadcast. Mrs. Sn tHJ1" was irked, till she found that t vas staying to talk things over lar- - John B- - Kennedy. Now she Just Kennedy to dinner. . Ty' j KATHLEEN MORRIS Failing Msrrfegss Bell Syndicate WNU Features By KATHLEEN NURRIS 75 MERICA comes first with me in everything. Ninety-nin- e times in a hundred she stands head and shoulders above the rest of the world. In the hun-dredth case I pass as lightly over her shortcomings as I can and hope and know that coming gen-erations will correct them. So one evening some weeks ago I was made really unhappy by the quite innocent and unaffected talk of a certain French professor. We happened, as we sat about a .friend's fire, to get on the subject of European marriage and the en-tirely different attitude In which young persons overseas approach this tremendous subject. And as I listened, I had uncom-fortably to admit in my soul that theirs is a wiser attitude and a wholesomer plan than ours and one calculated to build better homes and children, better com-munities and better men and women. Accept Marriage Naturally "Marriage with our women," he said, "is an accepted state. It is not an experiment. The girl be-comes a wife just as definitely as she is a French woman, blonde or dark, short or tall, hardworking, well-to-d- o or somewhere between. Married, she and her husband can afford so much or so little; he needs her help in the shop or res-taurant or farm, as a secretary or with the hospitality that maintains his position. They want and are expected to have children. "They face the facts," he said. "They do not attempt to deny or elude them. They make the most of what they have. Our women like the quiet certainty of mar-riage, with its plans, protection and we feel that we gain more . . 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 France's sober and industrious people of the great mid-dle 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 as those of their employers. No Need for Pretense "Youngsters," she said, "ap-proach 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 has she. But tradition and training save ..them both from many pitfalls that your young married persons know and of which they become victims. "The families and friends do not drop in on them unexpectedly dur-ing the first year. They are not expected to take groups of young friends to expensive night clubs and foot the bill. Children are ex-pected, and with the coming of children the woman finds herself more important than before. She is wife, mistress, mother, house-keeper. That she remains balanced and and equal to doing her duty means that every-thing else in the household goes well." He told me that psychologists do not do a good business in France, in the Scandinavias or among Bel-gian, 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 don't know where they stand. And too often the husband is as un-fit for partnership and as confused as the wife. She wants amusement; she wants her sitting room torn to pieces and done over; she wants a fur coat. What she wants has no reference at all to what money she has to spare for it. She and l:er lusband go to cocktail parties and vening bars, quarrel, come home ialf-sic- k with a sense of frustration. Bricker Asks Study To See if Jlmerica Faces Dictatorship DETROIT. A commission to find out whether the United States is rushing toward dictatorship has been suggested by Sen. John Bricker (R., Ohio). Bricker expressed concern that the federal system was being aban-doned and with it individual free-doms. Bricker's suggestion was made during a four-ma- n panel discussion of the federal system at a meeting of state officials. Bricker declared: "Maybe state governments are an expensive, archaic, manifestation ol a bygone day and should be dis-solved. Heaven forbid such a rec-ommendation but If they are let's find it out and stop paying lip ser-vic- e to the federal system." The proposed commission, pat-terned afte"r the Hoover group which studied the executive branch, would study the division of powers between levels of government. It would also determine appropriate fields of taxation. The senator said the commission should be composed of representa-tives from the three branches of federal government, from the state government and from the people. The discussion brought out that constant growth of national govern-ment was due chiefly to failure ol states to assume responsibilities. FIRST ABD to the AILING HOUSE I . J by Roger C. Whitman QUESTION: "When we moved into our apartment, we purchased from the previous tenant the inlaid linoleum on the kitchen floor. The quality is excellent, but the color is a dirty gray-gree- n in a marble-ize- d pattern. Is there any product which will stain or dye the linole-um (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 "spatter-dash- " finish. For the stip-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 sec-ond color that you will use for stip-pling, 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. Strike the brush ferrule against the stick so 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. Oil Boom Town of Today Quiet as One's Back Yard RANKIN, TEX. This is what passes today for an oil boom town. It's as quiet as your backyard. Gone are the brawling boom days when poor men struck it rich over-night, when roughnecks drank bootleg whisky like water and fought in muddy streets for the sake of fighting. That happened until the late 1920's wherever new oil fields were found, from Pennsylvania to California. It's still happening In Canada, oil men say, but in the Nnited States the boom town has grown stolid. Changes in machines and men and laws are behind the boom town's new respectability. Workers used to have to crowd into an undersized hamlet near the field, or live in tents and bunk-hous-on the job because their rattletrap cars bogged down in narrow roads hub deep in mud. Now they can spread out, as far away from the field as they feel like driving over paved highways. In the old times, hardly a day passed that a man wasn't hurt on a rickety rig. Now equipment is safe, and tested to make sure it stays that way. Amongs today's roughnecks you'll find college men petroleum engi-neers and geologists. They're get-ting ready to be executives by learning the horny - handed end of the business. Wildcatters, who drilled wells with barely enough money to buy baling wire to. hold their rigs to-gether, went out of business when the big companies started leasing and the states began laying down the law about where and how close together wells could be sunk. Rankin, with a rich new field In her lap, is still a peaceful town of ranchers and storekeepers . Reducing Lamb Losses Fortifying sheep rations with co-balt and iodized salt is a promising means of cutting down lamb losses on some farms. More Than Brains Needed For Success in Careers CHICAGO. Why does the college-traine-d man frequently fail at his first job? The answer he is still a child in one way or another, because he lacks one or more of seven basic traits. That is the answer given by Dr. Robert N. McMurry based on a survey by his management firm which studied 1,167 trainees directly hired from college by 247 compan-ies. He listed the seven traits as: The ability to stay long enough with a company to repay the in-vestment in training. The ability to accept responsibil-ity. Perseverance, or the ability "to follow a path to the end." The quality of being agreeable to different groups and different per-sons. Identification of his personal goals with those of the firm. And the ability to exercise author-ity without belligerence. "Absence of these traits, or any one of them, indicates failure of an individual to grow emotionally," said Dr. McMurry. |