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Show 1 MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE. DELTA, UTAH SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Tailored Set for Larger Sizes Pretty Frock Has Two Versions 3 YW in 'S-- P 3206 0 whobakeathome) fr ONLY lg Wiat makes vomen hap7y iWp' i'-C-C I WHENPISSOLVEP fi K ' 4 IWCKAGEEqUAlSl MCOMPRESSEp f JlSII Mtrt 11 at a time. Extra-activ- e u-S-fr Wj$$Wf ... always handy! 00 3 times as many &yr II women prefer FLEiscii!.!i:::rsE . ii Simple, Versatile II SIMPLE yet extremely smart frock that's as versatile as can be. Wear the collared version for daytime, omit the collar and add your favorite jewelry for impor-tant dates. Choice of sleeves. Pattern No. 3206 is a sew-rit- e perfo-rated pattern for sizes 12, 14. 16, 18 and 20. Size 14, short sleeve, 4' yards of long sleeve, 5Vt yards. SEWING CntqLE PATTERN DEPT. S30 Sontb Welti St. Chicago 1. 25 cents In coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No. Size Name Address - So Easy to Sew TAILORED to perfection, and so A easy to sew is this neat slip and pantie set for the larger fig-ure. Waistline darts insure a smooth fit, lace makes a pretty finish. Pattern No. 8517 Is a sew-rit- e perfo- rated pattern in sizes 36. 38. 40, 42. 44, 46. 48, 50 and 52. Size 38, slip, 2'A yards ol panties. IV4 yards. You'll be delighted with the smart new sewing ideas contained in the Fall and Winter FASHION special designs, free pattern printed inside the book. 25 cents. ed Shape Evenly Rounded or Flat Top Uniform Color T V?SJ Tender, Slightly Rough Crust. Even Grain, No Tunnels 7 miM0M-:- Moist, Tender Crumb I EMsv3 Stuffy cs3 FAST! Lf7 Quick. Put a few i A. Vicks V , ) Nose Drops In each y'S'r nostril. ol 'Sr works right where 7 trouble is. Believes 3, head cold stuffiness ys ' sC a108 instantly I C3 VICKS NOSE DSOPS rGDAH6E3 ofLfFI? Are you going through the func-tional mlddle age' period peculiar to women (38 to 52 yrs.) ? Does thla mate you suffer from hot flashes, feel to nervous, hlghstrung, tired? Then do try Lydla E. Plnfcham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. P Latham's Compound also has what Doctors call a sto-machic tonic effect I V LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S mS L LUSCIOUS 6AICES team 4t&'$ NO CREAMINGl NO L. 4lfev jv ; ONLY AN EMULSOR1ZED SHORTENING d jt GIVES THESE FINER CAKES, SO FAST! J V7S v i'.'W To make any favorite cake delicious, use creamy f S: -V , V- - y 4-- ' 'i" " " V, : il f Snowdrift. But to get everybody saying "Tto 13 ; I ' s V. f TV: VifY Ughter, more luscious"-t-ry Snowdrift's : ; , ZJ&y"i ; 'V' rW-"- N cakes. Say goodbye to creamink and separate ,f:;:,V I "'JS' ' S" "1 You mix all your batter together o lA V 'r!; J - - i' 1 the same bowL Like ? , Ii'' 'C : J k I l 1 emulsorizeci. Only an emulsorized shortening k : - blends so fast 'n' easy! Get wonderful, wonderM S'U' , ' ; I h - r cakes-lusci- ous as long as they last! C V...O.POOH.OI. , asimnu tae2e9; HT S Tender biscuit. tUU WSSSST--? j K VVyCrispy fries ( ?Aj j-- , gtet. ggn, Irom mm j g ! CUP brow; packed ff tU icing Pf,?; mid water to VX J K, atter thort.ningmod. bY th VieQ have become dull can be fSo,. holding them over th "i steaming kettle and .v,Spoilt ' them with a en to" to bring upftP;( Cold All Over The warmth of the Gulf stream makes Murmansk the only ice-fre- e Russian port except those on the Black Sea. Archangel, five de-grees farther south, is icebound in winter. Even Siberia's Vladi-vostok, 26 degrees south of Mur-mansk in the latitude of the Riviera, has its weeks of winter freeze. , I, ' ' s ' w K i i ' XX. X ' - Miliar rtfr atM& "wkti.......J-,........vw..v.w- w Let Cranberries Grace the Turkey Stuffing (See Recipe Below) THANKSGIVING DINNER Oyster Soup Roast Turkey Cranberry Apple-Brea- d Stuffing Sweet Potatoes with Oranges Gravy Buttered Cauliflower Green Beans Cloverleaf Rolls Celery Carrot Sticks Gingerale Fruit Salad Pumpkin Chiffon Tarts Beverage Recipe Given Thanksgiving Tips r1 WON'T BE LONG now before one of the biggest of the holiday meals will grace your table: golden brown, done to a turn turkey, chicken or other fowl, with the trimmings, topped off with a des-sert of glisten- - 'sSS&h or spicy mince- - J meat. 1 y. The market v ) list will be a long one, the f preparations ex--7 Zp tensive and the planning care-Cy- " ) ful. Start early c an(j make a n outline of all ingredients to have, and just what shouldbe done when. Then even a Thanksgiving dinner will be well organized and efficient-ly executed. TURKEYS weighing 8 to 16 FOR use an oven tempera-ture of 325. For turkeys over 18 pounds, use an over temperature of 300. Plan to "rest" the turkey 15 to 30 minutes after roasting to make carving easier. Sweet Potatoes with Oranges (Serves 8) 8 boiled sweet potatoes, sliced thin 2 oranges, peeled, sliced thin 1 lemon, peeled, sliced thin cup brown sugar Ys cup butter ; cup water Arrange potatoes and fruit in lay-ers in a buttered casserole. Sprink-le with sugar, dot with butter and add water. Cover. Bake in a mod-erate (350) oven until tender. and heat to boiling point, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat; add gelatin and stir until dissolved. When cool, fold in whipped cream and vanilla. Pour into baked and cooled tart shells or a nine-inc-h pastry shell, if one large pie is desired. Chill until firm. Garnish with toasted pecans. Serve with ad-ditional whipped cream, if desired. How to Prepare Turkey CLEAN TURKEY by removing feathers. Singe and use tweezers on pin feathers, if neces-sary. Wash and drain well. Rub cavity with salt. Stuff neck and body cavities lightly as stuffing ex-pands during roasting. For a turkey over 12 pounds, wrap strips of clean cloth around . end of each leg x-- bone and tie CKf with string. Cov-c5i!:- er cloth with C"' shortening. This ' '(.,. '2 prevents lower Jsi'i& leS from drying.. Q?T"Y? Tie leg bones together and Gingerale Fruit Salad (Serves 8) 2 tablespoons unflavored gelatin Z tablespoons cold water cup boiling water cup lemon juice 2 tablespoons sugar 1 cup gingerale cup red grapes, seeded and halved cup celery, finely chopped Vt cup apple, cored and cubed cup pineapple cubes Vi cup cubed, canned pears Dissolve gelatin in cold water; add hot water, lemon juice, sugar and gin-- I f??SS" gerale. When KS?! mixture thick-en- s, fold in Nr fruit. Chill in jpj one large or in- IllllllllllltiiialS serve with may-onnaise. Chiffon Pumpkin Tarts (Makes 8) 1 envelope unflavored gela-tin A cup cold water 1'4 teaspoons cinnamon Vi teaspoon ginger teaspoon nutmeg 1 teaspoon salt cup brown sugar, firmly packed cup rich milk 2 cups canned or cooked pumpkin 1 cup heavy cream, whipped teaspoon vanilla 8 baked tart shells Soften gelatin in water. Combine spices, salt, sugar in top of double boiler. Mix well. Stir in milk and pumpkin. Place over boiling water fasten string under the tail to hold legs against the body. Rub surface of the turkey with softened butter. Roast turkey in a slow oven fol-lowing the times given here: Size Roasting Time 8 pounds 3 hours 10 pounds 3'A hours 12 pounds 4 hours 14 pounds fA hours 18 pounds 5'2 hours 25 pounds 6 hours ONE more tip: plan small JUST of everything except the turkey, because that's what folks will fill up on! Oyster Soup (Serves 8) 2 tablespoons onion, grated 1 tablespoon celery, minced 1 tablespoon parsley, minced 2 tablespoons butter 1 tablespoon flour 1 pint bouillon 1 pint oysters Simmer vegetables lightly in but-ter. Add flour and brown. Gradual-ly add oyster liquor and bouillon. Season and cook for five minutes. Just before serving, add oysters, either cut or whole, and cook only until they curl. Fresh Cranberry-Appl- e Bread Stuffing (For turkey) 1 quart fresh cranberries, chopped 1 quart peeled, chopped apples 2 teaspoons lemon juice 2 cups sugar 1 cup finely chopped celery 1 gallon --inch bread crumbs 1 cup water or broth Combine all ingredients in order given; Add water or broth and mix well. LYNN SATS: Turkey Talk Will Guide you Helpfully Bread for stuffing the holiday; bird is best when a day or two old, and is much easier to use if broken or cut into small sized cub.es. Stuffings will have a more nut-like and appetizing flavor when the cubes of bread are toasted lightly before using. Carve an equal amount of light and dark meat so that everyone may have his preference, Turkey and stuffing will both keep better if the stuffing is removed from the bird before storing in the refrigerator, after the meal is over. If you are depending upon a roast meat thermometer to guide you in testing the "doneness" of the turkey, it should register at 190f. When the turkey is done, the drumstick can be moved up and down readily. The meat feels soft when the thickest part of the drum-stick is pressed between the fing-ers protected with cloth or paper. KATHLEEN NORRIS I Louisa M. Alcott NAME LOUISA M. ALCOTT THE always had magic in It for me. Since the long-ag- o days when her books spread their en-chantment over my girlhood she has been a dream and a model. So that when a new biography ap-peared by Katharine Anthony a few weeks ago, I could hardly wait until it was in my hands. Perhaps you visualized the ts as quiet, honorable New Eng-land folk, the father guide and teacher, the mother quietly gath-ering her four girls about her to master household arts and keep together the home. Anything less shockingly like the truth could hardly be imagined. To read their story is to become ut-terly confused, and I believe Miss Anthony was equally confused when she tried to transcribe it. The senior Alcotts were completely irresponsible, drifting from one un-profitable visionary undertaking to another at the slightest setback, and living almost entirely on the charity of relatives and the en-tirely unembarrassed donations of all and sundry neighbors. No Regular Education The girls had no regular educa-tion, their mother frequently slip-ping off from Concord to Boston to stay with old friends and their father at one crisis lying wordless on his bed for a long interval. Sometimes he chopped wood for a neighbor but this was small sup-port for four girls, one woman and himself. Emerson at this crisis suggested that he go to Europe at Emerson's expense, and off he lightheartedly went. Meanwhile the mother and daughters gave plays in the barn, but no pay is mentioned. The father returned with three male disciples in tow, and it was decided to start' the celebrated "Fruitlands," a Utopian experi-ment that I always thought had gone on for years, but which ac-tually broke up in six months be-- . mother frequently slipping off . ." cause not only had the men sown no crops, but neither Abba Alcott nor her girls ever had the faintest idea of cooking. They hated the kitchen. So the vision of "Marmee's" odorous kitchen with her four gay little cooks in attendance vanishes with the rest! Girls Ron Wild One or two of the English visitors went away forever, but after a year or two in which Abba ar-ranged for plays in the barn and Eronson chopped a little wood and the girls ran wild, one of them, named Lane, cairie back and Abba asked him to stay. At this Bron-so- n, "generously," says- Miss An-thony, perhaps as stunned as I am, retired to Boston for six months. After Lane left, Bronson came back, but thought it would be a good idea to wander westward lecturing and philosophising. Off he went, and the five helpless wom-en, instead of following the ex-ample of thousands of other re-sourceful manless households in a dozen ways of hung about in a state of distress and idleness, Abba finally going to Boston to try several fruitless ventures there and Anna going away to teach. By this time they were all pretty well grown. Then came the Civil War. Louisa enlisted as an army nurse, col-lapsed immediately and was sent home sick. And now Bronson was offered a modest job, which he actually held for four years, so that the discouraged Abba, the sick Louisa and the neglected little girls actually did live under one roof together. But Abba had visited a family with small pox and brought the disease home to the family. They all had it one wonders who nursed them but all got well but little Betty who died. But Louisa wrote short stories and they sold, and then a novel; not too successful but published. And then came glorious fame and wealth overnight with "Little Women," and at last her generous heart could do what it dreamed. May went to Europe to study, Mother and Father had a roof over their heads, a lovely airy house, a garden, and a servant in the kitchen. Louisa had silk dresses and trips to Europe and a real and enchanting friendship with a young Pole who loved her as she did him and gave her companionship at ' last. ' And when Anna angered her by marrying, her year or two of re-sentment were forgotten when An-na came home, widowed, with little boys to love. 1948 Was Safest Year For Industrial Workers highest accident frequency rate, but it was reduced 18 per cent in 1948 from 59.74 to 49.04. Coal mining, with the greatest accident severity rate both years, went down from 7.96 to 7.61, a 4 per cent reduction. CHICAGO. Workers in Ameri-can industry were safer in 1948 than in any year in history, the National Safety Council reports. Reports to the council indicate that disabling injuries per 1,000,-00- 0 man-hou- rs averaged 11.49 for all reporting industries in 1948. This is a 13 per cent reduction from the 13.26 rate the year be-fore, and a new record. An aver-age of 1.12 days were lost per 1,000 man-hou- rs worked in all in-dustries last year, a reduction of 9 per cent from 1947 also the best on record. In both years lumbering had the |