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Show .. - MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE. DELTA, UTAH SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Junior Style Has Quaint Charm Girls School and Party Dress frrr-J2-&- 8404 Nice for Special pRETTY and demure, yet nice enough for special dates is this junior frock with its crisp white collar and tiny puffed sleeves. Try a gay flower printed fabric and add narrow ribbon bows for ac-cent. Pattern No. 8404 Is In sizes 11, 12. 13, 14 16 and 18. Size 12. 4 yards of 38 or V yard contrast. The Fall and Winter FASHION offers 64 pages of smart new styles, special designs; tips on fabrics free pattern printed inside the book. Send 25 cents today. Crisp and Contrasty JUST the thing to have ready school bells ring a dain-ty yoked dress, for young girls that's delightfully easy to sew. Have the yoke in contrast and finish with crisp ruffling. Pattern No. 8415 comes In sizes 6. 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8. 2VB yards of 3 Inch; y. yard contrast. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 530 South Wells St. Chlcaro 7, 111. Enclose 25 cents In coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No. Size Name Address 1 . i M ET!JC that makes folks 1 HELltfO sleep all night! Thousands now sleep undisturbed because of the news that their being awakened night after night mtgkl be rum bladder irritaixon not Ih jtidnev. Let's hope so! That's a condition Foley g Pills usually allay within 24 hours. Since blad- - l der irritation ia so prevalent and Foley Pills so n potent Foley Pills roust benefit you within 24 ,S hours or DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK. Make test. Get Foley Pills from drug-gist. Full satisfaction or DOUBLE YOUtt e MONEY BACK MAKES IRONING jLeeps Your Iron Ff0m Sticking i 1 i Wk America' favorite ready-to-e- at J . iiili ft rice cereal. Oven-fres- h I Kellogg. I fc7 m$M j Ss:i fresh t So crisp they snap crackle I "11 gK?w.f) C iW B pis pop in milk. Nourishing. Good I ' --'Syg Pf 4 ; i.T MOTHER KNOWSa BEST I J - i ;c ::.:,wif;ii ' 'V' "V.: ' V J ' ' '"V . "SL ... ... vr. a . ... " v.v.v.v.w.-- I 4 1 ' ( ! "I 1 ? 4 " I i ? 1 .v. ...,.Y, V. .V.Vmto.m, wrtA-- .W.V.WftV. ..W...ynVVf Stickler's for tradition, the British, nevertheless, are willing to lay it aside in matters of expediency. For that reason, and because of the fact that the day may come when the "tight little isle" may need its women to help man its ships, the nation has inaugu-rated a program designed to give its daughters a hand in ruling the waves. Photos here picture activities of the naval reserve crew of the "English Rose, III." The lady sailors are called Jill Tars. Aboard their trim craft at anchor in Bournemouth Bay, Commander Wollard (above) has as-sistants, but they are on the distaff side. One, First Officer Brenda Long, gives individual instruction to a pair of cadets interested in navigation. She is showing one how to use the sextant. At left, a Jill Tar has the task of haul-ing water overside in a canvas bucket. Assigned to a job on the jib, this girl (right) wears the regulation lifebelt that must be worn when certain jobs are dertaken; and they have no compl-aints as they dangle over fathoms of silt water. , I - - v lA '( I If - , vrgff - , ' , " ' i 111 ' mS-J-'' - ' 'f'vi Jiff , - ih , . - ' ? Vi ! j. f t " j A little pan-cak- e for the "English Rose" applied by Jill Tars (left) who are expert at this sort of thing. Scrap-ing and painting the hull of the ship is all a part of the life of a sailor. I is a part of naval routine that ,e,6r appears on the recruiting poster. Pawn's early light, just as her male ""Part on His Majesty's ship must the Jill Tar is awakened and the !hipboard fay begins. This lady with whistle has won the title, "The girl y we'd like best to heave shoes "' B"t all that's wishful thinking, as e Mistier is adamant and reveille be obeyed. Just the same, it's e t0 sour these females forever on lsterj, be they from handsome "'res or female boatswain's mates. L j , sf 1 IfM r . " . I t' ' 5 ' t i i V K- - A? ' ; i 1 MAHONEY : MW j FORMER CCNY STUDENT AND GOLDEN ' & J f!j-- OLOVE CHAMPION, LEFT COLLEGE FOR V''1fc5s PRO BOXING RANKS AND HAS WON 30 wIwS&VnNr J BOJTSIN A ROW.HE5 THE FIRST HEAW- - fT'2r WEIGHT WITH A COLLEGE BACKGROUND rnST j SINCE BOB PASTOR AMD IS A NEW I I l 1 HOPEFUL FOR THE HEAVYWEIGHT XM"0 If J A 1 5 1QDBERT TRENT JONES, A MONTCLAIR, I if Si?S WiZ" N.J.,GOLF COURSE ARCHITECT, RE- - t if iiiti ZLabsest opening designed a par-- hole at a local iMMTCWr CROW OF THE COURSE. HE GIVEN THE HONOR SHOT-SA- NK A mQ BB i HOLe-IN-ONE j WAS 53,435 AT DETROIT. SPORTLIGHT Charlie Was Versatile Fellow By GRANTLAND RICE fpAKING HIS CENTRE college team to Boston to beat Harvard wasn't the high spot of Uncle Char-lie Moran's amazing career. It was just another episode in the life of the star from Horse Cave, Ky., who died a few weeki ago. I happened to play In the same backfleld with Moran and on the same baseball jf"" team back at Nash-- ' viUe Military and I Tennessee Military ff'OC'v-'-, 1 institutes in the mist-ridde- n days T' Oi ? of "far away and s long ago." I can't i recall another ath- - - lete who turned out I more nigh class jobs in as many Grantland Rice fields. In those far off and long ago days, Charlie weighed 180 pounds and he could turn the 100 In slightly better than 10 flat. Here are just a few of the de-tails he contributed to sporting his-tory: A great half and quarterback from Tennessee and Bethel on to the Masillon Tigers in its champion-ship days. A star football coach and trainer, who also mowed his football field and made the bandages and other protective equipment for his teams he was a master at this. A star baseball pitcher and catcher. Also an outfielder and when needed. He got as far up as the St. Louis Cardinals. His father played short on the old St. Louis Browns of Chris Von Der Ahe's reign. An excellent baseball coach. Whether football or baseball, his teams were always physically fit. For many years one of the best umpires that big league baseball has ever known. This is a pretty fair roundup. Charlie had coached at Ten-nessee, Bethel, University of Nashville, Nashville, A.C. and Texas A. and M. for five years before he came to little Centre college with a student enroll-ment of 110 plus Bo McMillin, Red Roberts and James (Red) Weaver, three It was this unknown team that beat the great West Virginia team that a week before, with Ira Rod-ger- s at fullback, had beaten a good Princeton team, 25 to 0. Moran stopped Rodgers by send-ing 220 pound Roberts at him full tilt on every play. In Bo McMillin, Uncle Charlie also had one of the best football players and one of the smartest quarterbacks football has ever sent to any field. His "Praying Colonels" were sensations as long as Mc- Millin, Roberts and Weaver were around and not so bad a few years later on. His Big Day I doubt that the Harvard game was Moran's big day. This came when he was coaching BucknelL In those days, regulations were loose and every coach did the best he could. Charlie told me the story later. He had swept the prairies and the hills for all the talent he could get together, and no coach could do a better job along these lines. "How did Lafayette beat you?" I asked. "They pro-tested 10 of my men, leaving me only one regular," Moran said. This went on from game to game. Each opponent would protest 10 men, leaving Charlie with a lone regular. The next to the last game on Bucknell's schedule happened to be with Foster Sanford's powerful Rut-gers team, one of the best in the country. Among its stars, as I recall from a long ago day, was Homer Hazel, an end in 1923 and an fullback In 1924. Rutgers hadn't lost a game that year, beating a good Lafayette team, 43 to 7. Bucknell's one man team had lost to Lafay-ette, 21 to 3, so Moran wrote Rutgers, asking that he be allowed to play his regular squad. "Play anybody you want to," the Rutgers coach wrote back. "Play yourself." Moran didn't play, but his reg-ular Bucknell team, playing for the first time together, beat Rut-gers, 12 to 7. That's how good it was. "I had three sets of brothers on that team: the Wilsbachs, Blais-dell- s and Goodwins," Charlie said. "They all played in the backfleld. At one time I had young Wakefield. He was a brother of Vanderbilt's Hek Wakefield. The one I had was the greatest football player I ever saw, barring nobody. He killed him-self." Wheu taking deviled eggs to a picnic, wrap each in waxed paper, put them in an egg carton and they won't get mashed. Bound to be right. To adjust tie-bac-k curtains so they are pinned back at the same distance from the sill on each side, pull down the window shade to the de-sired position and use that as a marker. Somebody spilled the beans I When food boils over in the oven, sprinkle salt over the spilled food. This will put an end to unpleasant odor and smoke. Then clean the oven when baking is over. The tray's the thing. If there's an invalid in the house, remember that the hours of the day mean little except when the next tray is brought in. Fish today, but not tomorrow. To remove the odor of fish from a dish cloth, boil the cloth for five minutes in a solution of one table-blespo-of baking soda to one quart of water. Rinse in warm water, then cold. Glory to Betsy! Have you looked at the market basket lately? Bet-ter treat it to a good scrubbing with hot soap suds. Chicken for four becomes chick-en for eight. Dumplings are an in-expensive stretcher for stewed chicken. Sprinkle well with chopped fresh parsley. Dentist no boogie man. If moth-er will take the young child with her to the dentist long before he needs to have anything done to his teeth and just let the dentist look at the youngster's teeth each time, there will be no fear of the dentist when work must really be done. Britain Charges Belgians With Eating Work Horses LONDON. Despite Belgian im-porters' guarantees, the 2,000 Brit-ish horses shipped there annually practically all are slaughtered for food, instead of being worked as agreed, Arthur W. Moss, of the Royal Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, charged. "The meat is processed and mostly sold in the form of Ant-werp sausages," he said, after re-turning from Belgium. "Immediately the horses on my ship were disembarked, they were branded on the neck with a hot iron and a hole was punched in the right ear to insert a number peg. The following day they were slaughtered." HOWEIgtg -B- yHaroUArnett I BW TABlFO& RfSr SICKCWLD S 9 A HERE'S AN IDEA THAT COULD MAKE C')v) jf T A HIT WITH A SMALL CHILD WHO -- JJUsLJ IS CONVALESCING." USE THE BOTTOM Ffifx OF A CARDBOARD BOX FOR A TABLE MStVV y TOP BY CUTTING- - THE SIDES INTO ZJW V ARCHES SO THE BOX WILL FIT v(Z I L OVER. THE CHILD'S LEG-S- . THE ENDS V v it CAN BE CUT AMD BENT UPWARD TO SERVE AS POCKETS FOR TOYS AND BOOKS. ' I I YOU CAN ADD A ROPE ' JA!J HANDLE TO BOTH ENDS f rfctTir 1) IF YOU WISH, AND ' M J-Z-BRIGHTEN IT WITH 0j I J PAINT, IF DESIRED. Sl I HQWZSZ A PINT ICE CREAM CONTAINER CAN K-- 8E CONVERTED INTO A CUTE ' HOLDER FOR A BALL OF STRING. -- T ly SKETCH THE FACE WITH INDIA INK, k.3tl AND FORM THE EARS BY SLIPPING NX; j Z POULTRY MARKERS INTO HOLES 'vtX ON OPPOSITE SIDES OF THE CARTON. i cor PUT THE STRING INSIDE, AND FEED IT THROUGH A HOLE IN THE LID. |