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Show i MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE. DELTA, UTAH SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Simple Smartly Styled Frock Twosome for Sun-Fille- d Hours fill " " ft" I " rf kj-- IVv - 4 ' If if. ::.:t::-:::::- t For Summer TAKE YOUR place in the sun in a pretty sunback dress that can be made in two versions monotone or with a bright con-trast. For cover-u- p, add the brief bolero. Pattern No. 1874 Is a sew-rlt- e perfo-rated pattern In sizes 11, 12. 13, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 12, dress, 3 yards of 35- - Pleasant Wearing YOU'LL GET many hours of pleasant summer wear from this simple yet smart daytimer. And it's so easy to sew try a printed fabric or cool, dark sheer. Patern No. 1885 Is a sew-rit- e perfo-rated pattern .for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 14, 4 yards of The Spring and Summer FASHION offers a wealth of suggestions for smart summer wardrobes special features, fab-ric news, free pattern printed Inside the book. 25 cents. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 531) South Wells St. Chicago 7, III. Enclose 25 cents In coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No. Size- -Name i . Address You Build It House Will Charm Bluebirds building the Bluebird House No. 110, illustrated above. It is as at-tractive as it is practical and you should have no difficulty in find-ing tenants. The full size patterns offered below take all the mystery out of building. User merely traces the pattern on the scraps of wood the pattern specifies, saws and assembles exactly as and where the pattern indicates. Full size patterns for painting decora-tions permit finishing nouses with a grofessional touch. Send 20c for the Pattern No. 110 to Easi-Bil- d Pattern Company. Dept. W. Pleasant, vtlle, N. Y. TOU CAN solve your bird-hou-ing problem very easily by For Your Future Buy U. S. Sayings Bonds fjrifQ that makes folks llCslffO sleep all night! Thousands now sleep undisturbed becaua of the news that their being awakened night after night might be from bladder irritation not (A kidneyt. Let's hope bo! That's a condition Pills Foley usually allay within 24 hours. Since blad-der irritation is so prevalent and Foley Pills so potent Foley Pills must benefit you within 24 hours or DOUBLE YOUK MONEY BACK. Make teat. Get Foley Pills from drug-gist. Full satisfaction or DOUBLE YOUft MONEY BACK. HIGH-SCHOO- L GRADUATES! NURSING 15 A PROUD PROFESSION! many opportunities for graduate In fine hospitals, pablio hemJth, ete. leads to R. N. a nurse need nerer be without a job or an income. open to girls under 35, graduates and college girls. jH. ask for more Information ffyVA at the hospital where job would like to enter nursing. i if v V f I . f 1 k , . i - I i I - i : V'1-- ' sf t ,,entical twins (twins), those rore look-alik- who are closer than two (two) carbons of the same letter, are 'n fair way to becoming immortal-ized more or less (less) through the Hollywood Twin club. This organi-zation is either one club with 36 members or two matched sets of 18 each take your choice. Six mem-bers of the Twin club and their carbon copies (left) smile noncha-lantly at the poor photographer. , Meetings are held once a month for the sole purpose of getting together to relax and enjoy mutual hobbies. Ditto Sisters yie Pope twins, Jane and Jo in common than I i tn) have more s;r faces. They have the same ill clothes, food and frolics, ' filing horseback riding. All jjdeisof the club are as versa-- ; ss they are beautiful, and all ( engaged in some phase of iricol work. Even in Holly- - :J, where 'illusions grow in ,iilgnce on movie lots, the kffi ore conceded to be unusual, '.' ;je and novel. An effective routine used by Marion and Martha Neff is this "mirror" illu-sion. Martha, or maybe it's Marion, holds a hoop in the foreground and Marion, or maybe it's Martha, dupli-cates the pose in the background to present a "reflection" that isn't. The Twin club was formed in 1945, starting with five sets. gBPHM"Wlln'"imrcrciTpj IT'I Mini lllll Hum XX : . - ? xX 'T 1 ' ' ir -- V X, h ) - ) x x n , ? . 'V r ' "it - XX . - - it 11 if IT',. V ip " , J?f i : ' ! " j - 1 K: 'c- xt;j ' ft a Jane and Jean Luther (right), who perform on skates pest coast ice shows, hold still in a pretty pose long r(,):;k for you to get a look at their faces in case you nt to try to tell them apart ond what good would that Dorothy and Ruth, (below) are ballet rr''("ils ar(i "fe considered good at it. Here they carry J'- - to twin business with identical dancing poses to vr-':- their physical appearance. The girls are both blonde 'i V-- Si S A 3 1 f x y - ' ' l' V s - j MAHONEY THE NOW FAMOUS DUTCH HOUSEWIFE, stQlL M) IS THE ONLY WOMAN TO WIN FOUR GOLD V MEDAL3 IN OLYMPIC HISTOI?Y. LITTLE ) NK. f KNOWN CN THIS SIDE OF THE ATLANTIC IT""! BEFORE THE 1948 GAMES,ALL EUROPE v il WAS PREPARED FOR FANNY TO SNAP AT J fj LEAST ONE TAPE. SHE HELD AO DUTCH X V7 AND EUROPEAN RECORDS AT ONE TIME TV, j (CCRGESEST ERN MCHIGAN OOLLEGE-Kyr- Zj - ' " WSBBE" ENTHUSED IN HIS EVENT 'fc AT A RECENT INDOOR TRACK MEET MAX CAREVcF THE PIRATES, AT- - AT MARQUETTE THAT HE FIRED THE TEMPTED TO STEAL EW3ES 53 TIMES IN RIGHT THRU A GLASS BACK- - 1922 AND WAS THROWN OUT ONLY TWICE! BORD CN THE MARQUETTE GYM FLOOR. L SPORTLIGHT . Casey Keeps Faith With His Team : By GRANTLAND RICE JiHERE WAS A moment late last March down In St. Petersburg, when Casey Stengel was staring moodily into space. He had sensed the fact that Joe DiMaggio would be out Indefinite- - Casey has known enough team grief to sink two or three managers. But he has never shown any sign of losing faith in a club that has been the best in the league so far. Yankees Sans DiMaggio A day or two ago, I ran across a smart minor leaguer from other days. We began talking about the Yankees without DiMaggio. "This reminds me," he said, "of something that happened when I was playing ball. We had finished Grantland Rice ly perhaps for a summer. Lindell and Berra were both limping. Char-lie Keller was swinging without his old power. Yankee prospects were about as dark as the mouth of a railroad tunnel. "So far as run- - me season Deiore in lourtn place. But at the, start of the next season we lost our only star. He had a broken leg and was out. So all the papers plastered us down in last place. 1 "So we got together. We talked things over. We finally decided that even though this lost player was good, he wasn't the entire club. We decided to go out and prove it. We fought and hustled harder than we ever did before. We moved into first place. The papers all said we wouldn't be there long not with our star missing. That made us hustle all the harder. I can tell you this if we'd had our star, we wouldn't have finished third. As it was, we won the pen-nant." nlng the team is concerned," Casey said, "nothing can happen. I can't be any big bust with my three coaches Bill Dick-ey, Frank Crosetti and Jim Turner. Here are three great fellows who know their stuff. I know they are all for me. I've never seen three men work harder. They are the first on the field and they are the last to leave." Then Casey smiled. "It means a lot to any manager to have the help of such men," he said. "They don't make mistakes. I might but they won't." The fact Is that Casey has made fewer mistakes than any manager I know this season. He has had his team hustling and working overtime. Be has picked the right rookies. He has lost the tang his tongue once knew. He has been sym-pathetic in place of sarcastic. He hasn't tried to be funny at any man's expense. He has been a member of his own squad, not an outsider. Stengel has done a fine job. And as he says, he has had the ser-vices of one of the best coaching staffs baseball has ever known. Bill Dickey would be a helpful, soothing influence on any squad. Bill knows what it's all about and his advice is a big help. Frank Crosetti is one of the gamest the Yankees ever had. He was always a hustling ball player. He has been a big help. So has Jim Turner, a winner with the old Boston Braves. Turner has turned in his full share. So Stengel was right in pin-ning a wild laurel blossom on each of his aids. It was a nice move by Stengel, a move other managers might not care to make. The old ballplayer continued to ramble on. "There's a good chance the Yankee ball club, subconsciously anyway, had gotten tired of hearing that Joe DiMaggio was the entire ball club. After all, there were Raschi, Forterfield, Byrne, Reynolds and other s there were Kryhoski and Phillips at first there were Coleman, Stirnweiss, Rizutto, Brown and Johnson. "There was and is a fellow named Tommy Henrich close to DiMaggio in everything there were Lindell, and Berra, Woodling and Bauer not even a Cobb or a Ruth could have been the entire ball club with all these fellows on hand. Most of them are first-clas- s ball players. They must have felt the inside urge to show they could also play some baseball. "Here's another thing. As good as Joe DiMaggio and Tommy Hen-ric- h together are they were not as important as the pitchers. Connie Mack once told me that the pitch-ers were 70 per cent of any ball club. With or without DiMaggio, the Yankees had a fine pitching staff." JUSTUS MwmWm Son "Well, dad, you've man-aged to live to a ripe old age. How did you manage to keep the germs of disease away from you all these many years?" " Father "I'll let you in on a little secret, son. I attribute my longevity to the persistent use of garlic. Now don't breathe that to a soul." Son "The secret or the garlic?" F i f t e e Viola had reached the crossroads of life but for her it was positively the end, but really. Her father went up to her room when he heard a lot of sobbing after she had returned from a dance. "Why, Viola, darling, what hap-pened?" he asked gently. "Oh, Denny and I had a fight," she explained. "Now I just know I'll never get married. It seems I'm not old enough for the young men and not young enough for the old men." Number one boy "My grand-father lived to be 98 years old." Number two ' boy "Gee, that's old all right. What finally got him?". Number one boy "Plot number 6, section 13 of Evergreen Ceme-tery." By Tom Grecoby T IllI HOLES ANP IMDENTATIONS S5P II ? IN LINOLEUMS ARE RE- - V'lY-'S- ! f .1 ;2 PAIRED EASILY BY JUST FILLING- - TM EM WITH A M UW V MIXTURE OF FINELY CHOPPED CORK AND C 'i LiauiD GLUE, WHICH ".&a-- ' -- -- (5 SMOOTHED VERY CAREFULLY AMD GIVEN TWO COATS OF CLEAR varnish when pry. A HEW USE FOR TIH CANS -- Thanks to J.8.P., Frankfort, Ky. TIME AND LABOR CAN BE SAVEP WHEM TRANSPLANTING- ' VE&ETABLES, FLOWERS AND SMALL SHRUBS BY USINQ, THIS TOOL TO MAKE THE HOLES IN THE GROUNP. IT IS MERELY A TIN CAN HAVING BOTH ENDS REMOVEP AND A PIECE OF FLAT IRON" RJVETED TO THE UPPER END FOR A HANDLE. SHARPEN THE LOWER EDGE OF THE CAN WITH A FILE SO THAT IT CAN BE PUSHED INTO THE &ROUND EASILY. |