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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONTCLE. DELTA. UTAH NEEDLEWORK PATTERNS Lovely Irish Rose Centerpiece tie time. Handsom. . and leaves center-t- he rose nU, r,s in Pink and white . Pattern No instructions, ,S ilti . requirement, a MO Both W,H. ,,. cEDLoir Eocl'u,., Nam Address Distinctive Doily 'THE CHARM "and distinctiveness of this doily can be captured with your crochet hook in very lit--i . . JOlLYTIMivj SAYS HAPPY ! f toeahngKELLOGG'sSS every morning. most at once I had " """ results. No laxative r for last 6 months!" I I ,1, writes . '. Mr. J. Wenig, 7723 ' - ' -- So. Mich. Ave., Chi- - t , M cage, Dl. One cwttn - f I. unsolicited ALL- - i. ' fTiP.V !e((er.Are .A J you constipated due v cjl.bulk iD the et? Tasty ALL-BRA- may help you. Eat il ounce daily, drink plenty of water It not satisfied after 10 days. Mi empty box to Kellogg's, Battle Crak, Mich. DOUBLE YOUB MONEY BiCil Unit Book Shelves Adapted to Needs CSr . 1 Vi Book Shelves THESE shelves may be made to fit different wall spaces by changing the length of the center unit or by adding extra sections. Pattern 270 gives directions and an actual-siz- e guide for cutting curved shelves. Price 25c. Order direct from WORKSHOP PATTERN SERVICE Drawer 10 Bedford Hills, New York. Relieve distress of MONTO Are you troubled by distress female functional periodic dist-ances? Does this make you rife from pain, feel so nervous, tlrri-- at such times? Tnen do try Lytol Plnkham'a Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Pinbic'i has a grand soothing effect on mi 0 woman's most important orgw! MYDIA E. PINKHAM'S M I Help Them Cleanse the Blood of Harmful Body IfaiK Tour kidneyt an coniuntly filtrtl waste matter from the blood itmffl Bsl kidneya sometime! lig In their wot- r- Dot act aa Nature intended (ill mova Impurities that, il rtuinei, W poison the system and upset til " body machinery. Symptoms may be naffing Mtuo persistent headache, etuckioldmi getting up nighta, iwdlinj, pua: under the eye-.- Mini o( w aniiety and losa ol pep lid Other ligm o( kidney or blMoi order are lometlmes burninl, WW" too frequent urimtion. There ahould benodonbttbitprw treatment il wiier thin n! " Poan'l Kill. iWl b" J2 new Irienda for more than lorrj l They have a nation-wid- e repiu Ar. feeommended by paula Ptf" country over. Alk w n If Peter Pain has uailtied upiwih FOR FAST RELIEF, n . ?i 1 iains up to 2 times mo , oij 1 agents, methyl pain-relievi- offered 1 tol, thm, five other wdely l ' jj ,q STRAINS. Ask Y fes Ben-0a-y THE ORIGINAL BAUME ANAISESIQ6 i BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET How Church Chimes Rang For the Benefit of Brooklyn I By BILLY ROSE This week I'd like to spin a little story a very, very little story: It's of no great importance, and I won't get mad if the editor decides to file it in the wastebasket,- and in its place print some big story about Marshal Tito or Rita Hayworth's baby. To begin with, this story concerns itself wth a church, and a lot of bright people will tell you a church is no longer of any importance in this test-tub- e and Bunsen-burne- r age. To make matters worse, the church is In Brooklyn, and well, I guess you've heard plenty of jokes about how un-important Brooklyn is. . . . One day last summer while driv-ing past a church on St Felix street in Brooklyn, I heard a set of chimes that did nice things to my I r2 i ears. They were unusually good chimes, and fig-ured to have cost a lot of money. Naturally, I won-dered how they hap-pened to be in the belfry of a modest church in a modest neighborhood. Maybe in a year or so, the church could afford the bells. Next day a member of his parish phoned. "I've been discussing the bells with my business partner," said the parishioner, "and we'd each like to donate a third of the cost. But there's a hitch." "What is it?" asked the Rever-end. "Well, my partner is Jewish," said the businessman, "and we were wondering if that would make any difference," Reverend Zeiler said he didn't think it would make any differ-enc- e at all. "We think," continued the busi-nessman, "that it would be a good idea to find a Catholic to put up the other third. After all, people of all faiths are going to enjoy these bells." THE NEXT DAY a Catholic in the neighborhood offered to put up the remaining third, and the Carillonic bells were ordered. At the dedica-tion ceremony a couple of months later, a plaque was put up on the wall of this Methodist church, and inscribed on it were the names of the Catholic, the Protestant and the Jew. ... And that's all there is to this story this very, very little story. Do I think this one set of electrically-contro-lled bells is going to elimi-nate religious bigotry in Brooklyn? Of course not. Do I think the people in Flatbush who hear the chimes Billy Rese "W hat's the church with the chimes?" I asked a newsstand proprietor. "Hanson Place Central Church," he said. "It's Methodist." "Have they had those chimes long?" "No," said the newsie. "I think they put them in about a year ago." The next day I did some tele phoning, and I liked what I found j out. WHEN REV. John Emerson Zei- - ter, pastor of the church, heard about a new type of electrically con-trolled chimes called Carillonic bells, he told his congregation about them and said it would be a nice thing for the neighborhood if people go-ing to work in the morning and coming home at night could hear those beautiful chimes. He told his flock the bells cost a lot of money, and suggested they contribute a little something from time to time. are going to be kinder and more tolerant? Again, of course not. Why, then, am 1 writing this piece.' Well, I guess ifs because I'm fool enough to think that even one drop of clean water falling on a dusty street is im- - portant. Who knows? It may clean up an inch of ground and give somebody else an idea. One of these days and I don't expect to be around to see it a lot of drops of clean water may fall and a lot of dust may be washed away. A dawn y , of dark g11! O Hearts, re-- ' I J member j The eternal truth God gives us as a sign That after the dark, as glowing as an ember, Deep at the core of life, a light will shine: ' i The light of hope, after the bitter weeping; . V fifj The light of peace, after the lengthened pain. y , V The Christian heart held dose within God's keep-- - Will find the dark skies brightening again. ' ' y The risen Christ-i- s proof of light's returning; ' The risen Christ" is symbol of the dawn. A sVy O you who have been striving, longing, yearning , VI To catch the light ahead, move out, move on. , You will find him there among the springtime ' ' flowers, 'V Among the clean winds of a new-bor- n day. ' ' He is the lamp for all our future hours; He is the light to guide us on our way. . GRACE NOLL.CROWELL X G.I. PROTECTION New Jacket Stops Bullet WASHINGTON. A jacket made of plastic and nylon and which will stop a revolver bullet at point blank range has been developed by the army quartermaster corps. According to reports on the ef-fectiveness of the jacket, a soldier wearing it would be knocked down by a bullet fired from 15 feet away, but the jacket most probably would save his life. The army pointed out, however, that the jacket would not stop a bul-let fired from a machine gun or, rifle because a missile from these, weapons travels at a much greater; velocity than a pistol bullet. A rifle fired at close range would kill whether or not the soldier hit! was wearing one of the new jack-ets; but a soldier protected by such: jacket would have a chance of be- -' ing saved if hit by a rifle or ma-chine gun bullet fired from an ap-preciable distance. Thick but Light Existence of the new jacket was disclosed at San Pedro, Calif., re-cently by Maj. Gen. W. H. Middle-swa- rt of the quartermaster gen-eral's office, and greater detail con-cerning the garment has been from the national military establishment. The material in the jacket is near-ly a quarter inch thick, and it weighs seven pounds. A thicker ma-terial would of course make the jacket more impenetrable, but that would make it impractical, since it would add too much weight. The present jacket, which is not a finished product and is still un-dergoing development, is heavy prji.aghwhen it is considered that a field ove'icoat weighs only half a pound more. . Rather than bullets from small arms like rifles and machine guns, the new jacket is designed to stop fragments from large shells, bombs, mortars and grenades, and partly spent and ricocheted bullets. Tlvj material is tough and spreads the shock of impact over a consider-able area of the body. Artillery Deadly The army., ground forces recently brought out in a report on battle casualties that big artillery guns kill the most soldiers, although rifles and machine guns are the most deadly. This report, which until recently was "classified" and not available for publication, showed that multi-ple wounds from fragments of shells from big guns appear to be the rule in battlefield deaths, and that to be killed by a shell you usually have to be close to the burst. The frag-ments lose their lethal velocity at a relatively short distance. On the other hand, if you are. close enough to be badly wounded by one fragment, you are likely to be struck by many of them. It is in such situations that our military men feel the new jackets will be useful in saving lives. The work is being done by the re-search and development branch of. the office of the quartermaster gen-eral, with certain private concerns BY INEZ GERHARD TT IS QUITE POSSIBLE that "The Heiress" will bring Paramount another Academy ' Award; if it does, most of the credit should go to William Wyler, who directed and produced it. Olivia de Havilland and Ralph Richardson, seen as an awkward, shy, unattractive daugh-ter and her bully of a father, give OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND superb performance. As a suitor anxious to marry the girl for her money, Montgomery Clift is less satisfactory. Mirim Hopkins is ex-cellent as the girl's aunt; in fact, the entire supporting cast deserves praise. "The Heiress" is even better as a picture than it was as" a suc-cessful play and William Wyler is largely responsible. The Farfa concentration camp sequences of "Stromboli," which Producer-Directo- r Hossellini had been holding personally, have fi-nally been turned over to the Tech-nostam- Laboratory in Rome. This makes the entire footage of the film available to RKO so it won't be too long now till we see Ingrid Bergman in what she says will be her last picture. V After playing golf d for 10 years and reaching a two handi-cap, Ken Carson, of the Garry Moore show, has turned right-hande-on the advice of Pro Har-ry Cooper. Cooper says Ben Hogan did it why not Carson? Wearing a black wig, Bette Davis sneers and snarls her way through "Beyond the For-est," the rather tiresome story of a small-tow- n girl who was willing to commit murder to get to Chicago. Miss Davis likes to play wicked women, but she should not have chosen this one. Joseph Cotton and David Brian do what they can to Improve matters, but the picture is not good. ' Rudd Weatherwax, owner and trainer of Lassie, has had to hire a new secretary just to handle the fan mail sent to the collie by fans of her NBC Saturday radio series. Much of it comes from children, and it comes by the bushel. Ed "Archie" Gardner is a dis-appointment to his son, Ed. Jr. The who has the handsomest cowboy outfit in New York's Central Park, wishes his father had become somebody dash-ing, like the Lone Ranger. Both Mike Romanoff and his famous Beverly Hills restaurant have been signed for top roles in "A Lovely Place," which Humph-rey Bogart will make for Columbia. This is the first time the well known tavern has been shown in a picture in great detail. Since much of the film's action takes place there it was decided to use th restaurant itself rather than build a replica. The ' Fiction FORTUNE SMILES Corner CALEB WARE was a young man quarreled with his father, . and was turned away from his boyhood home. Caleb always said later that he went away of his own accord. Fortune smiled on Caleb. Five years later he found himself promi- - nent in the af- - I fairs of the small Minute city in which he 3 Fiction ,h.ad hsen t0 I Moreover, he was rich, It was then that Caleb de cided to go home. As the train began to climb into the fresh, clean air of the mountain conn-tr- y, the tired look about his eyes vanished. Color appeared in his cheeks. It thrilled him now to know that he was in a position to provide his father with all the comforts of old - age. He swung from the train at the tiny depot. Everything was the same; the cracker-bo- x station, the general store, the postoffice and the few small dwelling houses. A man with side whiskers and spectacles peered at him from the at the farm. The place is plumb run down, and your dad ain't well." Caleb felt suddenly that Banty was condemning him, that everyone in the village had condemned him. "Dad isn't really bad, is he, too sick to work?" he asked. "He is now. A month ago he was took bad. Ain't worked since." Banty spat and glanced at him side-ways. "He won't be glad to see you, son, not like that. He's got too much pride." pALEB UNDERSTOOD. He knew that his father would never take succor from a son who had deserted him, would never admit he needed the help of a traitor. He'd rather die starving than that. Banty might have said more, but Caleb suddenly leaped from the slow moving buggy. "You just keep on going, Banty, and forget you ever saw me. Dad need never know but what I come home because I had to." Caleb plunged into the woods be-side the road and discarded his coat and undid his necktie. He walked for some distance through the heavy growth beside the high-way. Branches tore at his fine linen and ripped great gashes. Briars clutched at his trousers and tore holes in them. Thus Caleb came home. Sight of the farm gave him a pang. The house and grounds were run down and in need of repair. A cot had been placed on the rear porch and on this cot Caleb saw the thin, gaunt figure of his father. He came and stood over the figure and looked down at it and smiled. "Hello, Father," he said. "It's Caleb. I've come home to ask your forgiveness and to be taken in." His voice was humble. Old man Ware opened his eyes and looked up at his son, and there was a quick happiness in his ex, pression. His dimming vision saw the tousled, ragged farm boy who had stalked so proudly away five years before. "I knew you'd come back, Caleb. I knew you'd come to your old father for help sooner or later. And and I'm glad." doorway of the depot. "Hello, Banty. Where's your rig?" The man stepped through the door. "Caleb Ware! Know yuh any- - where! How be yuh, Caleb?" "Fine, Banty. And you?" "Tol'able, Caleb. . Just tol'able. Figure on goin' out to the farm? Drive you out if you say so." "Figured you would." He climbed Into Banty's ancient rig, glad of this opportunity to ride with the station master and learn the news. "Looks like you done quite well in the city," Banty suggested cau-tiously. "Not bad," Caleb agreed. And he knew that feeling of triumph and victory at his success. He thought "Caleb Ware! Know ynh any-where! How be yuh, Caleb?" of his father's surprise and disap-pointment. It would be a bitter pill for old man Ware to swallow. "How are things at the farm, Banty? How's dad?" "Your dad's ailin'," said Banty. "He ain't been right since you left five years ago." "Me left him? Why he turned me out!" "Don't make no difference. You shouldn't a done it. He needed you I ANOTHER I I A General Quiz The Questions 1. What is the plural of daily (a newspaper)? 2. Give the meaning of counter-part. 3. What is a silo? 4. Name two tunnels under the Hudson river leading into New York City. 5. Give the common name for a meteor. The Answers 1. Dailies. 2. Duplicate. 3. A receptacle for storage of silage or fodder for dairy cattle. 4. Lincoln and Holland Tunnels. 5. Shooting star. ' CROSSWORD PUZZLE frrr sflp AnsEi LjAlVlO k JO Ml Tt sIt L TljP amTe" S h pd E H A E ONCE tjiM A S T E r raNpA,-tes-k ppe p po l o ' NL."aM ' lV3Q p c Hr lwMllNrlLH K u p o stJg o a 1. s o e ea m n Er LIE gNTETLj me IE pLJ 2. Keel-bille- d cuckoo S. Notion 4. Bird's home: 5. Mother 6. Constella-tion 7. City (Mass.) 8. Bondsman 11. Scorch 13. Free 16. Female sheep 19. Snake 21. Lofty mountain 22. Tumult 24. To infold 27. Apex i 29. Canton (Switz.) 30. Artificial reservoir for water 31. Dwellings 33. A color 35. American Indian 36. Employs 37. Out of place 38. Mechanical man 42. Swelling 45. Observe 46. Evening sun god (Egypt.) 48. Conjunction ACROSS 1. Futile. 5. Bulk 9. Wavy (Her.) 10. Verbal U. Travels back and forth 12. Of the cheek 14. Close to 15. Devoured 17. Biblical name 18. Polish 20. Crowded 23. Bird 25. High priest 26. Core 28. Pocket 32. Breeze 34. Group of three 35 One who ships goods 39 Doctrine 40. Hebrew letter 41. Put on. as clothes 43 Tellurium (sym.) 44. Top. as of a wave 47 Pieces of skeleton 49. Fencing sword 50. Smell ' 51. Branch 52. Gull-lik- e bird DOWN 1. A raptorial bird U U U VA - I' V Va m. " n i ' I? Zl 22 " nn "zZ Z7 ', 23 Z.9 5 H 55 5' 57 38 W m 44 AS 46 ', 47 4fl i-- 1 1 I IN I 1 I PUZZLE NO. 24 New UN Building to Have Elaborate NEW YORK. One of the most elaborate systems ever conceived is to be installed in the new United Nations building here to let the representatives of the 59 member nations hand-pic- k their own climate. The system is expected to be a good investment in international good will. The air conditioning in the present building has been some-thing less than satisfactory. French and New Zealand delegates have been vocally critical of the system now in use. But, say U.N. officials, all this will be ended in the new secretar-iat building going up on Manhattan. The structure is to have an air con-ditioning system with 4,000 individ-ual hand controls. . Virtually every occupant will be able, by twisting simple knobs, to select exactly the temperature and humidity he liked best in his home-land. The building will be so con-structed that occupants of adjoin-ing offices can choose widely dif-ferent "climates" without interfer-ing with each other. Boy's Hunt for Autographs Valuable to Oklahoma State NORMAN, OKLA. Because of a boy autograph collector, the Univer-sity of Oklahoma's manuscript col-lection has been enriched by a treasured state historical document. The autograph hound, Robert E. Jackson, was a page boy from Sallisaw, Indian territory, when Oklahoma's constitutional convention met in Guthrie in 1907. Jackson collected the signatures of the 112 delegates present. Now a colonel serving with the U.S. occu-pation forces in Tokyo, Jackson turned over his signature book to the governor. Names in the book include those of four men who served as gover-nor of Oklahoma, the state's first senator, a university president and other men prominent in Oklahoma history. |