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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH NEEDLECRAFT PATTERNS A Filet-Crock- et Chair Set Our improved pattern visual with easy-to-s-charts and photos, and complete di-rections makes needlework easy. Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. 564 W. Randolph St. Chicago SU, Ul. Enclose 20 cents Cor pattern. No M ' - ' f . Address . r . . Standardization Reduces Types of Electric Motors Standardization, in. the case of one electrical manufacturing com-pany alone, has slashed the num-ber of types of fractional horse-power motors produced from 25,-0- to fewer than 4,000. A PRETTY and easy way to keep furniture clean! This filet crochet is beginner - easy crochet that everyone will love to do. Make this chair-se- t or scarf ends. Pattern 7076 has charts; di-rections. lest Ihmm HOME REMEDY TO RELIEVE Only Vicks VapoRub gives you this special Penetrating-Stimulatin- g action when you rub It on throat, chest and back at bedtime: It penetrates to upper bronchial tubes with special medicinal vapors. It stimulates chest and back surfaces liBe a warming poultice. And it keeps working for hours-ev- en W P 5 C E 5 Li while you sleep! V vaporuo Getting Deaf ? Thousands now know there is no excuse for letting deafness kill the joy of living. An amazing new radionict hearing device has been perfected in the great Zenitht Radio laboratories so simple so easy to use it can be sent to you for y free trial. Ready to wear, no individual fit-ting necessary. Accepted by the American Medical Association, Council on Physical Medicine. Come out of that world of silence. Write today for full details to Zenith Radio Corp., Hearing Aid Divi-sion, Dept. 19 - S Y, 5801 Dickens Ave., Chicago 39, Illinois. Made by the makers of world-famou- s Zenith Radios. Trial offer available on direct Bales by Zenith Radio Corporation or Its subsidiaries. Wmmm Tqd'II be proud of jf v your strong, f; : husky children LW'H '"t f when you give $ them Scott's I ass J Emulsion every V .. J day I Scotfi is .v" a "gold mine" f " i offwfWA&D Vitamins and ; natural olL Helps children stow right, develop sound teeth, strong bones. Helps ward off colds when they lack enough A&D Vitamin food. Many dectors recommend it. Economical. Buy today at fyour drug store. MORE than just a tonic it's powerfu novrishm&nf! mmmm PERSONAL BABBEIUNC Approred for Veterans. BARBERS are in demand. Graduate In six month. Salt Lake Barber College, Salt Lake KETCHUM BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. "Everything For The Buildei" 4th South at 7th West Salt Lake City 9, Utah FREIGHT PREPAID A beautiful gleaming vitreous china, close bolted closet com-bination with a seasoned hard-wood celluloid sprayed seat. Remittance with order please. "If it isn't right, yon money back without a fight j ;, I KETCHUM BUILDERS SUP. CO. ) Please ship Toilet Combination. ) To Address : Don't Let ECZEMA ITCISIEJG Steal Your Sleep Why scratch and suffer tonight when soothing, medicated Resinol Ointment is made specially to relieve itching, fiery skin? Famous through four generations for its quick, lingering comfort. ofLIFE? Are you going through tha func-tional 'middle Age period peculiar to women (36 to 52 yrs ) 7 Does thl ' make you suffer from hot flashes, feel o nervous, htghstrung. tired t Then do try Lydla E Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve sucn symptoms. Plnkham's Compound also has what Doctors call a sto-machic tonic effect! V IVDIA E. PINKHAM'S WNU W 0449 S0R6,6HAPPS9 UPB ? p--' " 7H Quick relief with fiS MENTHOLATUM " PAIN ..J Don't go oa suffering from tXy1"-- painful, dry, cracked lips t reach for Mentholatum. Feel g Mentholatum's fa- - w,. 9i3aXs mous combination of menthol, j5 tf y1 T !A'N3 camphor and other ingredients 2,,i s . &4 soothe tender lip skin, revive dried-ou- t skin cells, help them V4 k y ! retain Deeded moisture. Soon ; & ! if m smorIlng Pa'n leaves, lips feel ! ' J "y smoother it's a pleasure to twj,, ' r sm''e aSa'n-- tubes and jars TAT AS YOu j 35 and 75i sizes. ... iniiiiiirtii r ' M IPSA Famous Baseball Duels IT HARDLY seems possible that in in less than two months several ' thousands ol ballplayers will be headed for the sun again, south 01 west. In the meanwhile, the hot stove league is getting hotter now that football is packed away where it belongs. And one stove league feature has been the 'argument in-volving Tris Speak-er and Joe Here's one leading example: "Dear Sir: The other night we sat Grantland R1Ce arQund and aIter the inevitable late-hou- r discussion oi the comparative abilites of Joe Louis and Jack Dempsey, natural ly the chitchat switched to the all-- time baseball team. One man averred that there should be a place for Joe DiMaggio. That he is such a great star that it seem ridiculous to bar him. "It was pointed out that cur-rently, and for the last 20 years or more, the all-ti- eutfield has been made up of Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth and Tris Speaker, and which of those three could a fellow toss out In favor of Di- Maggio, no matter how great Joe is. It was said we could ttirow out Speaker, that .ild Tris had been only a great fly-catcher and that he didn't really -- rank with Cobb and Ruth and DiMaggio. When I got home, I got out the record book to look up Tris' records and I am convinced that DiMaggio is forever locked out of the e outfield. Surely, no one questions the rights of fobb and Ruth and, after a bit of study, no one can query the right of Speaker to the center field spot, either. "Now look. In the 22 seasons,, embracing 1907 through 1928, all Tris did was average 344 at the dish, in 2,789 games and after 8 times at bat, during which he got 3,515 hits. Only Cobb, Rabbit Maranville and Hans Wagner went to bat more than 10,000 times. The only others in the history of the games who hit safely more than 3,000 times are such stars as Cap Anson, Cobb, Eddie Collins, Nap Lajoie, Wagner and Paul Waner. Even Ruth didn't make tnat category. "The only others to top his lifetime batting record were Jobb, Rogers Hornsby, Dan Delahanty, Billy Hamilton and Willie Keeler. Ruth Is two points jack. Think of the other greats who couldn't bang .344 in (heir careers, and Tris did it for 22 years! "He's in the book for hitting 50 or more doubles in five different years, showing his amazing speed, and a knack of taking the extra base that DiMaggio has. He leads in the matter of two base hits, with 793. Aside from those figures, Speaker also shares the record for most assists from the outfield in one season 35. He once was guilty of perpetrating a pair of unassisted double plays in a season, and his mark of four triples in his three World Series stands alone. "I'm sorry that DiMaggio can't make it, but the book won't yield. Speaker was good. It says so. Caswell Adams." Speaker vs. DiMaggio The Speaker-DiMaggi- o duel is a tough one to analyze. In addition to being hard and timely hitters, both were great outfielders. On the defensive side alone, they were better than Cobb and Ruth. Both had better arms than Cobb and both were faster than the Babe. Speaker had a better chance to show his outfield ability than DiMaggio. He played in the day of the dead or at least deader ball. This gave him a chance for a much longer range. Speaker was a star at going back for a ball and so is DiMaggio. Both could also come in. Speaker as 8 master at fielding ground balls, perhaps the best in baseball. No one would be more dangerous in a pinch than DiMaggio has been with men on bases, waiting 'o te driven home. I doubt, that DiMaggio can ever reach Speaker's e batting mark of .344. Few have ever passed this set of figures. Connie Mack has the idea that there should be new base-ball rankings every 20 years since so many things change. This is a good idea. ' DiMaggio' then would certainly head the new order dating back tc 1920 or 1925. Or possibly beginning with 1930, when Cobb and Speakei were through when Babe was fading when Wagner and Collins and Lajoie had all finished. I V? j.N-- J O V ' 1 I J 7 Rv.?.... J. ..,. CAN-CA- N "GIRL" . . . C. Robert Jennings, Eufala, Ala., is dressed for his role as a chorus member in Princeton university's annual Triangle Club show, this year en-titled "All in Favor." He is of the class of '51, a Culver graduate, active in crew and tennis and a member of the editorial board of the Princeton Tiger magazine, ne is wearing the costume of the can-ca- n number, one of the high- - lights of the show. Released by WNU Features. '6 By INEZ GERHARD "iIVE LIZABETH SCOTT a good 'or., VJT death scene and she's happy. She didn't like the one in "Dead Reckoning" "It was only a three-Jrr;lin- e scene, and the dialogue was 'it', terrible," she explained at lunch 'e the other day. "But I have a five-!rtlin- e scene in 'Bitter Victory', and he it was supervised by a famous doc- - tor, so it's absolutely authentic." nil I I If j li.-- - 4(1 "rW '1 LIZABETH SCOTT Yellow haired, with arresting beauty and a husky voice, Miss Scott jL is wonderful fun. She had been to ,J sales, bought a rain coat and a pair of shoes. "I love sales; when I was a poor young actress here in New York I couldn't have been dressed without them." She says she may marry this year if she can get time off from Paramount. ' B' '.) Orlando Martins, from the Basuto e' country in Africa and a favorite Mj actor in London, has joined the "Hasty Heart" cast. Ronald Rea- - 1 gan, Patricia Neal and Richard jT Todd have the roles which were (: beautifully done on the New York stage by Richard Baseheart, John ss" Lund and Anne Burr. Baseheart and 'k Lund got Hollywood contracts as a n,' result of their work, m When Ozzie Nelson's mothe' flew from New Jersey to Holly-ea- I wood to spend her vacation with Ozzie and Harriet, her son was worried, for it was his mother'? 1,1 first plane trip. But she steppe" ": off the plane in California fresh as a daisy. "This is the way to c travel!" she told Ozzie enthus-i!- - iastically. He looked at her and " muttered "And they talk about the younger generation!" a i Jane Wyman goes into "Man ' ' Bunning", to be made in England by Alfred Hitchcock. Acclaimed as oti 1948's best film actress because eE of her work in "Johnny Belinda", ' by London's Film Tribunal, she iei: will use the $4,000 award to es-- " ' tablish a scholarship at the Royal ' Academy of Dramatic Art. It is presented in the name of the cast and crew of "Johnny Belinda." ' Before Bob Hope left for Germany for the holidays the cast and crew of "Easy Does :e It" gave him a present a walk-- ing stick whose silver handle un-- m screws, revealing a test tube J' large enough to hold enough liquid refreshment for a long " walk. iai ' Some Hollywoodians recall when is Victor Mature arrived 10 years ago, w set up a tent at a traffic intersection and refused to budge till he got a lj movie role. Now he has finished playing "Samson" in "Samson and K Delilah" (wait till you see him slay ras those Philistines with the jawbone i of an ass!) and returns to Para-U- t mount to play opposite Betty Hutton in "Red, Hot and Blue." ctt Save all chicken wishbones.' lie 20th Century - Fox and the e Poultry and Egg National Board join in a promotion for "Chicken Every Sunday"; contestants or send a wishbone and a letter exi-t plaining why they like chickeD nii every Sunday, also tell of "i ivi desired wish". Winner gets his n , or her wish. Three regional K inners go to Hollywood, as t, Quests of Celeste Holm and Dan a? Dailey. p: When Steve Sekely directs an A lif picture, he's Steve Sekely on the oi cast and credit sheet; when he does a B, he's S. K. Seeley . . . Wayne Morris ("John Loves Mary",) had ss a tough holiday season; he had i, four wisdom teeth extracted . . Id Patricia Neal has an interesting , landlady Mrs. Jean Acker Valen-s- ' tino, widow of the screen's "great le lover" . . . chet Lauck and Norris Goff are auditioning actors for new I, characters in "Lum and Abner" . . . cr .J Phi! Davis, head idea and gag al man on Ralph Edwards' "Truth or ,t Consequences", has sold an original story, "Moon over the CatsKills," to George Jessel, to star Danny ( Thomas. It is a musical, and Davis ji; will write the screen story. k" 0r Jack Benny's first effort as a motion picture producer, "The W Lu Stiff", produced for Amuse- - ent Enterprises, is scheduled for i February release. Benny has a nice if- "se starring Dorothy Lamour, Brian Donlevy and Claire Trevor. c t s t, t f fer.il llt Iff ' - ' S.'',i;'i1i,i'J'?-- v -- - i i mi 'm 1 t j. efi ffr V . I DON'T BELIEVE IT . . . There's an old saying that the "camera never lies", but that you can't always believe what you see is amply strated here. Seaman apprentice Robert Bradford of Chicago apparently Is supporting Italy's famed leaning tower of Pisa with his own two hands, but it's only camera magic. Bradford is a member of a naval unit visiting Italy. ' iui m m miHft w 'ill U JWmWMgPWWMI WW I' TOGETHER . . . Mrs. Cara Cor-tazz- o, 107, is shown with her great - great - granddaughter, Sharon Patricia George, in Pa. Mrs. Cortazzo was born New Year's day, 1812, In Italy. i - v ' ' ' " ' V( ......... - ' ' s "INTRODUCTION" . . . This photo, made some time ago, seems prophetic in view of the resignation of Secretary of State George C. Marshall. Secretary Marshall is pointing to Under-Secretar- y of State Dean Acheson as if introducing him. In announcing Marshall's resigna-tion, President Truman said Acheson had been named to succeed him. The post of undersecretary will be filled by James. E. Webb, budget director. Seamstresses will save time, ef-fort and thread if they use scotch tape instead of basting material. Did yon know that shellac will turn white with the absorption of water or moisture? Use up leftover pickle juice by pouring it over sliced cooked beets and allowing the beets to marinate in it. Serve the beets as a relish or on salad greens. If there is an elderly person or' child in your home, burn a low wattage light all night in the hall or bathroom to insure against ac-cidents. ( ' - ' , .. I -- - - DEMOCRATIC SPEAKER.:". Representative Sam Rayburn, Texas, ousted as speaker by Re-publicans in 1946, takes over his old jdb again after being elected on a straight party vote of 255 to 160. I ' ' y ' - ' ' (f fir;-- A A . NO HOOKEY PROBLEM ... No scholar is likely to play hookey from the Sam Hughes public school in Tucson at least not during "go western week", for school is more fun than a three-rin- g circus. Pupils don western garb, as do teachers, and the curriculum for the week includes lessons in rope spinning, technique of handling a er and other cow country folklore. ' V ; i i v'i BULGARIA'S NO. 1 RED . . . Prime Minister Georgl Dimitrov looks so much like Russia's top man in the Kremlin that in his big mustache, he is often mis-taken for the Red chief. But he's big man enough in Bulgaria, where he Is Stalin's right hand man. v I tut 1 ! ll si If - own H 2- - 11 4J sa PULPIT' TEMPEST ... An or-dained minister at four, Marjoe Gortncr raised a tempest of crit-icism when he performed the wedding ceremony for a Cal-ifornia couple. Supporters said there was no age limit on min-isters, the ceremony was legal. However, it was ruled illegal. p stAaa lit. ft--' RUGGED VOYAGE . . . That's what seems in store for Carl Madrid, 44, Chicagoan enroute to New Orleans aboard a raft which he made himself, and which is powered with an outboard motor. Madrid was uncertain as to how long it would take him to complete his journey, but said that when he reached New Orleans he plans to live aboard his raft and do some writing. |