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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Snit-Ah- le tor Year 'Round Wen, rated pattern in sizes 12 14 . 4( and 42. Size 14, short .Si yards of slv, The spring and summer offers you a variety of smart As!"0l sew styles for your summer wa'rP special fabric news; decoratiL drbi! free pattern printed inside th J cents. wtt. jj SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN cTtTl 830 South Wells St., Chic.t0 , Enclose 25 cents in coins (.' pattern desired. tch Pattern No siz. Name ' Address memt m 1 Smart as Can Be WELL styled two piece frock A that's as smart as can be. The unusual slanted closing is accented with large buttons, the skirt is pencil-sli- and has a tiny slit in front. Pattern No. 8536 is :. sew-rit- e perfo- - CASH IMMEDIATELY WANTED for CASH-O- ld or Drotn jewelry, gold teeth, rings, diamond! watches, old gold, coins, etc. Boadtd notary opens package. You approve our bid or we return goods immediate iy. Satisfaction guaranteed. 30 Yeats in business. Mail today we stud cash. KUSSICK DIAMOND CO. 430 8. Bill Lob Angeles CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR. BUY A MOTEL, RANCH or BUSINESS In Oregon, Washington or California. On Coast or Inland. Attractive prices, easy terms, some trades. Write for descrip-tions and prices. Industrial Development Service, Ine. 417 S. W. Stark St. Portland 4, Oregon HELP WANTED WOMEN SALESLADIES t ! Pleasant part time work taking mail orders for MAISONETTE FHOCKS. Big Commissions. Write 237 "F" St., Salt Lake City, Utah INSTRUCTION DENTAL technicians trained, G. I. ap-proved. Enlarging facilities. Write Dental Tech. School 1112 E. Evans Ave., Denver 10, Colo. MISCELLANEOUS ROLL DEVELOPED Overnight Service. 8 High Gloss Prints, all Sizes 25c. 3 prints each negative, add 10c. REPRINTS, 3c each. FOX STUDIOS Billings, Montana VSIEH SLEEP WON'T C0m AND YOU FEEL GLUM Try This Delicious Chewing-Gu-m Laxative When you roll and to is all nlghf-t- el headachy and J ust awful because you mtd a laxative do this . . . Chew ftzn --a --mint delicious chewing, gum laxative. The action of special medicine "detours" the stomioi, That Is, It doesn't act while In the sto-mach, but only when farther along In tin lower digestive tract.. .where you wants to act. Tou feel fine again quickly And scientists say chewing mata rsEN --a --mint's fine medicine more eff-ective "readies" it so It flows gently tuts the system. Get teen-a-mi- at any 1 n j drug counter 25, 50 or only .... Uf FEEN-A-ttlN- Tl 4tTv FAMOUS CHEWING-GU- lAXATlft M is ftnuteonzed I ASnowdrijtlo Y A sift together toto a large bowl: A , j 1 ,Vi,,p..doubloci,on Beat lnfe. I bokins powder 12 HI ,p floUI) 1 WP. mh.d rip ma lately J,P "f. scrape beat- - i- -ce wp, S alter 2 minutes. an emulsorized shortening streamline mixing and give these better cakes, tool favorite cake into a real trea' creamy Snowdrift. But for an a tOnlySnowdrift's l"5" cakes. light, emulsorized shortening brings , and easy. Snowdrift is emuisorH cake ingredients as smooth as 'three is mixed in the same bowl In onij B minutesl Yes, a treat like Banana Nui w that easy I rr-- And for all your baking- -f or tender bls jyy flaky pie crusts-u- se Snowdrift. It s tops Mr digestible fried foods, too! PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING MADE BY THE WESSON OIL PEOPliJ Be Smart! The spirit of the new foot-wear is utterly feminine and sophisticated. Pictured here are two current designs that typify the variety of materials now being used. At the left is a basic suede decorated with vari-color- leaves across the toes. The leaves, besides giv-ing color contrast on the vel-vety white suede, also offer the contrast of reptile leather. At the right, shades of great grandmother's quilts come to life in cotton patchwork on a slipper, with an all-ov- lining of polka dot. WOMAN'S WORLD Plan Wisest Use of Home Closet Space By Ertta Haley Smart Suit Dress MODERN HOME designers necessity for plenty of good closet space; indeed, if they don't, women will soon tell them there must be plenty of it. Not only do closets take care of a lot of items for protective purposes, but also to get items out of 'ooms and thus prevent clutter. Closets, like rooms, should be planned with as much care as a bedroom, kitchen or living room, if they are to give their best serv-ice. Before you decide to tear down a wall to get more closet space, check to see if you're using what closet space you already have as efficiently as possible. Many aids have been introduced to closets to make them more prac-tical, and these may well solve the always be piijtected by boxes or bags since closets do collect dust as any other place in the house. On shelves, they are ready to get into easily. Label boxes for utmost effi-ciency. Shelves such as those just de-scribed are also ideal for hat box-es, and these offer the best solu-tion for keeping headgear in as good condition as possible. However, if you do not feel there is sufficient space for blankets as well as hat boxes on the shelves in the closet, it's now possible to attach hat racks or shelves to the backs of the doors of the closet. Protect hats stored on racks with zippered or plastic covers made for the purpose. If hats are in con-stant use, then only those used seldom need protective coverings. Shoe bags may be placed on the lower halves of the doors, while hat racks and shelves can go well above them. If you have a small closet which will take care of only essential clothing for a season, then you'll have to store clothing from another season elsewhere. Don't try to keep all clothing in a small closet since everything will suffer. : '" i j t: ' 3 ;: " ' ; f ,i'.'$M ; , 1 liiiiiliis? ..:::v:'''::.V:.;i:' I L L For busy days, nothing could be smarter than this brown and white nylon suit dress with Its batwing sleeved jacket that has a shoulder spread collar over-laid with white pique, repeated on the cuffs. The clender skirt shows the current trend. Brown patent is used for the belt. attached to the back of the door or the wall of the closet. If blankets and flat apparel are to be stored in the closet, these are best placed in plastic, zippered bags Keep closets neat .... problem of proper storage, with-out necessitating more space for the purpose. Closets are no longer catch-all- With current trends, this little room is being made into a thing of beauty. Decorations for the closet are matched as carefully as for ay room exposed to public view. Color schemes can be planned to match the room to which the closet is nearest. If you don't want them to match the room, at least select some mode of decoration which will harmonize with the room to which the closet opens. Accessories may be made at home if you have the time and in-clination. Otherwise, they may be purchased with much the same thought as you would buy other accessories for the home, with a plan and purpose. Budget the items you want stored in a certain closet, then lay out a plan as to where each should be. Then you'll be well on the way to-ward getting the most space and use from the storage space. Type of Storage Depends on Space Armed with a plan of what the closet is to hold, you'll have no problem deciding whether you should have shoe bags or a shoe chest. Most shoe chests will hold as many pairs as will the bags, but they do take up floor space which you may not have. Solve the prob-lem simply by having shoe bags with proper storage plan. or boxes which open easily much like drawers of a chest. If you have shelves above the clothes rack, or space available for shelves, this is by far the best solution. Any apparel of this type should Hard-Heade- d Man Tries Butting Car MILWAUKEE, WIS. Because he tried to butt a streetcar off the tracks, Robert Elliot, 57, re-ceived a y sentence from a judge. In district court, a policeman testified that Elliot stood in the middle of the car trttcks and re-fused to let a trolley car go past. The motorman got out, pulled Elliot to the sidewalk and dashed back to start his trolley. But Elliott was back before him and standing on the tracks. The police said that Elliot then butted his head into the trolley's headlight. The glass shattered and Elliot suffered a small cut. A policeman ran up calling, "Why don't you move?" "Let him go around me I" El-liot shouted defiantly. The defendant told Judge Har-vey Neelen he was "willing to take 30 days." Judge Neelen said he was thinking in terms of, say, 90 days. "But spring is approaching, your honor," Elliot protested. "Think of it, the birds, the bees Judge Neelen agreed to change the charge from drunk and dis-orderly conduct to vagrancy. "Thirty days," the Judge said. "But why did you do it?" "It was fun," Elliot replied. HUOUSEHOID When preparing both the yolk, and whites of eggs for a recioT time, work, water and egg mayS saved by beating the whites fi and then, with the unwashed beat, er, the yolks. With cut glass back in vogue here's a cleaning tip: Tackle the' dust that's collected in all flu crevices with a baking-sod- a paste and a stiff brush. KATHLEEN NORMS Let's Recall Old-Tim- e Virtues IF YOU WERE a little girl, at the Easter time, of, say, a hun-dred years ago, you would prob-ably find yourself in a family that used several terms that are only vaguely familiar to you, and of which your children don't know the sound. The family was probably "God-fearing." That's one of the words. You would have often heard of your "duty." . That's another. Then there was "modesty," which has gone out as a word and as a fact. Other words stood for obedience, respect for elders, purity of speech, avoidance of everything coarse or degraded. Easter was a time of prayer. Some of it was automatic; some of it was a mere social gesture. Some of it struck the younger genera-tion as boring, and sometimes Sun-day was a day to dread. But nevertheless, there was pray-er. Family groups strolled to church in the spring sunshine. God was thanked for domestic blessings; God's help was sought in insuffer-able griefs. Lent meant certain re-strictions, theatres and candy were foregone for 40 days, and Lenten marriages took upon them a sober character. "Our Father" So that Easter, when the physical world burst into bloom, and door yards were crowded with daffodils and lilacs, and light lingered on after suppertime, up and down un-der the elms and oaks of Main language matched the niceness of their speech, their books, their con-duct. And 100 years ago they didn't; have to be taken from comfortable homes, either from the guardian-ship of parents, or the love of hus-band and children, to be put into psychopathic wards, weeping that they don't like what they ought to( do and consequently don't have anyJ thing to do, except occupational therapy, behind bars. A sense of duty, with all that it implies, to parents, to husband and home and children, to reading and speech and to the smallest action, is a great tonic. It makes life worth while to be always holding oneself up to higher levels of service and of perfection. For the real seat of duty is, of course, the human soul. We can't go back a hundred years; to parents who were "too preachy," to church services and Sunday laws that made the sev-enth day a time to dread, to qeer-in- g at "old maids," and paying a g servant 10 dollars a month, to whalebone and crino-lines, to seven-cours- e meals that kept dear Papa in a constant state of dyspepsia, and corsets that squeezed the last breath of com-fort out of dear Mamma. To coal stoves and kerosene lamps, whip-ping schoolmasters and cruel step-mothers. But perhaps we could infuse faint modernized strains of these old virtues into today's roar and rush. Easter makes one think of it. A time for housecleaning and stock-taking. Prayer. Duty. Modesty. "God-fearing- " ;ow 21" "Respect" "... makes life worth while . . . Street, was really a time of relief and joy, and men and women who couldn't have analyzed their emo-tions, or the cause of them, yet felt the glorious uplift and the sing-ing beauty of Eastertide. Well, except in a few cold, blue-nose- unhappy groups it wasn't fear. One can't put the words "fear" and "father" together, and we have a right to say "Our Father." It may have been a rather sluggish type of be-lieving, but it was what Words-worth called "pure religion, breath-ing household laws." How much have your children had of those "household laws?" Our civilization was built up on them, and it is the best the world has ever known. Do your children know the prayer that begins "uur Father?" Have they ever heard the word "duty?" What does it mean to them? Does it mean respect for Dad and Mother, helpfulness about the house, acceptance of restric-tion in freedom, in pocket money, in hours wasted in amusement that ought to be spent on homework? Does "duty" mean manners and politeness, pleasantness to Granny and the aunts? Does it mean per-sonal cleanliness and neatness in their rooms? Does it mean avoid-ing the dirty little jokes that cir-culate in school, the books whose sole recommendation is that they would shock the most sophisticated reader? A Lovely Virtue And "modesty." Modesty was a lovely virtue. It meant that girls didn't expose their pretty young bodies just beyond the inches of coverage demanded by a lax law that isn't enforced. It meant that they didn't get drunk. It meant that they weren't conspicuous in night clubs and saloons, and that their Federal Agriculture , Department Urges Use Of 'Iodized' Salt " WASHINGTON. Many people think of iodine as a brown liquid in the medicine chest rather than something that has to do with food or a food essential. Yet the body needs small but steady quantities o- - the stuff for normal growth and development. The simplest, most practical and least expensive way to make sure that all people, especially young and growing children, get the io-dine they need is to use iodized salt. This is why the U.S. department of agriculture is with the U.S. public health service and physicians, nutritionists and other groups concerned with na-tional health in a campaign for general use of iodized salt. Home-maker- s are urged to look for the word "iodized" when buying salt at a grocery to make sure they are getting this small but important bit of health protection for their families. Since only one part Iodine in 10,-0- parts salt in needed, iodized salt is no more expensive than salt without this nutrient. It seems that the major salt porducers are will-ing to comply with the demand for it, so let's not overlook the chance. As a little review, iodine is es-sential for a healthy, thyroid gland, which in turn affects general well-bein- g of the body as well as growth. Iodine "hunger" is the cause of much fatigue among adolescents, the physicians say. Also, physi-cians have found that giving iodine to mothers has reduced miscar-riages and aided mothers in hav-ing enough milk for their infants. The use of iodized salt in areas where goiter was prevalent has proved a most effective means of preventing this disease. Now iodine is naturally present in the salt from the ocean and in many local salt deposits in the earth but, as with many refined foods, this iodine is lost in refin-ing. Returning iodine to salt is similar to enriching flour to make up for the vitamins and minerals removed from the grain in milling. r-- THE READER'S COURTROOM Crack in Back of Sacroiliac By Will Bernard, LL.B J If a Girl Gets Hurt Jitterbugging, May She Collect Damages? The members of a country club decided to give a dance for a group of soldiers stationed nearby, and a number of girls were invited to act as hostesses. During the party, one of the soldiers asked a girl to dance and she accepted little realizing what was coming. The soldier hap-pened to be a rabid jitterbug, and immediately began flinging his partner around with reckless aban-don. The girl was terrified and Is a Pedestrian Supposed To Guess the Speed of An Oncoming Car? A businessman decided to walk across the street from his office for a cup of coffee. He noticed a car approaching at a distance, but figured that he still had plenty of time to cross. He was wrong. The car, which was exceeding the speed limit, knocked him down. Injured, the man sued for damages. At the trial, the motorist tried to shift the blame onto the pedestrian "for starting across the street when he could see how fast I was coming." But the court held the motorist solely responsible for the accident. The judge said that, while a pe-destrian must use due care, he needn't make "mathematical calcu-lations to see if he will beat an on-coming car. If a Person Confesses A Crime in His Sleep, May He be Convicted? A prominent club woman was slain one night, in a crime that baf-fled the city's best detectives. A few days later, a young man walked into police headquarters and said: "My roommate killed that woman. screamed for help, but no one came to her rescue. By the time the dance was over, she had suffered an injury to her sacroiliac! Later she decided to sue the club for dam-ages. The club officials argued that the girl took her own chances in ac-cepting the dance, but the court dis-agreed and granted her claim. The judge said that an organization sponsoring a public affair of this kind must at least try to protect the hostesses from disorderly guests. ... A certain city council passed a law authorizing police to kill any dog found at large without a muz-zle. A few weeks later, an officer noticed an unmuzzled collie running along the street and quickly shot the animal. The dog's owner had the officer arrested on criminal charges, claiming that the city had no right to condemn a dog that wasn't doing any harm. But the court held the law valid and found the policeman not guilty. The judge said that the ban on unmuzzled dogs was to guard the public health. He said so, very plainly, in his sleep last night." The roommate was ar-rested and brought to trial on charges of murder mainly on the basis of his nocturnal "confession." However, the court ordered him freed. The judge said that his confession would not stand up in court, because it wasn't made "of his own free will." Woman Follows Odd Occupation Probably Is Only U.S. Anniversary Detective NEW YORK, N.Y. Maxine Allen Schoyer has already worn out one rug. Attractive Mrs. Schoyer is un-usual in two ways: She is an anni-versary detective, and she's the only known history researcher who does most of her work lying on her stomach. "I went shopping for a new rug recently," she said, "and the sales-woman was considerably upset when I told her I wanted a comfortable rug to lie on." Discovering anniversary dates started out as a hobby with her. Always a bear for history, as a for-mer newspaper reporter, adver-tising copy writer, radio commenta-tor and publicist she understands the importance in keeping track of the dates of past events. The hobby is threatening to be-come a profitable business. Mrs. Schoyer and her husband, William, now publish an annual digest of im-portant anniversaries. Orders come from newspapers, radio stations, ad agencies, publicity firms, librari-ans, free lance writers, publishing firms, music publishers and from people who like to read about anni-versaries the way others like to read almanacs. Maxine does the anniversary hunting, with occasional spare time assists from her three teen age sons and husband, she edits the volume. - There's nothing that gives Mrs. Schoyer more pleasure than getting on the trail of a new anniversary. Anniversary fanciers consider a first rate anniversary to be a first, fifth, 10th, 25th, 50th, 100th, 500th or 1,000th. She claims she lives constantly in the past finding anniversaries or in the future compiling next year's edition. Never the present. "There was one that was fun hunt-ing down," she says. "It's the 125th anniversary of an experiment dis-proving the old superstition that toads will live for ages in solid I rock. Sheriff Keeps Jail Lighted With Cord From Own Pantry HYDE PARK, ,VT. Sheriff Ken-neth Potter is a man of resource and ingenuity. The fact that the lights were on and the hot water heater running in the Lamoille county jail here recently proved that. They were running only because Sheriff Potter strung an extension cord from his own pantry to the jail. And the four inmates had their baths and clean linen, too. The power was turned off at the jail because bills were overdue. There were no lights, no hot wat- - er, so Sheriff Potter went to work to save the situation. The sheriff charged that the en-tire condition came about because the state auditor was "trying to dictate to us." In his turn, the auditor declared that ever since Potter installed an electric hot water heater about a year ago, the jail's electric bills had been climbing, and for several months had averaged $75. Before the time of the new heat-er, he said, the jail's power bills averaged $18 a month. So, contin-ued the auditor, he refused pay-me-on two bills and the power company discontinued service. The sheriff said that because oi the extension cord the electric light bills would now be in his name. Will he pay them? "I will pay up," he says, "until figure they've had a reasonable time to iron this out." And what if it isn't ironed out? After a pause, Sheriff Potter said- - "I shall just puU the plug and thi jail will be in total darkness |