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Show . MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Pretty Button Front for Girls Princess Style Has Slim Lines fncl' " V V I 8743 ' l 4 yrs Button Front pERFECT for school or parties all season is this button front style for young girls. Narrow tuf-lin- g trims the rounded neck, puffed sleeves are as young as can be. Pattern No 8743 is a sew-rit- e perfo- rated pattern In sizes 6. 8, 10. 12 and 14 years. Size 8, 3'h yards of Send an additional 25 cents today for your copy of the Fall and Winter STYLIST, our complete pattern Gift magazine. patterns printed inside the book. DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTION m CRAZY WATER CRYSTALS kpfgj IN POWDERED FORM SJz Old Prlc New Pric $ .85 Jar $ .40 1.25 Jar .75 Enjoy quick pleasant relief from constipa-tion and excess gastric acidity, and ailments to which they are contributing factors. If Ytur Droggi'tf Cannot Supply, Orrfr Direct CRAZY WATEJt COMPANY, INC, Mineral WelU, Texas GUARANTEED W TOPOSv l''MEj R 2 k ?fc DELICIOUS jfM Vf at all i OeVivTrri ' J Appb Bran Muffins So delicious, so easy I Mix everything 3a l bowl this Kellogg-quic- k way I 1 cup Kellogg's 2 tablespoons toft shortening y cup milk cup sifted flour Topping: 2'i teaspoons 1 2 cored thin baking powder apple rings Vj teaspoon salt i teaspoon 14 cup sugar cinnamon 1 egg Vt tup sugar 1, Combine milk In bowl. iSift together flour, baking powder, salt into same bowl. Add sugar, egg, shortening. Stir only until combined. 3, Fill greased muffin pans V2 full. Dip apple rings in mixture of cinnamon, sugar. Place firmly on muffin batter. Bake in preheated mod. hot oven 400F.) about 25 min. Yield: 12 medium muffins, IVi inches In diameter. totrica's most famous natural laxative cereal I 'tmQZt ! tor diets of insufficient s""""'"' pfgifjff Daytime Dress SLIM princess accent a daytiirre dress that comes in a wide size range for the more mature figure. Note the scalloped detail, the pretty keyhole neck-line. Pattern No. 3222 19 a sew-rit- e perfo- rated pattern in sizes 36. 38, 40, 42, 44. 46. 48, 50. 52. Size 38. 54 yards of mm Send an additional 25 cents today for your copy of the Fall and Winter STYLIST, our complete pattern magazine. Gift patterns nrintori Inside the book SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 347 West Adams St.. Chlcmio , III. Enclose 30c in coin for each pat-tern. Add Sc for 1st Class Mail If desired. Pattern No. Size Name (Please Print) Street Address or P O. Box No. City State KIDNEYS MUSTREX EXCESSWASTE When kidney function slows down, many folks complaia of nagging backache, losa of pep and energy, headaches and dizziness. Don't suffer longer with these discomforts If reduced kidney function is getting you down due to such common causes as stress and strain, or exposure to cold. Minor bladder irritations due to cold, dampness or wrong diet may cause getting up nights or frequent passages. Don't neglect your kidneys if these condi-tions bother you. Try Doan'a Pills a mild diuretic Used successfully by millions for over 60 years. While often otherwise caused. It's amazing how many times Doan'a give happy relief from these discomforts help the 15 miles of kidney tubes and filters flush out waste. Get Doan'a Pills today I Doan'S Pills POUND ' Ml lor POUND, HlOtt people aT use HUM () CLABBER h m CIRL than any other 1 baking fJ?. powder. S . vS it HUIMAH 4 COMPANY. TiftRf HAUTf. I NO. Ifs Wonderful the Way Chewing-Gu- m Laxative 53 Acts Chiefly to l( I REMOVE WASTE J l --NOT 1 GOOD FOOD Here's the secret millions of folks have discovered about ton-a-mi- the mod-ern chewing-gu- laxative. Yes, here la why action la bo wonderf-ully different Doctors say that many ether laxatives tart their "flushing" action too soon . . , zight in the stomach where food Is being digested. Large doses of such laxatives upstt digestion, flush away nourishing ood you need for health and energy. You feel weak, worn out. But gentle feen--a --mint, taken as rec-ommended, works chiefly In the lower bowel where It removes only waste, not ood food! You avoid that typical weak, "tired, worn-o- feeling. Use and feel your "peppy," energetic self Get N increase In price still y. 30 or only 10. jf FSej-A-MIMT- lS FAMOUS CMfwINC-CU- LAXATIVE Art Wlashes" Stopped or strikingly relieved In 0 of cases in doctors'fesW If you're miserable from the "hot flashes," and accompanying irritable, restless feelings of "change of life" you may be suffering unnecessarily I For ... in tests by doctors . . . Lydia Pinkham's Compound and Tablets Brought relief from such functionally-- i aused suffering to 63 and 80 (re-spectively) of the women tested! Complete or striking relietl Yes! Research has proved these medi-cines thoroughly modern in action . . . fias shown you where to loos: for relief Irom those distressing, nervous, "out el sorts" feelings of mid-Uf- a "change"! So. ..get Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound or new, Improved Tablets, yith added lronl (Wonderful, too, lor the junctional patnj of menstrual periods.) fr1 u.ij,ij9,:m It acts through a woman's RPnVw '3 sympathetic nerrous system Wmhli(!l$?M to relieve distress of those rt'G awful "heat waves"! Yodora f q J J checks 1 ! perspiration Jp I M tli u cream base. Yodora jj I actually soothing to normal skins. I N ls chemicals or irritating I I salts. Won't harm skin or clothing, i Slayj soft and creamy, never gets I j painy. ' i senile Yodora-- eei the wonderful 'I Fvmw - K' i McJUaaoc BuWilivn. Inc. trlUwwrt, Coo, SE10KER? ' nil cork rip Change to SANd the f J r??W distinctive cigarette with . HS"" bano s scientific process cuts nico- - I LKi !T, '' tine content to half that of ordinary rOlIVo A S "W . cigarettes. Yet skillful blending ' - I makes every puff a pleasure; jsdg'M 'r ' I FLEMING-HAL- L TOBACCO CO., INC 3 ASK YOUR DOCTOR ABOUT SANO OGAHmti j RURAL LIVING Writer Tells His City Friends Why He Likes It in the Country (E',t0.s Note: Th following arti-cle, I Live in the Country" by Alan Devoe, was published in the Septem- ber issue of Coronet magazine. It is reprinted here with the permission of that magazine.) By ALAN DEVOE TT IS QUITE CLEAR that most of my city friends feel sorry for me The reason is that I live in the country. While they pity, they also wonder, and this reveals itself in certain perpetual questions. What on earth do I find to do in the country? What is there to see? How do I fill my time? They feel sorry for me because I have no radio or television, and be-cause 11 miles separate me from the post office. They speak with sympathy of how very "dull" my life must be, and marvel that I am content to "stagnate" here. I receive these commiserations with scorn. For I extract from this life of "isolation," as my friends term it, a deep and endless de-light. The house in which I live is very ancient and somewhat askew; but from this ancientness and crooked-ness I derive continuous solace. Here in this tiny dining room the china dogs on top of the old pine corner-cupboar- d have watched three generations at their feeding; in the great spool-be- d upstairs have occurred both births and deaths. There clings in these rooms with their faded flowered wallpaper, their horsehair sofas, and wideboarded uneven floors an aura of the stalwart tran-quillity, the hard-toilin- g patience, of that succession of homely Dutch-men who were our predecessors. Near the middle of the last century, one of these Hollenbecks (for such was the name of the sturdy family which tenanted this homestead) de-serted the plow for a life of seafar-ing. When he was an old man, and had voyaged to every quarter of the globe, he came back to this house to eke out a living by mend-ing stone walls. So much for the house. It is like that tattered sampler in the hay-loft of our barn which reads, "Sweet Rest in Heaven," and like the crooked path that untold thousands of footsteps have worn through the clover field to our well a link with the simple, earthly lives of those good souls who are vanished. In every direction, as I look from my windows, are the green wooded hills, untenanted by living man. They lie these carved and molded masses of rugged earth brooding in an ageless silence, baking their hummocked backs in the hot sum-mer sun, shouldering the cold white weight of countless snows, existing eternal while the oaks and firs upon their slopes wither and die, and are born and live again through the passage of seasons. My friends who speak of "loneli-ness" and "isolation" take no heed of the deep companionship of trees and rocks. Yet it is easy to discover, in lichen-covere- d boulders and in the cool smooth trunks of maples or the rough, fragrant trunks of firs, an essence of being with which it is very easy for a man to commune. These high hemlocks are my fel-lows upon earth; together we face the elements, together struggle for sustenance, together are set upon By plagues and pestilences, together will return, when we die, to the eternal embracing earth of this planet. And It is possible for me to walk upon the black leaf mold in which these hemlocks have their roots and to draw from that contact a profound tranquillity of spirit. This relaxed contentment is a far better antidote for turmoil and vexation than my city friends can possibly receive in the diversions afforded them by the movies, the theater, the radio or television of which they deplore my lack. T"HIS COUNTRY life of mine, far from being barren of things to do and see, is crowded from day-break until nightfall. My personal routine of eating, working, sleep-ing, and performing chores is suf-ficiently simple. But the details of the lives that surround mine and demand my attention the lives of chipmunks and phoebes and wood-chuck- s and of the very buttercups that grow profusely in our pasture are so vastly absorbing as to re-quire all my hours. It is inconceiv-able that I could possibly be "bored," even if I had nothing more to occupy me than the con-templation of the meadow upon which I look out as I write this. In such a rural district as that in which I live, neurosis is impossible. That sickly "turning inward" which makes wretches of city victims has no opportunity to enter here. All man's thought and energy and time are taken here, as they were in the beginning, in a constant coping with the problems presented by the earth and the elements. And living thus in daily contemplation of the vast swing and surge of the eternal cosmic machinery, man's minor woes assume an utter insignificance. Canning Timetable 4 rf you don't have a canning time- - issued since 1946, you will 43aD't to take advantage of t h e saving new rules resulting research in the U.S. Depart-fen- t of Agriculture. Get the latest ii inning information from your r'e demonstration agent, located S" jj the extension office in the coun- - I ' ty seat- - - - J Best Varieties ( freezing the right varieties now ran make a big difference in the ality of frozen foods you take c t of yur 'ocker next winter. Be you freeze only the recom-;- ., iended varieties of fruits and Vegetables this summer. HOUJEHDLD Casserole A tasty casserole dish can be made from a combination of beef, tomatoes, macaroni or noodles, onions, bread crumbs, flour, and seasonings. Peaches Fresh peaches, when they are at the soft ripe stage, should be kept thoroughly refrigerated either covered or uncovered. Summer Salad Combine 2 cups of potato salad with Vz cup diced cooked ham and four quartered, hard-cooke- d eggs for a different summer salad. I CRDSSWDRD PUZZLE nsMELTnwAiicrs IS? U g E jllA TOP ACROSS 2. Aslant 22. Angrily EEl HLMIlLi 1. Relating 3. Young girls 23. A hard At I prVrclij'-r- l to the (Scot.) crayon KJNGUI NC.Z3EN cheek bone 4. Mimic 25. Fetish Ptc r P'wrl P T 6. Apple seeds 5. Music note (Afr.) r n a n Bfinn m ti 10. Day's 6. Raccoon- - 26. Crushed e nCu n n RTtA march like substances sfemF 11. Wild ox carnivore 28. Total IpIaIcIe RHlTeInIiX Ml F 12. Lift 7. Originated 30. Plants of E R N eHbE R G Sfl 13. Diplomatic 8. Needy the lily IpIyIe Is Li EIgIrIe ItEJ agent 9. Speaks family 14. Vipers 12. Roam 31. Fresh 7 15. Church. 13. High '33. Sloping: 38. Wild sheep officers priest roadway (Ind.) 16. Greek letter 15. Half ems 34. Silkworm 40. Compass 17. Islands off 18. Poem 36. Swallow point coast of 20. Eastward eagerly (abbr.) Greece T 19.Raises 2. S 4- - S 1 6 9 21. Apex 42 64. 24. Rent under y 10 V II lease 'j 'A 25 Musical . Z Z IS drama , 27. Large 4 28. Dwellings W 29. Two-seate- d 77Z 2i 320CoytCle rJVk 2 Vo (abbr.) V 33. Staggered 777.777 35. Chills and & fever - VCt ClA weapon 22 2 38. A stern oar 55 3 55 3b 39. Measure of . Z distance J7 J 40. Husk 41tT 1" 1 421 , 1. Estimates I I I I Y((A I I I I TfYA EPICUREAN ERROR CORNER By Isabelle Snyder LAURA FENTON vie'wed the dubiously. "Are you sure this is the road. Amy?" "Oh yes 'third road on the left' just as you wrote it in the notebook . when Mrs. Ed- - wards told us 3 -- Minute about it ... a Fiction wonderful country I J home that serves divine food. Hurry, I'm starved. And it sounds so divine!" Laura turned the carefully-cared-fo- r coupe into the narrow road, guiding it cautiously up the steep grade. Amy giggled like a girl. "It's a good thing it isn't much farther, Laura. I'm starved!" Laura smiled gently at the exag-gerated speech of her flighty friend who refused to grow old, graceful-ly or otherwise. "I believe the food will be worth the long drive off our main route. Mrs. Edwards is most discriminating." "There's the place," an-nounced Amy coughing from the thick Just. "Just look at all the cars in the yard the food must be wonderful." Laura turned the coupe into the crowded farm yard and carefully selected an ample parking spot. Amy pouted, "The food may be perfect but we'll have to wait ages to get in just look at all those others waiting!" She bounced from the car like a child and stood im-patiently while Laura fastidiously changed driving gloves for fresh white ones before leaving the car primly. "Goodness, Amy Bowen, straight-en your hat," Laura scolded as they walked to the house. "It seems strange that they don't have a sign on the road or out front," she com- - "Oh, outside, please," an-swered Amy warmly. "It's mnch too nice a day to stay Inside." mented as they ascended the steps to the veranda where other people already waited. THEY were greeted by an woman in black. "Would you care to come inside or will you wait here on the porch?" "Oh, outside, please," answered Amy warmly. "It's much too nice a day to stay inside." She continued to chatter of the weather and the lovely view while they found chairs in the shade. Then she turned to the woman next her. "Isn't this a love-ly place?" she asked enthusiasti-cally. Her enthusion apparently was not transmitted by her speech. In fact, Amy had the peculiar sensa-tion that comes to one who has committed a grave social error. The woman murmered something polite and turned away but Amy was not to be denied. "I'm Amy Bowen and this is my friend, Laura Fenton. We are school teachers from over In Ohio," she said. The woman looked at them in a pugzzled way, acknowledged the introductions briefly and changed her place. "Well, really!" Amy said In dis-gust before turning to Laura to say in a whisper, "Where do you sup-pose they feed folks, Laura? I don't smell any food nor hear any dishes." Laura answered quietly, "Don't fret so, Amy. There are so many flowers around that you couldn't smell food." Amy squirmed around In her chair, peering curiously into the house. "Goodness," she said, "the place is banked with flowers." "Oh," she gasped, turning an odd greenish white. "Laura, I'm going to be sick," she cried. Laura moved quickly, grasp-ing the smaller woman by the arm to help her to the car. As they passed the open door, Laura glanced Inside, then stifled a cry with a white-glove- d band. Reality had arrived with abrupt suddenness. Not till the two women were safe-ly In the car and ready to turn onto the paved highway did either speak. Amy wailed, "Oh, Laura, that hor-rible place We'll never live this down." Laura stopped the car and looked at the directions in the notebook " 'Third road on right,' " she read. She turned to her stricken compan-ion. "Amy Bowen," she said stern-ly, "maybe this will teach you to read the directions as they are writ-ten and to follow them carefully. The idea of taking us to a funeral Instead of a restaurant! " By INEZ GERHARD 73LONDE Marion Marshall has her best role so far in "That's My Boy," starring Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, at Paramount, but she piled up an impressive list of credits at 20th Century-Fo- x be-fore she left that studio. She was a model when 20th signed her, sent her to dramatic school for a" year, then put her into "The Snake Pit"; after that came "Sitting Pretty," "Apartment for Peggy," "I Was a Male War Bride," for which she spent six months in Europe, and others. It was the' test she made MARION MARSHALL for "War Bride" that Hal Wallis saw; as soon as she began to free lance he signed her for her role in "That's My Boy." GRASSROOTS Republicans Must Woo Dixiecrats to Win in 1952 By Wright A. Patterson AS A MEANS of stealing the show from their opponents in the 1952 presidential campaign the Republicans should insert state rights as a major plank in their platform, so stated as to leave no possibility of its being misunder-stood or misinterpreted. To be effective it cannot be expressed in political weasel words, one of those "heads I win, tails yon lose" kinds of statements that can be twisted to meet whatever occasion may present. It must be as explicit in its meaning as were those of Thomas Jefferson, the father and patron saint of the Demo-cratic party, and the original states' righter. Every piece of Fair Deal legis-lation the President has been able to force through congress has taken something away from the consti-tutional rights of the states, and something from the liberties of the people. All of the fair Deal legislation the President is so insistently demanding that congress enact is o the same anti-stat- e rights character. Each bill, should it become the law of the land, would take away some rights that are now enjoyed by the states under the provisions oj the constitution, some things on which the states now have the say-s- At its convention, the Demo-cratic party must either approve or condemn the actions of the Democratic administration. If it endorses such policies, it is ap-proving a limitation of the constitu-tional rights of the states. That would be objectionable to the mem-bers of the party in the southern states. With the Republicans propos-ing to protect the rights of the states it would give the Dixie-crats a place to which they could turn, and might result in the Republicans carrying some of the Southern states as ' did Herbert Hoover. The, Republicans have joined with the southern Dixiecrats in opposing the anti-stat- rights leg-islation the President has asked for, and the adoption of such a plank would be but an endorsement of the party's policies during the last two sessions of congress. The party, as such, must either endorse such actions, or apologize for them. The opportunity the situation pre-sents lor a "squeeze play" would seem to have been made to order for the Republicans. Will they improve it, or will they "muff" it as not needed to win that 1932 political battle? Undoubtedly a strong states' right plank in the Republican plat-form would insure some Demo-cratic votes for Republican candi-dates in many states. Thanks to the brilliant mili-tary mind of the late Admiral Sherman, at the time chief of naval operations, and to his ability in the field of diplomacy. despite the pettiness of England and France, fearful that Franco might fall heir to some of the funds that would otherwise go for their rearmament, we have added to the defense of Europe a practically impregnable bat-tle line in the Pyrenees moun-tains and Spanish divisions to man them, for which Eisen-hower will be thankful. It will prove of enormous value in the job to which he has been as-signed. There was certainly no reason why we should listen to the preju-diced protests of England and France. We are paying a large portion of the bill for their defense and providing a considerable por-tion of the armed manpower to defeat Stalin and his Communistic hordes. England and France, being much nearer and more vulnerable, have much more to fear from the threat-ened Russian attack than have we, but those protests, based on the hates of many years standing, is an evidence of the impossibility of achieving the altruistic aims of the United Nations so long as those hates continue. If England and France cannot rise above their petty prejudices, the United Nations might as well call off its efforts for world pacifi-cation. We are indebted to Admiral Sherman for ignoring those preju-dices and adding to the defenses of Europe, for which we have assumed responsibility. It was a fine job, well done, and at an opportune time. In Dutch Wife: Who's that woman over there staring at us? Husband: Shhh not so loud! I'll have a time explaining to her tomorrow who you are. Tact Customer "To what do you owe your extraordinary success as a house-to-hou- salesman?" Salesman "To the first five words I utter when a woman opens the door: 'Miss, is your mother in?' " |