OCR Text |
Show l - MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT FARM MACHINERY & EQUIP. WATER WELL DRILLS, Failing 1,000, truck mounted, drill pipe, bits, tools, etc. Water tru-ik- Casing. FRED E. BUTLER, 1013 South Cedar St., Casper, Wyoming. FARMS AND RANCHES CANADIAN FARMS Writ U) for FItKK IN-FORMATION on farm icttloment opportunities Ftutfla tolli. Ilpssonably priced. C. F. Corn-wall. Caontllao I'aclflc Railway, Vancouver, B.C. HOME FURNISHINGS & APPLI. STEEL FOLDING COT Cot with wire link spring at-tached to frame with helical springs at each end. Strong angle iron frame, and heavy tubular ends. Ends are locked la position when set up. 2'6" Wide, 6'6" Long. Spring 17" High. Weight 45 Pounds. Quantity Prices Upon Request. New Used t to 21 $2.50 each J1.50 efc 24 to 100 2.00 each .... 1.25 tack 100 or over 1.50 each .... 1.00 each MOHSEY mm & METAL CO. 750 South Third West Salt Lake City 4 Utah. MISCELLANEOUS I 24 PASS. CHEVROLET I SCHOOL BUS PRICED RIGHT Call, Write, Wire to W. R. HUBBLE, Gen. Mgr. JESSE M. CHASE, Inc. Pocatello, Idaho 6th ft Confer Phono 2600 Open 7 Mondays thru Saturdays WANTED TO BUY WE BUY AND SELL Office Furniture, Files, Typewriters. Add-ing Machines, Safes, Cash Recisters. SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGE 621 South Stato St.. Salt Lake City, Utak-- Are Always A Good Buy arsA axafves are AfOf necessary for mosfpeope The juice of a lemon in a glass of water, when taken first thing on aris-ing, is all that most people need to insure prompt, normal elimination. No more harsh laxatives that irritate the digestive tract and impair nutri-tion! Lemon in water is good for you! Generations of Americans have taken lemons for health and generations of doctors have recommended them. They are rich in vitamin C; supply valuable amounts of Bi and P. They alkalinize. aid digestion. Not too sharp or sour, lemon in water has a refreshing tang clears the mouth, wakes you up. It's not a purgative simply helps your sys-tem regulate itself. Try it 10 days. USI CALIFORNIA SUNKST LEMONS PILES TROUBLE? For Quick Relief DONT DELAY ANT LONGER! Now. a doctor's formula you can use at home to relieve distressing discomfort of pain-I- tch Irritation due to plies. Tends to sof-ten and shrink swelling:. Use this proven doctor's formula. You'll be amazed at its speedy action relief. Ask your druggist today for Thornton & Minor's Rectal Oint-ment or Suppositories. Follow label In-structions. For sale at all drug stores. May laiaiLi Tomorrow Night without being awakened if you're forced up nightly because of urges, do this: Start taking FOLEY PILLS for Sluggish Kidneys. Thay purge kidneys of waates; they soothe those irritations those causing urges. Also allay backaches, leg pains, painful passages from kidney inaction. Unless you sleep all night tomorrow night DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK. At your druggist. ,7Nt) W 3748 High-Scho- ol Graduates CHOOSE YOUR CAREER IN A GROWING PROFESSION! 4 open to girls under 35, 3fl graduates and A college girls. .Vmore opportunilies CTcry year for the graduate nurse, best preparation for both career and marriage. ask for more information xsk at the hospital where you Q D would like to enter nursing. Jy& INEZ GERHARD , rHARY SCOTT has been 7Aowed by Michael K eductions from War-t- o be one of the two 1 59S interests in Joan I ' f. life in "Flamingo ffl assignment which he de- - 3 Scott is a god actor wh0 "'! iiP,i as many good roles as It" ' i . i I h , 1 "new " V ZACHARI SCOTT V i have come his way. He'll i joung deputy sheriff who be-- f Cces state senator, a handsome '"tling who breaks or at least ' Joan's heart, with Vir-- 7 ix Houston as her rival for his A 'Sections. 4 incdentally. Miss Houston, a -- tjuate of fie Omaha community iihouse (Dorothy McGuire and ..Vi; Fonda came bom re), iot the role because Curtizaw her for Mimi Chandler. W t. a party fii fen a Memphis lad in Yankee !K..3i yelled "He did it for me!" at via Joe Di Maggio hit a home Si run Dick Jurgens wondered if he ml lis right Everything else had ten done for him as one of the fKMjers' popularity contest win- -' ten visiting New York this sum-it--e- r. They appeared on Jurgens' i b 5t:i:!ht Revue" and visited the aKi Km's high spots. Twenty-si- x boys E ad girls have been spending New ore'i'crk as a result of Jihievemint contests conducted by "".rath organizations all over the tt'jitry. J: Stsan Hayward can take a .. dare and band it back. Soon I: iller she reached Ada, Okla., Ii. m location lor Walter Wanger's . "Iilsa," she received a huge bunch of mistletoe from the j tofra's menfolk, with a note . I sayinj "We guess this is just f j wishful thinking, but here's A j hoping." She replied that she'd ,p kiss an; representative male M, citiien of the age of her two-- y twins! I - y Fj Bainter, long a stage star rijr: r;dio serial heroine and lately fcjJt "June Bride," has a new career -- tig realty operator. She is g 30 dwellings on 14 acres , & Pita Springs, to be sold when Jtill Bxphrey Bogart's butler had , "te o! absence while Bogart was '"H in "Key Largo." He visit-cte..- y London and got household point- - F from friends on the staff at lragham palace for use in the :'i;rt household. finally cast as a very solemn deacon in Leo McCarey's g--i 'A Sam," Bert Roach, the to be such a laugh ,c:,r that he was as a J ; m politician to use his talents fl"e fi"t time spectators will I r; a sees as over the bar, in "The Olym-b- - ' 1948'" Eagle-Lio- n re- - j,;'- H technicolor, too. Low- - "r,i,airplanes equipped with 1 ,Jf",MU- o lenses, vaulter from ;)SlandTonthe .rSed in "The what is be- - ' he Z is a klnd of Hungarian a VnS n?d 30 rare that the l C yet been cognized I American Kennel club. 1 tfand with four V I'JJivan ''"Ten, Maureen John Fa"w PW'fW00d le" than 24 'l fThe"J ra: Shannon. Ire- - ,n ul. between planes. 5 'otsu Geer ' ' "i radio star, "t J Si'1 29 " trio ifhMiTKLel"y.Leo White th" .a' hm important tib'A C, 1 HPP Times," ' 1 ' ' - - -- 1 FRIVOLOUS SAL . . . Mildred E. Gillars, the Nazi radio's al-leged wartime "Axis Sally," smiles from the U. S. marshal's wagon upon arrival at U. S. dis-trict court where hearings are being held on a charge of trea-son against her. Spraying in Summer Will Not Halt Grubs Destroying Eggs Fails To Stop Winter Attack Spraying cattle in summer with benzene hexachloride, rotenone or other insecticides, new or old, does not prevent grub infestation in win-ter. Although there is nothing new in that statement, the need for repeat-ing it is plainly indicated by an account of spraying dairy cattle in one of the corn belt states. The work was given considerable pub-licity, with erroneous conclusions. In this case, older animals of the herd were sprayed with DDT. Heif-ers and calves were not sprayed because they were running in pas- - fit ". - Dipping method Is favored by some cattlemen to control grubs and other infestations. ture. Spraying them would have required getting them up and han-dling them. The following winter, it was noticeable that the cows which had been sprayed were not infected with grubs. The young stuff was peppered with them. The natural conclusion was that a summer spray of DDT was effective. That conclusion is unwarranted because, as entomologists know, older cattle seldom if ever have grubs of the heel fly. The young animals are the ones that suffer. The department of agriculture says: "Many substances have been applied to cattle to keep away heel flys and to kill the eggs deposited on the legs of the animals. All have been found to be either ineffective or impractical. The best time for attacking the pest is when the grubs are in the backs of cattle." itHfit IlfffiiMiiMiiWiititBiisftb I ; J,j, Ml I - Vt ,, f f f f I , WHERE THE U. N. WILL TALK IT OVER . . . This month the Unit-ed Nations is reassembling In Paris to have another try at persuading the world to settle down. Here, a workman is shown engaged in the decoration of the newly erected secretariat building adjoining the Chaillon palace where the U. N. general assembly is convening. Through the window the Eiffel tower looms Into the sky. ............. iiiiiiiiu Editor's Note While Drew Pearson is on vacation, the Washington Merry-Go-Rou- is being written by his old part-ne- r, Robert S. Allen.) Political Kettle Boils '"PHE political ket-- tie has reached the boiling point. On the national stage, the cooking started when Harry Truman and Thomas Dewey formally squared off before Labor Day audiences. Simul-taneously, a number of equally ex-citing and significant state contests were joined. To the smart politicoes, these local battles are second in importance only to the "big top" melee. For the poli-ticoes know that what happens in these state arenas will' profoundly affect not only the national contest but also the shape of things after-ward. The control of congress, of pow-erful organizations in key states, and, in the event Mr. Truman loses, of the national Democratic machinery, are at stake in these tests. Intensifying the concern of the po-litical generalissimos are two fac-tors: The great body of "undecided" voters, manifest in every important poll; and the spectacular upset of Memphis Boss Crump by crusading Rep Estes Kefauver. To the profes-sional politicoes, these two items spell uncertainty. Anything can hap-pen. The general public is itchy and new and fresher-soundin- g voices have a strong appeal. Rank Surprise High-ranki- officers are in' for a surprise when the report of the advisory commission on serv-ice pay is published. The commission will recom-mend increases for enlisted men and junior officers, but none for the top grades. In fact, they ac-tually may face a pay cut in the recommended elimination of tax deductions and certain allow-ances. A previous committee of gen-erals and admirals had recom-mended pay boosts for all ranks, with the top echelons getting the biggest increases. Defense Secre-tary Forrestal didn't even both-er to send this report to con-gress. Instead he appointed the civilian commission to make a new study. Shipping Ban Violated The U. S. still is shipping vital war material to countries behind the iron curtain. And these shipments still are be-ing made with approval of the com-merce department's office of inter-national trade. This is the agency that formerly was headed by Wil-liam Remington, leading figure in the Russian "spy" disclosures of the house activities committee. This astounding trade still is going on despite the administra-tion's announced policy of ban-ning it, despite the warlike ag-gressions and provocations of Russia and also despite the world-wid- e furor over the con-gressional revelations and their attending fantastic ramifica-tions. This column definitely has es-tablished the following facts re-garding the continued export of war potentials to Communist-rule- d coun-tries: The OIT has secretly issued a li-cense for export of a large quan-tity of ball bearings and steel balls (for the manufacture of bearings) to Czechoslovakia. This license was issued to the Overseas Mercantile company, N. Y. Satellite Czechoslovakia is today one of Russia's major munitions producers. The great Skoda plant has been converted entirely to mil-itary output. Further, ball bearings are a key essential in the making of war goods. Two of the most costly air force raids into Germany during the recent war were for the pur-pose of knocking out g plants. An official of the Overseas feat the ball bearings being shipped to Czechoslovakia could be used in war preparations. Eye Poppers in Budget Preliminary budget estimates submitted by the army and navy for next year are The two services are asking for approximately five billion dollars more than the 16 billion dollars congress voted them this year. The navy wants more than 11 b. lion dollars and the army more than 10 billion dollars. This stupendous 21 billion dol-lar total does not include air force estimates. They are still sure to be not to come and are less than 7 billion dollars. is already in The 1949 budget preparation. It will be submitted to the new congress in January by whether he is President Truman, or not. If they win, G.O.P. leaders privately, are planning to in preparation of demand a voice the budget. I J BOTTOMS UP . . . One thing about babies no one would ever accuse them of being As an example, here is young Robert Singer of Shirling-to- Va completely nonchalant. t $4. - s . J: t r 1 W J" ri.. ,ma - rim. mil WALLACE PICNICS AFTER 'EGG SnAMPOO' ... In this picture nenry Wallace, Progressive party candidate for President, doesn't look like a man who had just been subjected to a shower of eggs and other missiles, as he was when he spoke at Greensboro, N. C. He is chatting calmly with Mary Price, who was among those named by Elizabeth Bentley, confessed spy, at the recent congressional spy Investigation in Washington. I 'i EYE FOR SALE . . . Victor St. Cyr of Woonsocket, R. I., car-penter by day and restaurant worker by night, has offered to sell his right eye for $10,000 in order to provide for his seven small children who face pros-pect of life in an orphanage. Soil Inventory Termed Good Management Basis Keep an inventory of the soil's fertility, the same as of buildings, livestock and equipment, advises Middle West Soil Improvemem committee. Nearly any farmer knows how many dairy cows, beef cattle, hogs and sheep h'e has. He also keeps a record of his seed, feed, build-ings, machinery and fences. Few farmers, however, have an inventory of their principal asset ( CHECK UP H ON YOUP SOILS PLANT FOOD I f UW I "IMOGEN I I I PHOSPHATE I ( Jirwy potash i Yjrt--TS OBBAMc MATTER I SOIL TILTH I ITjif oooo j XwUFP$Zpr W the soil. Yet a farmer's earning power depends largely on whether his soil's fertility level is high or low. On thousands of farms a soil fertility inventory would show seri-ous shortages. Overcropping has used up nitrogen, phosphate and potash. The organic matter supply is scraping the bottom of the barrel. Soil structure has been damaged. Drainage is poor and air circula-tion is shut off. Crop output is low. Restocking the "shelves" of the sod warehouse involves several es-sential steps. Plant food is impor-tant. But other things also are needed, particularly organic matter and good soil structure. The soil inventory can be im-proved faster and at lower cost U "leaks" are halted by conservation measures that will slow down run-off and save topsoil and plant foods. Among such measures are contour cultivation, strip cropping and ter- - racing where needed. j jj j I j j j ALL HANDS ALOFT TO TRIM SAILS . . . For the men who go down to the sea in ships, sights like this are virtually a thing of the past, along with the cry "Sail ho!" and sailing vessels are only used as training ships now. This one is the coast guard training ship Eagle, formerly the German naval training vessel. Horst Wessel. a three-maste- d bark. jF BY BREAD ALONE . . . Peter M. Schwartz, for whom the sun rises and sets in the yeast, dis-plays assortment of enriched bread and rolls for William Walmsley, principal at American Institute of Baking school. Baker Schwartz just finished training course. If I ' I PARLEZ VOUS SOCKO? . . . Marcel Ccrdan, pride of the French fistic world, was able to sing in the shower after arriv-ing in V. S. to begin training for his middleweight title bout with Champ Tony Zale on Sep-tember 21. vdllNG MEN GOING WEST . . . Film Actress Mae West, who was of defending herself in a $100,000 damage suit in Los in the process of small visitors come up and see her in the A eles had a group rtroo'm It was a pack of Cub scouts, visiting the court to observe 'iurisnrudence. When the scoutmaster explained to Mae that fnTy were called a "Cub pack," she retorted that they looked more like a wolk pack to ber. Soil Fumigation Needed In Sugar Beet Culture Joint tests in Utah by sugar in-terests and USDA "showed that soil fumigation for beets which follow beets made the difference between big yields and no yield at all." The sugar beet nemotode builds up so last in one growing season where fertile soil has grown a big crop of oeets that the field is a death-be- d tor sugar beets the next year with-out soil fumigation, It was indicated n the tests |