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Show GIVING OUH WOR1D Once Sign on the door of Dell Ray Nielson's pick-up: "Half ton, will travel". Oh, Joy Spring spranR Saturday, and welcome wel-come it was. We should make the most of it while ,ve may. Reading the news of the weather in other places makes us realize that the climate pf Delia isn't half bad. Floods in Florida, zero weather in the Dakotas, turbulence over Indiana, Indi-ana, deep snow in the middle Atlantic At-lantic states, and warm, friendly sunshine here. The only trouble with Spring In Delta is that sometimes it doesn't last long enough. We often go from prolonged winter into early summer in one jump, but not always. It can last a whole third of the year March, April, May and June, and maybe it will this time, -though this isn't a long-range forecast. We have a four-season climate, which is the best kind. And year in and year out, I still say that our most reliable and delightful season is the autumn. From the time the last summer heat spell breaks until the first snow flies, often almost up to Christmas, our autumns give us some of the most enjoyable weather to be found anywhere any-where on earth. 1hp AC The other day I happened to read H PI? TO KEEP UP if WITH YOUNGSTERS Bexel Special Formula for adults contains a powerhouse of vitamins and minerals to fortify your daily diet-build rich, red blood Latest research in nutrition .hows that many adults need extra vitamins and minerals over and above daily foods. Don't miss vital food factors Bexel offers every day! Bexel Special Formula-Full Formula-Full Peltncy Guaranteed I These capsules concentrate dynamic dy-namic food factors ! 5 times your daily requirements of iron! Vitamin Vita-min B12 and other needed B Vitamins. Here is valuable help for rich, red blood for adults, especially older people. Only 61 a day. Thais a Afembtr of the Bexel Family of Vitamins for Entry Member of Tour Family don't forget the children! GUARANTEED I If you need vitamins, you will look better, feel better after one bottle of Bexel or your money will be refunded in full! Penny for penny. ..yon eat mom lui with Service Drug Co. I n . i $35 to I6I lower than the other four leading makes! lwi!-sr1cd pickup ntw from stronger tromt to lv I0n9.w-last.ng nomt finiih, j The only pickup with off 1 illlll ivl--, mm '- 11 111 s ; - -- u ,! ,,n ujj. if-- ' "flV' U"Jy 1 -,v i mi i -' S ' &.itotM Tl MM Now economy certified in tests by independent experts! Examples: over 25 more miles per gallon than the average of other sixes in Economy Showdown U.S.A.; over twice the front tire life of pickups and trucks now using "soft type" front suspension; see all the test results. Check Ford's prices. They're the lowest of all leading Light and Medium Duty trucks! ?ated on cerf ed ecDonjori of rf fo'ef ovo'eb e mo'ie'oc'v'eri' svf jeied rfo( den'o' awes, incu rs ftemral ' " elari deo'er pnaaruUQn, cw.C !:Qsing and oi'.naoe THE Over . By Dick Morrison I the date plate on a medium size i . -it . n i A 1 t t'lt'cinc minor, uuuui ot iijj, i think. What it said was, "After 10 years, lubricate with a little fine ball-bearing grease". That little bit of instruction "sent" me. Imagine a device so well made, so simple, so dependable, that it could be expected ex-pected to render whatever amount of service was required of it for ten years, virtually without attention, and then require only that little detail to make it ready for another ten years! In this day and age, when many items seem to be manufactured man-ufactured with the idea of wearing out as soon as possible so the "consumer" "con-sumer" will have to turn around and buy another, such an example of honest value was almost startling. start-ling. And yet, come to think of it, the . uncounted millions of little electric motors which serve us every day are remarkably dependable depend-able and durable; from the tiny ones that run the turntables of our record players to the full horsepower horse-power ones that operate grain loaders and such labor saving devices. de-vices. I am not at the moment concerned con-cerned with the 100 horsepower motors which pump water for irrigating, irri-gating, or the bigger ones which turn the propellers of ships, the wheels of locomotives, or the machinery ma-chinery of steel rolling mills. Only with the little ones, which bring us a myriad of conveniences and take the burden of much tedious labor. j Electrically, all motors may carry into the realm of the fanciful, be-! cause nobody really understands the magnetic force which moves them, but mechanically, they are remarkably simple. Most of them have only one moving part, if we don't count the automatic starting switch which makes a contact to send an extra surge of "juice" to a capacitator or through a special extra field winding at the instant of starting, and which then pulls 'back and remains . inoperative as long as the motor is running. Only one moving part the center shaft on which the armature is fixed, "push-pulled" continuously by the magnetic impulses which race smoothly around the bars of the stator, built into the outer case, or housing. "Swish, click, hmmmmmm " goes your fhp AC motor, when you flip the switch, as the surge of starting power causes it to lea.p into action, bringing it to full speed in a fraction of a second; as the starting switch clicks off; and the armature settles down to its steady competent, hum. Apart from the spinning armature, no mechanical part is moving exceptions, in some motors, being the spinning balls in the end bearings when that type of bearing is used. The more common com-mon bushings don't move, nor do they permit any appreciable a-mount a-mount of friction, as long as the little wicks from the tiny oil reservoirs re-servoirs keep the fraction of an ounce of oil circulating, which they do, usually, for ten years on end. The ends of the armature shaft, riding inside the bushings on spinning spin-ning molecules of oil, seem incapable incap-able of wearing out, ever. Ordinarily, Ordin-arily, trouble can't happen except as the result of abuse, or of a drop in voltage which can cause overheating. over-heating. And so your little electric motor spins on and on, almost si U f i a M 1 1 s w m Li ii h --Arl miueim-jUL-uj lently, steadily doing the work It Is supposed to do, one of the most remarkably dependable and efi-tient efi-tient devices serving the needs of mankind that was ever invented. There is a saying among industrial indust-rial designers that when a thing looks right, it probably is right. And it might be extended to mean when a thing sounds right, it probably prob-ably is right too. Our little electric motors not only look right, but they sound right. That smooth, barely audible hum of an armature, spinning as steadily as an electric clock, but much faster the most common constant speed being 1725 rpm somehow sounds just exactly right, and it is. "The machine, the frozen form of living intelligence, is the power that expands the potential of your life by raising the productivity of your time", wrote Ayn Rand, in Alias Shrugged. That's what an electric motor is the frozen form of living intelligence. It is as if a flight of fancy -were caught by a movie camera, and a single frame blown up in a clear enlargement, the living conception of intelligence "frozen" in the picture. The billions of little electric motors which serve us in countless ways which we moderns just take for granted, do have the true beauty beau-ty of functional design, which is a delight to see, and the low, steady stea-dy hum of their spinning rotors is a kind of music that sounds sweet to the rational mind. Defense of Conservatives It is often said that a conserva tive is a person who is opposed to change, and that a "liberal" or! a radical is one who favors change. I That definition, it strikes me, is one of the most confused and misleading mis-leading ever invented. For one thing, it seems predicted on the assumption, which is a false one, that change and progress are always synonomous, and that stability, sta-bility, or lack of change, Is always bad. In the field of political-economy, which is where the definition is most often used, the implicit errors are glaring. Ordinarily, leaders of business and finance are lumped together and classed as "conservatives" who are opposed to change. And, to some extent, this is right. These people are opposed to some kind of changes. And political reformers, socialists and so on are presented as "progressives" who favor change and to some extent this is right, too, because these people often do seem to favor changes of any and all kinds, rather indiscriminately. In my lifetime and yours, change change has been the order of the day. Those of us past 50 have seen the world change from the horse and 'buggy to the automobile. We have seen the airplane spring out of nothing nothing, that is, except ex-cept the creative powers of man's reasoning mind. We have seen most of the development of the telephone and the electric light. (My grandfather Snow told how he once walked fifty miles to see the first electric lights in John Wa-namaker's Wa-namaker's store in Philadelphia). We have seen radio come, from the first crystal and battery sets, reach its zenith, and then give way before television in its turn. A few generations earlier saw the first railroads; we have seen the steam locomotives displaced by diesels and streamliners. We have, indeed, been living in a world of change. Well, who brought about all this change? The radicals? Not on your tintype. It was the "conservatives" H 1 i . i w m p"" And youf savings continu. mile after mittl New brake liivngs, for instonce. last up to 13 longer. New oil filler hai 10 increase in efficiency. 11 M h ) u w ,,, viz r3 Gas-saving champioft, Ford S,x for o F.O.A.F. r? I 2 I ! I ! 1 the leader? of business and finance fi-nance who led the way. What of the "radicals, then, who are forever advocating almost indiscriminate in-discriminate change? Well, what of them? When you get to thinking it over, what worthwhile changes have been responsible for in the past half century? I say that, for the most part, they have been the ineffectuals, the incompetents, who, seeing the truly remarkable changes the wonderful progress brought about by the "conservatives" "conserva-tives" have sought political power pow-er in order to declare incapable of participating in constructively. Let's try defining them ove a-gain. a-gain. A conservative is one who recognizes that certain principles in human relationships are right, and need not and should not be changed. Within the framework of the correct set of principles, end-i less progress is possible. Without1 the correct set of principles, only retrogression enuses. So, as it looks to me, our conservatives may be ; defined as the people who seek progress and who hold that progress pro-gress can only be made if the right set of underlying principles are maintained. i Our radicals are those who hold there are no absolutes; that they, can take over the political means and simply order or buy a better world a better world which they are incapable of creating. On the one hand, you have a Fidel Castro, radical boss of Cuta. Which has caused the most progress? Which the most change? Defense of John L. Lewis It isn't at all inconsistent at this moment to put in a word of praise for John L Lewis, who has just retired re-tired a few weeks ago as head of the United Mine Workers' Union. John L. Lewis was an enlightened enlighten-ed labor leader. He recognized that the political means was not enough to provide the improvement in the standard of living of his miners. He knew his economics well e-nough e-nough to know that the economic means was basic. And so, he cooperated co-operated with the mine owners, sometimes even took the lead, in encouraging them to buy and install in-stall labor saving machinery. How different his attitude was from that of the labor leaders who, lacking understanding of economics always opposed such progress! He knew that wages and profits both are paid out of production. How different from the ill-informed attitude which held that wages came only at the expense of profits! pro-fits! And he lifted the membership of his mine workers union from one of the most miserably afflicted with hard work and low pay, as well as danger, to the status of a labor aristocracy. And he never took the stand of an extortionist. He said, in effect, "We will help you to produce more. Then you can pay us more". Religion in Politics With a member of the Catholic Farmer X Used 50 Lbs. N, Harvested 14 Tons Corn Silage Per Acre mm (q) e Church a fair chance of becoming a presidential nominee. It strikes me ps appropriate to look Into the question of whether such a candidate candi-date would be in the position, if elected, of recognizing a "higher authority" than the U. S. Constitution. Constitu-tion. The same could be true "f a Communist, obedient to Soviet Russia, were to be nominated. Life and The Reader's Digest have published 'an article by the Right Reverend James A. Pike, Protestant Pro-testant Episcopal Bishop of California, Califor-nia, in which the following is quoted quot-ed from the Jesuit paper, "Civilita Cattolica": "The Roman Catholic Church, convinced through its de-vine de-vine prerogatives of being the only true Church, must demand the right of freedom for herself alone. As to other religions, the Church will certainly never draw a sword, but she will require that by legitimate means they shall not be allowed to propagate false doctrine". And further quotations present it as the Catholic view thst what is not in accord with the "truth" Catholic doctrine has objectively no right of existence, propagation or action. And that "Catholics will be obliged to ask full religious freedom free-dom for all, resigned at being forced to cohabit where they alone should rightfully be allowed to live". My gosh! Tolerant lot, aren't they! What can be the matter with people who think they, and they alone, are infallibly right? They don't need to defer to me, or tolerate tole-rate me. I've got some of my own ideas, and I'll stick to them. The question, according to the article, turns on whether the prospective pros-pective candidate, Kennedy, holds to the "Official" Catholic view or REX WOOD Branch Mgr. Utah Poultry & Farmers Co-op m your fertilizer needs 4 t A David Patterson farm3 with his father, Frank Patterson, and two broth-r, broth-r, Jack and Lewis Patterson near Roy, Utah. This is his experience with fertilizer last year: "We applied between 100 and 125 pounds of available nitrogen to corn and harvested about 27 tons of corn silage per acre. Farming is like any business you can't expect dividends unless you invest. Fertilizer is one of the best investments a farmer can make. For nitrogen, I like USS Nitrogen Fertilizers." Those results by Mr. Patterson can be achieved by other farmers who follow proper management methods and who use enough fertilizer. Insist on USS Nitrogen Fertilizers for your crops this year. USS Nitrogen Nitro-gen Fertilizers are made by United States Steel and sold by reliable dealers. "It takes N, Men" and USS Nitrogen Fertilizers are top-quality fertilizers that mean more dollars per acre. Use enough fertilizer; harvest more profits! iTiirogen eraiizers erW Ke4awt Millard County Chronicle Snow College Hills Scientists Aspiring young scientists of the south central Utah region will have an opportunity to exhibit their work at the first annual science fair scheduled at Snow College on April 9, Floyd S. Holm, college director, di-rector, announced this week. Dr. H. R. Christensen has been named general chairman of the fair. According to Dr. H. R. Christensen, Christen-sen, chairman of the Snow College the more liberal "American" view. Myself, I won't take the chance. I wouldn't vote for anybody who has declared offiliation with such an organization. IVELL-FED are money makers .... N AH ILfTK ' . iA Are your crops well-fed? Don't GUESS-TEST! AMMONIUM NITRATE - SUPER SULPHATE MORGRO for home gardening Ask your county agent how to have your fields tested for fertilizer needs. REMEMBER, for good profits, use the recommended amounts of fertilizer. Ijtcedt tfrctlterJ Delta, Utah 1 ?: David Patterson Used 120 Lbs.N, Harvested 27 Tons Corn Silage Per Acre Thursday, March 31, 1960 division of physical sciences and mathematics, the fair is co-sponsored by the Utah Academy of Sciences. Dr. Christensen said that invitations invita-tions have been extended to secondary sec-ondary schools throughout the south central Utah area. Four categories cate-gories are open for participation: biological sciences, physical sciences and engineering, mathematics mathe-matics and nuclear. ADVERTISING " HELPS YCU LIVE BETTER Fon LESS CROPS - 1 mi ! 't.r ""'hip i ' it! '- " I 'A i"i:s' 1 DELTA MOTOR COMPANY DELTA, UTAH Only Ford Dealers Sell USED CARS AND TRUCKS 2feV l'-- : , |