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Show I THE TIMES- - NEWS, NEPHI, UTAH Thursday, January 6, 1949 j " VlSSr PAGE SFVT5N mm mileAujIiil . ' Fruit Strange Physics Ttacber What will happen ubm Two little girls were being taken away from London, and as a spe- light strikes tht water at tn cngls of cial treat someone had given 4i degrees? will go out. Bright Youth Lady the them a couple of bananas first they had ever had. Sows Tops As soon as one child had taken a bite of her banana the unlighted Raises Total of 71 train ran into a tunnel. from cold "Oo, Mary," she said, "have you to Pigs Weaning Age eaten yours yet?" Before First of her Hampshire breed to "No," replied Mary. and get well quicker become a "seven-star- " sow, Rinadded Jane. "Well, don't," with the NEW FOLEY'S gold Lady Dora No. 753,056 has "They make you blind." raised a total of 71 pigs to weanThe NEW FOLEY'S HONEY TAR cont&ins one of the most important cougti ing age, an average of 10.1 pigs of Opinion Matter treatment developments tn years, one that per litter. This record is more "Were you ever disappointed in ACTUALLY HELPS 8PEED RECOV. ERY. Also soothes throat, checks coughimpressive when compared with love?" does not ing. Also delicious, national averages. According to digestion. But moat Important. NEW upset twice. The first "Yes, jilted me, FOLEY 8 helps you gel veil fuirker from U. S. department of agriculture retnd the second didn't." cough due to cold At your druggist ports, the national average is 6.18 Dora Ringold Hampshire Check that Cough a It Gets Worse t "AW WE BROKE UP. HER DOLL WAS MORS IMPORTANT TO HBR THAN I WAS" "now ydure positive youoonV want hm anymore?" NANCY aammr By Ernie Bushmiller . kA VJJAX VF VL- - WmWs W THIN POOR THAT y-- v? IS USED TO LT' -- W) 'A 1 MILD AUSTRALAN X CLIMATE 1 "Vl JJST p LITTLE REGGIE I FIXED SANTA IT WONT A WHAT fl 4M '$ WLlII IN SAM THE IT NEVER MATTER WITH LIKE ACTED T F(WELL By V STVp I ( )) ytTiV MUTT AND JEFF ANDR.EI.YO0 LOST AT POKER BECAUSE You DON'T UNDER STAND THE GAME FULLy KIND THREE TWO PAIR AND FOUR. OF A KIND BEATS THREES Z- P- TKV I J MO, ANDREI THERES CALL-- ! yoo cakT ONE LITTLE TKlNGi I WIN.' I'vE GOT FOUR I Kl'LL 1.1 7..7.5L FORGOT TO EXPLAIN) I've got fourspades AND A CLUBVdrtlCH i?7 THAT BEATS ANYTHING! "SSI? By Bud Fisher V "HTr a i ) HAPPEN AGAlU IN A DOESUT GAMES! MILLION JoCtfUR.NONEGAKAE VfScfT? 7c" fw 'fTZ unniX WAlTTrtttWOOLDNTl cY I ULdALU WHAT I GOT A 1 Margarita GTiS H AN.VTrtlr46jJ ssr js JITTER By Arthur Pointer ITTO? ANDTlSiXIE ARE GUESTS AT HE STUCKINADRIrT SKI CLUB.... Here, with her seventh "star" family, is Ringold Lady Dora No. 753,056, champion production sow in the Hampshire breed and the first of her kind to qualify as a "seven-star- " sow. spring pigs and 6.39 fall pigs per litter raised to weaning age. To qualify for a Star in the Hampshire production registry a sow must raise a litter of at least eight pigs, without fault or defect, to weigh 320 pounds within 56 days of farrowing. And of course to gain a "seven-star- " record Ringold Lady Dora has repeated this performance seven times. She is the first sow in the Hampshire breed to be listed for either the sixth or seventh "star" litters. In her seventh "star" litter, this sow farrowed 15 pigs, nine of which were saved. The eight selected for registration weighed 443 pounds at 56 days after farrowing. The production champion was fed a ration containing corn, oats, alfalfa and pelletized milk byproducts prior to farrowing. Her pigs were creep fed early and rs'sed on a ration of seven parts corn and three parts oats, with 8 per cent milk added. Ringold Lady has been owned and bred by William C. Goodheart, Jr., of Eaton, Ohio, since 1944, and was sold to Meadowlark Farms, Inc., Sullivan, Ind. It Rub in for fast soothing Ben-Ga- y conrelief from muscular soreness and pain. Ben-Ga- y tains up to 2Vi times more methyl salicylate and menthol famous agents known to every doctor than five other widely offered rub-in- s. Insist on genuine Ben-Gathe original Baume Analgesique. Also for Pain due to RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, and COLDS. gently-warmin- g, pain-relievi- y, Ask for Mild 'intfriti'rjsfiflsW 1 Form Production Costs Farm production costs have nearly tripled since the pre-wyears of 1935-3according to U. S. department of agriculture statistics. These costs totaled 14.9. billion dollars in 1947, compared with 5.2 billion before World War II's outbreak. Farm wages are now three averand a half times the 1935-3- 9 age. Meanwhile, farm prices have slumped and many economists expect a further easing in months ahead. Corn and wheat are already 25 to 40 per cent under their early 1948 peaks. Farmers can best meet the impact of higher productioa costs and lower prices by good soil manage- ar 9, REG'LAR FELLERS By Gene Byrnes s Tiope?. w NO MOftf. FIGHTS -- NO MORfc GETnH V V MO MATTEL, WHAT HAPPENS! HEY! THA'S &NTUL I VW W MCWSLED J WHAT BUSTED AUNT fflftNMK tjAVE S3U y. rOK. C KlVMUA 1 H ABOUT TURNN'OVH. THAT NCW i ( V Tuo.Lrfifieii ilP? iC'CUV. . UAVE TW YOU WAV, CUA21IE, 1 k' tVEP MtT IV---L- l) Z') Z' V OoooooooH, A AAAN.'l D IT wk - to- isr tfcr .Am1 I FIND REAL SMOKING- COMFORT IN ) - A PIPEFUL OF RArAND THE NEW HUMIDOR, TOP . SURE KEEPS RA MILD AND RJCH -- TASTING-! PRODUCTION FAQ.M mm , by Clark S. Haa -- BV - r."zzL ilk tint-"---I ALL OVER YOU TYOU 55 t947 IO5S-5- 0 SUNNYSIDE io" w- t- . for C06T 'mmm' for Children. Ben-G- ay PUT IT TMEt?, JIAA THAT CUCtD MC FOR V S3?l It? AVERAGE can't beat P. A for smoking comfort," says John Burks. "P-smokes mild and cool right down to the bottom trt the "You rich-tasti- ng A. bowl." : MO BE M EN MOKE ir-sr- P ment that steps up crop producing efficiency and lowers output costs per unit. Good soil management involves no magic or mystery. It simply means playing fair with the soil by returning organic matter and plant nutrients used up by constant crop production. Organic matter can be restored by growing legumes such as alfalfa or sweet clover in the rotation and plowing them under for green manure. When the soil is restocked with organic matter and plant food you will get higher yields and you will cut your production costs. THE NATION - ANY THAN j- X U, SMOKI OTHER TO bacco deep-roote- d ;:yftvSI 010 hic-cu- remedies ft''Jx f$h ffclK xr,' " - V- - "L'XMf Dry Skim Milk Retailed Now in Small Packages Now that dry skim miik official- RA'S NEW HUMIDOR, TOP IS GREAT. I FIND r CUT PA. STAYS FRESH AND TASTY, AND ROLLS FAST AND EASY INTO ly called non-fdry milk solids- -is on retail markets in small pack- UPjKjA MILD CIGARETTES at ages for home use, thrifty have a convenient, economical product to build up the nutritive value of family meals. The ease and convenience of its use as well as its high nutritive value justify its place along with flour, sugar and salt on the pastry shelf of every homemaker. 51 WAT CRIMP js, ts - r home-make- rs "Crimp cut P. A is great," says Fred Eisner. P.A shape up fast into neat cigarettes that are xtra-tast- esrtra-mild- ." r fa' mS:Su a. t. a-TUNE IN "GRAND OLC OPRY". SATURDAY NIQHTS ON NBO |