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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD, DUCHESNE, UTAH W'i ' r yste! he neWc 9, r' v WA3 NOT urU 1333. the year Babe Rath ea.re to Ya-e- ti tie as an outfielder, that fa.u re&Lzed tte dead qualifies cf the fcaS that J7 T"3sS wn to had teen used ch anjr Parasite Dodder May Be b-- here utstartd find over Jations a fchen j (oiio ,dlagrar, 'r"'- - J rhh.in ... .penis k At this tiny grave on the lcea2 S IfOP BY THE SIDE OF THE ROAD V. pn r prairie near Elrod, S. D., a train stops every Memorial Day i No. 37 the crew conducts simple rites memorializing the friendship of The Little Fellow. 5,11 Chambers and ly Gbr )m of i J OF gene .ion of c FRIENDSHIP a 58 Years, Mighty Railroad members The Little Fellow V royal f ie de Bt 1 the kir been res WNU features. Memorial Day since 1888 a passenger train has ..very unscheduled to an stop on the lonely prairie near Elrod, t and while passengers wait and wonder, members of am crew visit a tiny grave along the here, a moment of silence is observed, a few brief Eaker had been lead-rtre with less league t than XL The ball bad been gefifing faster in 1313. But Babe would have led the here-ru- n pack even with the deader ball, as he always had the greatest combination of power, Lm-lr- g and smooth twinging known to the game. Jimmy Fcxx reached the 3 mark in 13u2, and Eank Greenberg Climbed to the same 53 peak in 1333. Last season, Greenberg demonstrated he still had 44 home runs in lus tall system. The ball used this seasen is certainly net any deader than It was in past years. Judging from the loud salvo of four-bas- e hits, the 1347 model is flying even farther. I cant recall another season where as many home runs have been hit, in the same number of games, as the new campaign has shown so far. , right-of-wa- s to are said and flowers are-the grave. The trainmen their train y. i and the trip is L ask passengers they learn the story a railroad mans of a small ascmation for railroading led : endship that has been memo-- j for 58 years even though e railroad man and the small curious he stop, M-Il- 'AVIATION NOTES AIRPORT CHATTER For the first time since Sioux Falls, S. D., will have 1334. air races in connection with a CvJ Air Patrol air fair at the muiuc.pal airport Sunday, May 25. Other highlights of the event will be competition in bomb dropping and spot landing, a mass parachute jump by local and the marBlast for repair work under riage of a couple aloft in a plane. yrenoti the area. The Little Fel-a- s The Sioux Falls squadron is endeavwould J? the son of the oring to raise funds for a plane to omeraldj) who had vigor a charge of the be placed at disposal of the city. le box s and mess cars for tire con-- n Red Cross and police or for use in y weigh gang. emergency search and rescue misi! i ry day when Bills train sions. . . . Newest of the Rocky in fti-finto the railroad camp, Mountain empires air transport to meet him and )oy ran services, daily flights between Denobers would ver and Salt Lake City have been spend hours i him tales of the big cities Inaugurated by Challenger Airlines i railroading. Then, in Au-tare made at Stops company. boy became seriously Cheyenne, Laramie, Rawlins, Rock id died. He was buried Springs and Kemmerer, Wyo. The y and along the company plans to open routes from romised the boys parents both Denver and Salt Lake City to aid take care of the grave Billings, Mont., in the future. . . . Mrs. Clara Frick of Goshen, Ind., they were able to return move the body, experienced the most thrilling day on her 80th birthday never returned, but Cham-P- t of my life gsiffiyf' his promise even when he anniversary. She went for a plane ride with her son. . . . Mrs. Sarah freight conductor and later er conductor. Section crews Lunsford of Cobbs county, Georgia, him by keeping the grass utilizes her Piper Cub for a school teds away from the spot, bus. Because the roads are ters rible, the school bus leaves too put up a boulder to mark ve early and the family car went out ually Bill reached retire-ge- ; of commission anyway, Mrs. Lunsyet he still visited the ford last fall started flying her two children five miles to the school-housegularly on Memorial Day as he was able. Others took The plan worked out so suctask for him and continued cessfully that she decided to conThe children dice even after his death in tinue it indefinitely. dont even get a thrill out of it any ice J. Ford, conductor, daughter. Every more, their mother admits. al Day Ford has taken s place, although he, too, AIRPORTS ARE QUIETER The noise nuisance from retired The flowers are sent has been reduced substanwife and Mrs. aircraft Lydia Benson, r in many parts of the country, of Chambers, tially daughter ad( whom reside at Redfleld, T. P. Wright, Civil Aeronautics in reviewministration reports head, Jgether with the train crews, inf ool came ing progress of the f your people have kept alive the P of paign. and "The Big Bill Cite Much of the annoyance can be ellow. age., 58 avoided by changing the traffic patyears and the Chicago DgUiBS and Westerns TO tod train 106 has terns around airportssuitableby pilot in using power ...with cooperation n the near Elrod, prairie propeller-pitc- h Wright and VJ1 settings, e Passen-Wagain this year. I In many cases the traffic tratorui, waited and wondered. declares. I wr-has been altered to provide ave heard pattern seen and the story travel over water, Indusemony. Not once has a pro-e- n that planes or wastelands rather districts trial heard. than over residential areas. The campaign, he reports, has reWith sulted in a substantial drop in the number of complaints against noisy fobby' airplanes. ESBURG, KY. A grade student here boasts longest names in the d years ago. name was William F. as Big ers, better known hambers, and the small boy k The Little n only as a was Bill in 1888, Big zy he rrj an on the train hauling enters. Bi nans Fel-Bac- Gro-F- 1 he right-of-wa- e. mar-Tiambe- rs low-flyin- g anti-nois- 30 Names for Short ase they thought hed be the and the family Bible still (r lines unfilled In the portion r family records, his parents, ld d Mrs. W. L. Stallard, gave name: Alexander Morris Gene dalPh Giles Gilbert Motoer 18 Miles Marion Mayo John James Gordon Bennett Christopher Columbus Ell sen Eversole Bradly Kincaid Jefferson Breckinridge Stal- - 1 r call him Bennett or TL,aea for short. 2ns a A Circle shows how dodder WTapi Itself around alfalfa to absorb the sap. f ; -- 5 ' , r 9 a, f - V. X S' A? SUPERIOR LETTUCE troop carrier planes developed for army air forces, is demonstrating latest developments In equipment and tour of the techniques on a Facifio area. :v. T act" could reach 0m8 b present at Her father, overjoyed mother and daughter sur-her for the event. ACCESS. ns TO & INVEST. .W OrrOR. WfFKIV Addressing Stnd 10c to cover mntllnK. Mr MU I S t OMl'ANY Washington Park Ct , Chicago 10, 111. ASTHMA, HAY FEVER ' " TRY SELR0D0 RELIEF OR NO COST TO I ... YETS SEE FAMOUS P. HORSE Richard Ryan, former cavary officer, is shown astride the worlds most famous white horse Emperor Hirohitos Ilatsushimo, which the Japanese placed in his custody for the American people. Ryan is taking the horse on a tour of veterans hospitals. The dog Is Mike, a gift of Edward Arnold of the films. - t? 6 TOU See Vour Druggist or Write . Balt Lake Cltr, t'tsh. O. Box 111S WANTED TO BUY WE BUT AND RFft Office Furniture. Files, Typewriter, Adding Machine Sifen Cash Registers SAIT I ARE DESK 828 South btato St., bait Lakt Lily. Utah FIIA(.E Slobolt lettuce, developed by the USDA, is available for the first time to the gardener. longstanding Slobolt produces wrinkled, frilled, light green leaves. Plants are of moderate size. If the plants are set 10 to 12 inches apart and only basal leaves used, Slobolt lettuce may be harvested over a period of several weeks. Slobolt makes a good fall crop from midsummer plantings. It produces usable leaves three weeks longer commercial than many leaf lettuce varieties. It receives its came because it is slow to bolt seed stems in warm weather. Non-headin- s. m BUY YOUR EXTRA SAVINGS BONDS well-know- n Herds and Flocks For Greater Profit sM SICURTM NOW miimomwit Even up the size of fitters. A sow will take strange pigs before hers are two days old. Make changes when pigs are ready to suck. Sprinkle the strangers with a Women In your "40,sl Does t: of weak solution functional mlddle-sg- e peci lar to women cause you period stock dip. to Buffer 1 nerveus Cashes, wei hlghstrung. Dock all lambs tired feelings? Then do try Lydia Plnkhsms Vegetable Compound and castrate all buck lambs at one relieve euch symptoms. Its amo td three weeks. Combine the two for this purpose Takt n regularly Plnkhams Cor operations castrate first, then dock. pound helps build up reslstun on a reliable disinfectant Use such distress Thousands hs against wounds. Bloodless docking and casreported beoettt! Also a very e'ecw stomachic tonic. Worth trying! tration can be done with instruments VfCfTXBI the for purpose. made especially LYDIA!. FI C0MP0U Dehorn calves when young (under 10 days) with a chemical dehorner WNU W 214' that wont rub off on the udder or deflanks of the cow. A chemical homer works best on young calves, and calves are easier to handle when young. To help prevent damp litter in brooding and laying houses, mix For You To FelI M H lime in the fitter at the rate hour ti !? dr. T day Week, navor topping, tha k duey filtar of one pound to eight square feet of Want from matter tb blood. Hydrated lime, refloor space. If nor poop l wr war of how tht kidnev limestone. mutt rtmovi aur not oonfntiy ground member acid and other vat HOT TUSHES? r CAUGHT I THE FLOODS . . . Flood waters of the Mississippi river stalled this Frisco railroad work train. Thoto was made from a coast guard plane making an aerial survey of the flooded area. Other locations reported train and railway tracks under water, bringing about renewed demands upon congress for flood control. A?! A V t It . .,4 - T L ' v -- T i . air-bor- 60-d- o & MISCELLANEOUS Supreme This will be the first time In many summer moons that a battle for the middleweight championship will overshadow the heavyweight scrap. No matter how noisy the ballyhoo, nor how loudly the echoed, no advance hulabaloo SAFETY RECORD of the schedwould have made fans believe that More than Joe Baksi would have uled international airlines, which of a chance against sort the of world, had In all any parts operated Joe Louis, even had the match been had a record of absolute safety In 1946, International Air Transport arranged this year. association reports. Sixty of the Just how much the passing years member airlines flew a total of hav? taken from Louis is anv bodys passengers miles dur- guess, but no one can believe Lotus 8,346,000,000 The scheduled airlines has moved so far down the soapy the year. ing accidents, result- chute that he would be tn serious 33 fatal reported would ing in 298 casualties, which danger of losing his title to one of miles passenger per 28,314,000 the present crop of heavyweight equal of the air'uiei fatality. Forty-twopponents. had no fatal accidents BUSINESS 5018 hi i i 1 All t' i f' There are too many easy ways of transportation for the youth cf today. The kids will ride four blocks, when they get a chance. There are not many athletes who have the incent.ve to give their legs enough work to get them ready for the games they play. Middleweight AUTOS TRUCKS EARN Card8 ld latest-typ- e DEPARTMENT lespedeza and other plants in the sprayed areas, the loss usually will prove negligible as the dodder usually will be confined to small scattered areas. The labor Involved In cutting out dodder is excessive and it is almost impossible to remove all of the parasite by this method. Infested fields may be planted to grain "or com for several years. These crops are not attacked, but care should be taken that the dodder does not continue growing on weeds In the field. -7 ? 7 fi is possible by the use of 2, weed killer. While the 2,4-- also will kill CLASSIFIED 4-- . twmrs plus fluid. Treat Egg Right to Keep In Cold Storage s slow-movin- g of Storm Mrs. E. E. who first saw the light wiring the great blizzard of Constant reminder of that term. For thats what her tand for: Eighteen Eighty 'Irth 4 two-thir- ETON, COLO. , r loc.g-cfistan- tom-tom- Initials Serve finder TROOP CARRIER . . . This Fair-chi2 Packet, one of the Where is the managers flee? asked the salesman. Follow the passage until you come to the sign reading No Admittance. Go upstairs till you see the sign, 'Keep Out. Follow the corridor till you see the sign, Silence, then yell for him. farm land. ind-cafio- The leg work, that Joe Louis has thrown in throughout his long ring career, is one of the main reasons the Bomber is still heavyweight champion of the world. The Then Landing of the Pilgrims. she requested each pupil to draw from his or her imagination a picture of Plymouth Rock. Up spoke Willie: Please, teacher, a hen or rooster? Thats It! BIG MUDDY RUNS AMOK . . . Abnormal spring rains are causing floods in many parts of the country. Inundating large tracts of land. Top panel shows the sandbagged levee of the Missouri river near Aldridge, 111., before the rains came. Below, 36 hours later, the levee proves no barrier, the water breaking through to flood 2,000 acres of WR-Lam- Except for polo players and jockeys, legs are rated as the most important factor in competitive sport Even polo players and jockeys need strong legs. The trouble is few athletes realize the importance cf their underpinning, according to most cf the trainers we have talked to, and only a small percentage ever get them legs in shape. The only exception Is the golfer who has to walk from 5 to 10 miles a day, through each single and double round. Greatest offenders are ballplayers and fighters. You find few who are willing to get their legs in shape, through the road work needed for this purpose. Ty Cobb lasted for 24 seasons, largely because he hunted almost every day between seasons, usually moving at top walking speed. The same is true of Babe Ruth, who lived on his legs in the off season, either in the hunting field or on some golf course. And the Babe's slender ankles had to carry a tremendous frame, around 230 pounds teacher had recited to get over one. Miller cow rarely department. cusses an afternoon without belting one out cf the inclosure. When the season opened. Ted s, Greenberg and Johnny 5Lze were voted the tno most Lkely to succeed at the art cf leadm.g the home-ru- n department Kmer and Joe DJJaggio were included in this list; also Keller, York and Musiai But early are that .10 or 12 outs.ders have decided to enter the tournament There have never been as many, this early in the season, able to move up with the big guns. The man sfill to beat is Wiliams. Ted has pleasant dreams of beatng the 40 mark and possibly moving up into the 50 secficn. But, as the cheerful Mr. Durante puts it Everybody wants to get in the The Importance of Legs The Kind He Knew The not have a good time than to have Edit sprint "Watch out for the norms, son" ad monished bis mother. "Any norms in this here apple better natch out for me," tbe youngster retorted. Middle age is that period of a er la the meanwhile, the early sprmg war cry about breaking up for the the Cardmais has subs-de- d time be mg. The Carinals remind you of a 3 to 5 shot m a horse race that gets away last But, it is surprising, the number of things that can happen before October. A penns: r ace is no A mother took her seten-er-aJ- J so trub her to the grocery store. Tbe grocer noticed tbe boy eyeing s large barrel of apples, so be gate him one. mans life when he would rather One amazmg example is cf Cincinnati, a bnlliant-fleldji- g shortshop, who never has been rated even close to the power & sympa-understand- Fair Warning By W. J. DRYDEN Field dodder is an annual parasitic vine, growing on lespedeza, alfalfa, clover and various members of the dandelion family. It attaches itself to other plants and sends small growth into their tissue to absorb the sap. As preventive is easier than the cure, it is essential that only seed free from dodder be planted. Spota in fields should be eliminated. This g y D Selection of Clean Seed Also Essential 54 homers, such pajt as champions Frank t 4-- pre-Th- at was the year Bate P.jth OhoWffig Killed by 2, Squeeze Flay Walter I proposed to Tessie in the garage. John What happened? Walter She wouldnt let me back out. t- - - . i CR-- - . . Sttf. ... It looks as if a cjtloue MW. NOT I II Ml MS. CU'sI n Tilts had slruik the Jim Munro Iwine at Ie (laire, Iowa. However, it was the landlord, not the elements, that caused this siene, the Munro family ilaims. They iharge the landlord, Harold Olsen of Montpelier, Iowa, wreiked the summer kill hen of their home when they Ignored an ev li lion notice. Similar happenings have been reported In other parts cf the country by landlords anxious to gain possession of homes. Treating an egg right means storing it clean, covered and cold, say University of Nebraska specialists stored Fggs when clean should be tn a covered bowl or pan, away from strong smelling foods. Wlthoul a cover, eggs lose moisture arid art likely to absorb odors. When kepta in a cold place, even for part of Stored day. they stay good longer. may eggs room temperatures, st lose much quality in three days. that cannot stay in th blind without Injury to health, thara would ba battar undaiatandmg of vfcg tif wbola lyatam la opt when kidneys I1 to function properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent oHb tloo sometimes warn that aomethr ts wrong. You may uffr nagging bar cha, baadathea. dixuiniwa, fheuroat'f aweliu g pains, getting up at n gbts FwJaT You wh Why not try Vocn ba using a medicine recommended tr country over. Loan aiirmiiafa th funrto tion of tha k dnsya and help them from flush out poiaonmis want blood 1 bey contain aotHmf harmful coubdeucw with tea Don today, (rat At all drug stores. m attar te |