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Show jMERY COUNTY PROGRESS. CASTLE DALE, UTAH Mitten Easy-to-Kn- it union of George Widener, a ablest turfmen, foreign to never given a chance ere. I sent oreign entries are five days to three race." Widener over from six jld be sent a year ahead of time, no chance, they will have when Mead-ra- s igo, I recall challenging for the cup. Harry Payne Whitney sent all the American ponies to V;2 England at least months in advance. said that He take jF, would months or longer to have them for their best Now we know that most of jet the foreign horses we have seen France, Belgium, are much better horses iroved to be. Their re badly upsetting, tie chance to get in :al shape. n ly a shame, and I hope ature, owners of all in' ign entries give their ds at least some sort of nt the least doubt about opinion. I could tell you number of foreign horses is point. Top Horse irs ago, Charley Howard, tea Biscuit, bought Sorte-e- r triple horse, I saw art at Santa Anita. Sored up and was doing a two hind legs when the of Argentines paid $40,000 for the ral weeks training, td. later he was little bet--a year later, in New lat with owner Howard rteado broke a worlds sr a mile and a half beat War e t by one-fif- th Admirals of a sec- - greatest horse in the y," Howard said at the can outrun any horse ieen." Sorteado went out record a few days later, a hole, broke a leg, and he yed. larthy bought an Austral! nown as Shannon II. He ustralian champion. He lerican flop the first few ow Shannon n is winning and beating such horses st. Hes one of the best, nmy Jones told me he stake in flying Armed to five days in advance of "I should have sent him ts ahead, since he trav-inJimmy said. Drse needs ample time to e, himself to new surround-tiat- e and environment after a long trip, it our horses abroad, under the same be run into Foreign owners should their thoroughbreds at ve them from six months 0 go after the rich purses in from Belmont to Santa 1 Chicago to Hialeah. they would 5 f Worses iridge. the veteran train "mg a story about Col. ley. the famous Kentucky years ago, John said, radley had hired a train-loo- k after his fighting i also his horses. The kind of proud of those ht there was re several of a private his game ere entered. They didnt good. In fact three of chickens turned and ran. r felt pretty bad about laturally the colonel was nave his game chickens as the last word, y." John continued, the red across a field. There a' horses around, stallions. The ns began fighting. The hed over and tried to 'em. He didnt do a good ere badly cut up clonel Bradley heard was rious. He sent and gave him a ter-fn- g out. Then he fired The Bernadotte Plan INSIDE story Electricity Assures Water for Livestock of the of the 1 Bernadotte plan noworigin has leaked out The Bernadotte plan was developed at a highly secret meeting on the island of Rhodes just before Bernadotte was killed. Present were only four people Sir John Trout-becBritish ambassador to t McClintock, U. S. state department official; Count Bernadotte and Dr. Ralph Bunche, Bemadotte's deputy. The British ambassador bluntly announced he had instructions from Foreign Minister Bevin not to support any plan unless it provided for handing over the potentially wealthy Negev areato the Arabs. Previously, the United Nations had awarded the Negev to Israel, and largely because of this, State Department McRepresentative Clintock refused to accept the Bevin proposal. McClintock described it as similar to the n plan for the partition of the Holy Land which the United States had flatly rejected. Coldly, Sir John Troutbeck replied that there would be no agreement on Palestine unless the Arabs got the Negev. Result of this basic disagreement was that Bernadotte and Bunche had to mediate not between the Jews and the Arabs, but rather between the Americans and the British. Finally, McClintock agreed to cable Washington the text of the British proposals. Significantly the Bernadotte plan never was discussed by the mediators with either the Israeli government or the Arabs. It came directly from Bevin as the British price for the acceptance of any plan for settlement in the Holy Land. When McClintock got word back from Washington that the state department favored Bevins proposal the Negev, he was regarding amazed. However, thats how the Bernadotte plan was bom. Economical Installation For Winter Suggested v Egypt-Rober- - : which has eased the to the aid of farm animals, too. Through the medium of electricity, Dobbin and Bossy no longer need fear that their drinking water supply will be shut off during the cold winter months. - Tests by agricultural engineers have demonstrated that electricity is economical to provide warm water for livestock during the winter. Watering devices were operated at a cost as low as 70 kilowatt hours per month, representing an outlay of $1.40 at two cents per kilowatt. Electricity, 1 farmers chores, has come ... NOBEL PRIZE Dr. Pan! Mueller of Switxerland was awarded the 1948 Nobel prise In physiology for his discovery In 1939 of the Insecticide known as DDT which saved the lives of many refugees. Some Grady-Morrisso- OtWiVY, Q.4im wava-.- i ... NOT FUNNY TO HOGAN On the rostrum, Austin Hogan, president of New York local 100 of the Transport Workers Union, tells 600 rebellions bus strikers to return to work, while, beemnse of an odd camera angle, the cherubic face of Michael Quill, TWU International president, CtC 0n 0,6 side r the makers stand. Quill, who is obviously enjoying Hogans discomfiture, was accused of selling out In the recent New York bus drivers strike. that finding g V"OUR time is halved by these miraculous new directions! Just two piecesl Only two needles! Beginners delight! a a a mitten-knittin- HAIR-RAISE- ... R PatMake these mittens tn tern 970 has directions In small, medium and large sizes. Our new. Improved pattern makes needlework so simple with its charts, photos, concise directions. Mrs. John- 8ewlng Circle Needleeraft Dept Randolph St Chicago to, IB. ny Olsen of Chicago, HI, made n vow in 1932 that she would not cat her hair as long as a Democrat sat in the White House. S64 W. Enclose years. Classified Degartnent This horse can laugh at Old Man Winter as a result of this floating water heater, an electrical which assures farm animals a drink despite the cold. de-ic- er FARMS AND RANCHES of insulation or because too much water is heated. The following suggestion will help to make an ideal installation: as possible, IUse as smallnota tank more than 150 gallons. Install a float so the size of the tank can be reduced. Commercial units now on the market use only a drinking cup. Use at least three or four inches of commercial insulation and cover all aides, leaving room for only one or two animala to drink. Install a baffle board to prevent air movement over the water under the insulated top. Use of electricity makes it safe to install the tank inside the bam or in a shed, which will encourage livestock to drink more water and thus increase milk and meat LOOKS LIKE A SAND BURR . . . Joan White, a senior In Hsllahan girls high school in Philadelphia, got her hair-d- o all stood up when she submitted to a scientific experiment at the Franklin Institute. And all she did was place her hand gently on a model of a Van deGraff generator. This widget, however, bnllds np high charges of static electricity. Miss White got a charge of 150,000 volts, every one of them strictly harmless In a sort of way. 2 hair-raisi- top-secr- et Lient. Gen. J. Lawton Collins has been appointed to the newly created off. fice of army vice He will take some of the administrative load off the shoulders of Chief --of-S tall Gen. Omar Bradley. chief-of-staf- JtfL yoWLjiduJUL (BiUf Bond. 74. S-- ScuiinqA. RAh-E- i! D (Sen Brcaifco AgdnS When your nose fills up with a stuffy head cold or occasional congestion, put a few drops in of Vicks each nostril and get comforting relief almost instantly I la so effective because it works Tight token trouble is to soothe irritation, relieve stuffiness, make breathing easier. Try Nose Dropsl itl Get Vicks Va-tro-- Va-tro-- Fiery, Smarting Itch of Common Skin Rasho Dont stand such torment another hour I Just smooth Resinol Ointment on your Irritated akin at once. See how quickly its medically proven ingredients in lanrelief. g olin bring blissful, five-ye- long-lastin- PILES Hurt Like W..&1 SiSlMiaLtfi.Hii' And little TALK . . . Got a liberty pass, sailor? Richard Davidson, 4, of New York, who can get tough, too, answers He looks skyward toward Shore Patrolman Who wants to know? Arthur Davis and glares right back. It was an amusing interlude as thousands of Navy Day visitors trod the historic decks of the battleship Missouri, on which the Japanese surrender was signed. N Red Tape Over Air INHERITANCE . . . Pasqnale (Pat) Iarossi of Camden, N. J grins lavishly about the 5200,-00- 0 soaped on the mirror of his barber shop. He helped a stranger down-and-o- 44 years ago, and when the man died last month he left the bulk of his estate to Pat. fv air-freig- . 'm f ' ' ' W'i i . Life on the farm is far more hazardous for the fanner and his sons than it is for his wife and hit daughters. In fact, a survey covering 15,000 farms the country over, made by the department of agriculture, reveals that about four times as many accidents happened to men and boys between the ages of 14 and 65 as were suffered by farm women and girls. Of the youngsters under 14 injured, nearly 65 per cent were boys. More farm people were injured by falls than any other type of accident, with the majority of mishaps involving falling on steps and stairs and from vehicles. Men and boys were victims of twice as many injuries from falls as were women and girla. Of the total number of farm accidents, 56 per cent were connected with farm work and 8 per cent with housework. The age period from 25 to 45 was disclosed as the most dangerous. Sin! But Now I Grin Thousands change groans to grins. Dae e doctor formula to relieve discomfort of piles. Sant druggists by noted Thornton tt Minor CllnTo. Surprising QUICK palliative relief of pain. Itch, irritation. Tends to soften, shrink swelling. Uio doctorr way. Gat tubs Thornton A Minor's Rectal Ointment or Rectal Suppositories today. Follow label directions. For sale st ail drug stores everywhere. Get Well QUICKER From Few Cause One to a Cel FOLEYSSS&LU WNU W NURSING IS A PROUD ONCE AROUND BIG WIGS AT PARLIAMENT . , . Garbed In the traditional robes and wigs of their office and encrusted with many medals, British Judges leave the parliament bnlldlng In London afte.r the colorful opening ces- parliamentary robes for from distant parts of the sion during which the king wore his crown and the first time in ten years. Representatives empire also are shown leaving the famed halls. . . . Mrs. Mor-row-T- lt of Cambridge, England, strides from the cockpit of her little single-engin- e plane at Haneda air field, Tokyo. She and her navigator, Michael Townsend, are flying aronnd the world. PROFESSION! Disease and injury that prove crippling can be prevented by giving special attention to horses feet during the stabled period. Brittle hoofs, spongy hoofs, thrush and toot canker are the four diseases commonly caused by bad stable conditions. Clean, dry floors are recommended as a precaution. The feet of stabled animals also should be trimmed at least once a month. aome-time- 46-- 48 GRADUATES! HIGH-SCHO- Horses Need Attention During Stabled Period com-pan- air-carg- fra 4 ... ARMY BRASS 4 Veterans going Into the business are still snarled in red certificatape, cant get government aeronautics civil the tion from board. In formal bearings, the board has been lined up almost which solidly behind the big airlines are opposing the veterans. One CAB member, Harold A. Jones, was so eloquent in expressairlines point of view the best break I ever ing the big Inr sai(t to the colonel, that the grateful American airlinest 15 Dan Gribbon, injudicious-lethe craziest I counsel, this remark in front of I dont want place slip any part everyone: Mr. Jones, I dont think vnyU mean the crazl- worked? U..vr the yon could have pot your d better into "bats wrong with policy words. whats wrong 2, Jou, colored Jones coughed nervously, trainer ,ald. Tve ? weeks at this great with embarrassment. The air force has NOTE C? ,n Kentucky, and . the urgent need for building o fleet Yet usually an up counsel for Richardson, Seth astute "Toh U neCMMr7 tor Northwest airlines, testified: This added, that Col- - whole proceeding is inopportune. . b.,?ot on'y didnt lira be need for an airave him a nice There may five or 10 years Industry freight now. not but now. (rom CANADIAN FARMS Writs for SUES IX-FORMATION or MUImint opportunities. FeitUo tolli. Bratonibl? prlcodL C. F Cora will. Cinadlta FaritM Ballway, Vumhtic; B.C 3 super-predictio- Includ-Bradle- cents tor pattern. Name. Address. Now, scissors or no scissors, she'll have to wait another four g 4. 20 No Economic Forecast Crystal-ballinis a favorite indoor sport in Washington, not only with newspaper columnists, but with government economists. However, while a columnist must publicly climb out on a limb when h frepredicts the future, economists forecasts their can keep quently secret. n on the Right now, nations economic outlook for the next six years is reposing in a file at the agriculture depart ment. Prepared by the bureau of agricultural economics, the forecast deals chiefly with the years 1950 through 1954. Based on the assumption there will be no war, heres the gist of the economic forecast DEPRESSION There will be no major depression in the next six years and no runaway inflation. NATIONAL INCOME Barring an unforseen sharp decline in employperiod, ment during the 1950-5money available for consumer as spending may average as high 10 in 1948, with purchasing power per cent greater, due to lower prices. Net farm income may drop 15 per cent, however, due to lower prices and continued high production costs. A drop in consumer PRICES 10 per cent from will average prices period, the 1948 on, during but the retail price level still will be more than 50 per cent above prewar years. If unemployment (now about 1,900,000) reaches 9,000,000 at any stage, retail prices may drop 20 per cent below the 1948 level. EMPLOYMENT Unemployment could reach 9.000.000 but is not likely to go over 6,000,000. However, full employment (60,000,000) is a "distinct possibility during some 1950-'5and perhaps all years from conworker per If productivity natinues at its present rate, total 1952 will be I by tional production 1948. per cent greater than farmers are their installations are expensive to operate, principally because of lack s -- many opportunities for grad nates In fan hospitals, pnblie health, ala, leads lo R. N. -a sens weed never be without a iob or as toneme. -open lo girla under 33, graduates and college girls. aik for more Information at the hospital where yoe would like to enter a arsing. -- Ugh-aeho- ,-- |