OCR Text |
Show THE PAYSON CHIiONK tta 1 POP1'"- - 'v : 1 a n : k - PUnt a k futuie announ; P he MAX R WARNER, Editor B Year was 223-- J JnotJet been e amunt The 1947. $1.23 -- - ..t i r- - National Editorial Assoaiatton Mambar Utan State Press Association and t a .t. -- r t nr- - -- -- - ; i r- - .c r - EDITORIALS It was just such a World War Two veteran as those who took $10,000 worth of tungsten out of a Mojave DeZn cne week recently, according to an article in the July e mopolitan magazine. Where the prospector, cru,' ped, sought only gold, his present day counterpart seeks null titanium, tungsten, beryllium, chromite and a dozen other metals, and he does it many times with the aid of a small aerial map as shown above. old-tim- Blessing in Disguise ni1 o need something, tu li.ne the money to pay for it, and Mill not be able to get it. is an annoyance most of us have ex penenu'd in the past few years It has been the same story with highway construction SCRAM! TOUGH WlATHtk During the war road building came to a halt But untold mil lions of dollars in special highway taxes paid by motorists kept he money couldn't be spent for highway improverolling in The result is a tre ments then, and so it kept accumulating. CAN'T HARM ' 1 mendous backlog of funds to build new roads and improve old And the tax millions continue to pour into highway treasuries at a greater rate than ever before. ' I he motorist has been annoyed because lie hasnt seen this money converted into roads With the needed money on hand in greater Amounts than ever before, lies been asking whats holding up those promised postwar highway improvements. 'I he answer, of course, is found in shortages of road building equipment, materials and manpower. lie situation today is like that after World War I. Then the Nation exvrienced a temporary period of scarcities and high Alter inflation ran its course, however, prices leveled off prices considerably in the highway construction field cononusts expect the same thing to happen when the If so, the delays in highway conpresent inflation blows over struction will prove to have been a blessing in disguise. After prices are stabilized, we should be able to get a lot more in highways for the enormous amounts of money now held in reserve for road building. WeII get more miles of better road for the same dollar. ones 1 1 When you ! and I weie young Molly, We built our humble home And because cce loved deal Utah, We did not erne to mam We walked fiom down 'till claik, Molly, To help build up this land, We dug our shaie of sage biush, And did it most by hand Our me-alweie often slim, Molly, But you did the 1kM you could, You helped pack in the w.itei. And sometimes chopied the wood. Bath tubs then ueie scaiee, Molly, But we kept our bodies dean bathing in the wash tub. Concealed behind a scieen. There were other li.u By CONGRESSIONAL PRESSURE, congressmen play what .. Every year Republican and Democratic is laughingly known as a tall game for the benefit of ctarity. Rep . Tom G. Abernethy (Dent., lilss.) will remember this year s melee for a lorg tine. He is the one being sat on at tlrst base by the obi iousiy weighty Rep. J&aes p. Lchobllck (Rep., Pa.) who moves the indicator to 29 5 pounds every tine he steps on a scale. From Soup to Nuts myriads of colorful flowers. And the good tasting fruits and vegetables! Corn on the cob, snap beans, red tomatoes. Ummmtnm I hat reminds us that just the other day wc were discussing with a friend food of our childhood days and what the sight of a fresh tomato in winter would have done to our mother's eyes. Other fresh produce that modern transportation has since made possible would have been too much of a shock to her. Since we were lads other things have changed, too. in the culinary department, for back then winter menus knew very little but the results of mother's summer canning Recipes were or from the church cook book or tfyp pinch of this and that method Now homemakers can get cook books on practically any type of food lrom food manufacturers. Best oods, for example, who make real mayonnaise, among other products, olfers its booklet "From Soup to Nuts" with recipes lor the various ways real manyonnatse can be used in cookery. But back to the good ol' summertime we still prefer our fruits and vegetables, fresh off the vine. And right now we ll take a salad of lettuce, cucumbers and red, red tomatoes topped with mayonnaise! WtATHCR-BIRDS- OUR HOME? Molly, So difficult to bear, But you weie more than willing Those trying times to shaie Depression hit us haul, Molly, But we never went in debt. We did not slink our taxes. These, when due. weie promptly met. Your hands aie woin fiom to.l, Here at last after a long fearisonie winter is the glorious Molly, Deep furrows line youi blow. summertime. Golrious. we repeat, because all the earth is at its And this home? Pei haps not out, best when the warm sun and rain bring forth green grass and dear. haid-me-dow- For the State demands Mis. Ulan e FOR BOYS AND GIRLS Smart styles for warm weather... better fitting qualities ... plus 5 special Weatherired features. it now Bum 2.98 - 3.98 - 4.98 son Airplanes Pollinate Fruit Tree Biossoxs TUMBL-T- Ot - EAST LANSING. MICH Bios oms on a fruit tree do not m at that the tree will bear fruit hoi t culturists at Michigan state college pointed out Those blossoms must be fertilized and that requires care ful planning by the grower To get any fruit, pollen must be transferred from one blossom to another. This Is usually done by bees and flying insects, but If the weather is cool and windy, the bees will not fly. Therefore, a number of orchardlsts, In with TrUt Hart JUST THE bf 8 t THINGK SUMMERS l( Michigan state college, have been trying artificial pollination. They collect the pollan, ripen It and apply it to the blossoms either by hand duster or airplane. But the grower must be sure that the right pollen Is available Some varietlea of fruit, which are called can be fertilized only with the pollen of a different va In general, this Is true of riety. apple, pears, sweet chenles and self-steril- e, plums To overcome get dependable portation at the translow est possible cost is a guiding principle here! varieties that wiU cross pollinate each other If this Is not possible, he may graft Individual branches on certain trees In the orchard or he may set palls of blossoms It also throughout the orchard. helps If he provides strong colonies of bees to transfer pollen A final consideration, say the horticulturists, is whether the va- rletiet are compatible For ex- ample, Cortland and aarly Mcln-toa- h apples do not work well together. Neither do Bartlett and Seckel peart. Time Is another factor In compatibility, for th varietlea choaan must have overlapping blooming periods if pollinlzation Is to occur. Principal dry farming areas in SMITH AUTO CO. Spanish Fork, Utah Phone 55 Utah are Cache, Box Elder. Salt Lake, Juab, San Juan. Sanpete, Sevier and Tooele counties. The growing of sugar beet seed an important industry in Washington County, Utah is . 1 this difficulty, the grower may set out his orchard with The selling of Ford cars and trucks is an but only ONE part of important part our job. Seeing that you, as a customer, anr the aeco $2.00 Six Months W quity MOORE, Business Manager -- i if the rider Kfadohne Dixon, Local Cor respondent . Phone ELISHA WARNER and MAX R WARNER. Publisheis k ot elVoikc t One m1" to Post Office at Payaon, Utah County, Utah as second-clas- s matter GRANT P0 cBak lad The Payson Chronicle Enteikd at 1 fr Is . tii ;l m: . i' , s s - e u i' A T get T.ore service . water Summer Pin-Up- s! '0' l NEW, PICTURE-PRETT- Y ete m Made the TUMBl-Way to give FOR girls Wl.'degirUwmU.p.W, in colorful ' 'CC Uea.ic t, 'c'-.- r ,'eoars Elect- - - Rone, as INDLRLLLn-M- ; ,fuE Hear resisting quality. Oeatly finished, double lne sturdy stitilung r xtra deep hems mo"'c non.riP buttonholes Wd. liable fabrics 3 to 14 -- 2.98 s144.50 F and better we Soft, washable twill pastel plaids and checks i 1.19 3,95 CHRISTENSENS Reliable Merchandise Reasonably Courteously Presented Always. retl ' |