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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH NEEDLECRAFT PATTERNS Embroidered Kitchen Towels towels to give your kitchen an original touch. Tea towels you'll love. In embroidery you'll find easy. Pattern 718; transfer of 6 motifs 6x7 inches. This new, Improved pattern makes needlework so simple with its charts, photos, concise directions. Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. 564 W. Randolph St. Chicago SO, 111. Enclose 20 cent lor pattern. No EJALF the fun of housekeeping is the trimmin's! Such as em-broidering these gay romantic ULJJJll Harsh Laxatives Keep requfar ffi's tecrthfy way The juice of a lemon in a glass ot water.when taken first thing on aris-ing, is all that most people need to insure prompt, normal elimination. No more harsh laxatives that irritate the digestive tract and impair nutri-tion! Lemon in water for you! Generations of Americans have taken lemons for health and of doctors generations have recommended them. They are rich in vitamin C; supply valuable amounts of Bi and P. They alkalinize; aid digestion.' Not too sharp or sour, lemon in water has a refreshing tang clears the mouth, wakes you up. It'a not a purgative simply helps your sys-tem regulate itself. Try it 10 days. VSt CALIFORNIA SUNKISJ UMONS a Because Kellogg's Corn Flakes - N n are so popular, they come to sjjv) you fresher. Crispy-deliciou- s! Keep Posted on Values by Reading the Ads f IS IT HARD FOn Y00 TO CO? D0MI SmOKIHG? Then change to SMIO, the safer cigarette with LJ Not a Substitute Not Medicated f I it V Sano's scientific process cuts nico- - J ' tine content to half that of ordinary p5TY'rii ' cigarettes. Yet skillful blending 01. fl , ,1 makes every puif a pleasure. "vMv&tUO U I FLEMING-HAL- L TOBACCO CO.. INC. N. Y. ! T'Pr, I Y J Aoeragebasedimcorulnutnolcst30fpopularbrandM w ttjV'OjA M ASK rOUX DOCTOIt ABOUT SANO ClCUlimS i H'dM). iJj J rl Actu' w,i'1' 'A Oi. A An underwlr lurt buttt to VpfjT T A II V I I"'1 lika a ral Uv. I HI L minnow. Madt of plastic, and I' available In a wlda varlaty of I M W fl A V I ,i'h atchlng colon, at aH I I II II W If laading sporting goods Itoras. If your daalar want supply, eidar direct and shipment will b mada promptly $1.25 aach, postpaid Made by Soil 'Bank Account' Determines Returns Check Up on Solvency To fissure Prosperity Check up on your soil fertility "bank account." It's more important to you than the number of dollars you have in your commercial ac-count Your present and future prosper-ity depends on your soil's crop pro-ducing ability. Crop producing abil-ity, in turn, depends on the size of your soil fertility bank account how you match deposits and with-drawals. Every crop you sell carries with it nitrogen, phosphate, potash and ( REGULAR DEPOSITS ) I I KEEP SOILS FERTILE. JL other plant nutrients. Unless you balance these withdrawals with good management "deposits" that replace nutrients, rebuild organic matter and repair damaged soil structure, your soil bank account will be overdrawn. Among steps recommended for keeping your soil bank solvent are: Use deep-roote- d legumes regularly in the rotation. Apply lime on the basis of soil tests. Use commercial fertilizer containing phosphate and potash as needed. Return manure, corn stalks, straw and other crop aftermath to the soil Use contour cultivation and other conservation methods where necessary. Just as you will get a notice if your checking account is overdrawn, lower per acre yield and higher per bushel costs will notify you if your soil bank account is being over-drawn. WHAT A PROBLEM TO BUY A , GIFT FOR THE BOY VOU HOPF "Sr WHAT DO YOU MEAN, WHAT GET INTRODUCED TO NEXT WEEK? ' TVPJi Z OV UKE'' S ERE THAN ONE TYPE?" More Money Spent During 1948 Americans during 1948 are buy-ing houses and automobiles faster than they can be produced and In-debtedness is increasing, according to the Federal Reserve Board's 1948 survey of consumer finances. Fewer folk are saving in 1948 than the year previous. Some 3 mil-lion consumers who had savings bonds in 1947 didn't have them the first of 1948. Consumers are doing more of their paying on a credit basis than a year ago. Eecause buy-ing has Increased, they're using more of their savings than before. It Is expected that about one-fou-of the consumers will spend beyond their income In 1948 as they did in 1947. NANCY . By Ernie Bushmil er rr K,ES i K,!!ES I KISSES II KISSES i LITTLE REGGIE By Margarita j p I 5 ANOTHER J ? 7 A General Quiz 1. How many bones are there In the body? 2. What state occupies the geo-graphic center of the U. S.? 3. Is it true that the hairs of the head are similar to fingernails? 4. How much ice is there at the South Pole? 5. When were red and green lights first used as traffic signals? 6. Will moths attack nylon? THE ANSWERS 1. 200. Some anatomists name 206 by including the ossicles of the ear. 2. Kansas. 3. Yes. There's a likeness of ma-terial between hair, scales, feathers, the beaks of birds and the horns of cattle. 4. Antartic region has enough to cover world with a layer 120 feet thick. 5. In 1868 in London, England. 6. Nylon is moth-proo- f. Farm Bulldozer Blade LV ' J This bulldozer blade can be at-tached or removed from a tractor in three minutes. The blade was salvaged from an old road scraper and the pushers are old 1.12 inch galvanized irrigation pipe. The which attach the pushers to the tractor are 1.14 or 12 inch flat Iron which was bent into shape and welded to the pusher pipes. Braces for the frame are 1.14 inch pipe. REG'LAR FELLERS By Gene Byrnes IE ' - f LOOlt SWELL IN OOR 1 BUT DO YOO A IT WAS AN' THIS i I .' . J fI pf I ' nS I NEW UNIFORMS, J KNOV WHAT I UNLUCKY TO ) IS TH' MOST 1 ( J I , IV. OrSfcfc. .4tv efJ Q2SXP Hampshire Sow Sets New Production Mark Ringold Lady Dora, 753,056, with the litter with which she established a new production record for the Hampshire breed. This sow is the first to have made a "Six Star" rec-ord in the Hampshire registry. She is five years old and has raised 75 pigs in eight litters. In her six star litters she has raised 62 pigs, an iilisiliiliillll average of 10.3. These pigs weighed a total of 418 pounds, 56 days after farrowing. She is owned by William C. Goodheart Jr, Eaton, Ohio. She was fed corn, oats, alfalfa and milk prior to farrowing. Her pigs were raised on a ration of seven parts corn and three parts oats with 8 per cent milk added. JITTER By Arthur Pointer - V jDE ; by Clark S. Haat 5 PAVING 7 NAH.' WE BEEN PIWIM' T"" Y "',MEL'tciTS fJ I I f vUAS-BASEBA- lL? PIPATE DOWN AT J ; EAS f 1 A 'fs p Tests Disclose Silage Increases Hay Tonnage Tests of haymaking methods show that considerably more tonnage of feed will be obtained from a mead-ow crop when it is put in a silo than can be procured by any other method of storing. Analysis of field cured and mow cured hay and of grass silage show a larger percentage of protein in grass than in similar forage cured either in the field or in the mow. |