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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHTtONTC'LE. DELTA. UTAH MEEDLECRAFT PATTERNS Flatter Him With, a Chair-Se- t Our Improved natt Name Address --- 7325 NfiBSB? When your nose fins H? 'l up with a stuffy head rfii i cold or occasional con. gestton, put a few drops VtjfWU S ol Vlcks in ' ' each nostril and get comfortbiv m almost mstantly o fective because it work, m trouble is to soothe ,! stuffiness, mak. breath ngS"1!;' ltlGetyicksVa-tro.nol- C "PHE masculin look for his chair. He'll be flattered when you make a chair-se- t especially for him. Filet crochet with an easy-to-us- e chart I Horses' heads aid a handsome note to any room I Pattern 7825 has charts and directions lor Bet. STICKING 0 Feet- - Enjoy a hot, sudsy Resinol Sci; foot bath smooth on soothirj, medicated Resinol feel like ns! RESHJOKS "" " '1?T3 "sr""" 1- - NeediWif-- BE SKYHIGH? I NOT ON YOUR LIFE! TO PROVE IT 1 CHECK THESE 194 SPARTON I RADIO VALUES YOURSELF! J I These now 1949 Sparton radios are at your Sparton j; I dealer's now. See them. Compare the features, and the 1 price tags, anywhere, in or eut of town. See for yourself I why Sparton is the "buy" for you- - I r'-T ...i.!,;,,,,,!, mmm, AM-F- RADIO- - fW- - r---- A Sparton AM-F-t " ... masterpiece witb II t ( . l' fast, silent record- - 1 1 ' ,' - changer, famous , Sparton tone, '""-fa- .,. ' '""l- - , ' tennaforFM.10' I v , f i , permaaeat meg- - i I ' , ' - net speaker, fu- - ft f ' f , . ' tura d f it k - ' 1 . dial, high-spee- d i p. ' , ' station selector I . ", V I' and other pluses- - j ' console m "a- - m s ' A if hogany veneers. 1 " J What a "I"6' ; I AM-F- TABLE MODEL 1 Vet, hart is a table model with the latest - . .. - j ; m type, static-fre- e FM, as well as stand- - !:" '. ' j H ari broadcast. Built-i- n "loop" anten- - : . i I aa for standard broadcast internal, la J I power line antenna for FM, eu'de-rul-e " - --"r j I cHaL, precision station selector for 1 II swhiathrpmesot dertunning. Mahogany veneer L,'-- ft J ebonized front CQOS """'in " i'" I trim. Compare! Modell21. J7,J 1 1 . Spartoa sells direct to ene 2. Spaxtonmakesitoown exclusive dealer in each com- - inets and nianjr Pf n0 munity (possibly a neighbor mere savings! If u''tomi of yours) ... cuts out the Sparton dealer m your . 1 middlemaaooets.The savings please write Sparton, J go into making a better set WN, Jackson, Mt"gSier. N at a lower price. name of your nearest I 'AH prioe. idightly hisW wt of Bock) BIGGEST VALUE THE COMPANY, JACKSOK, WO" i FICTION BOIL FOR LUOEC I lW' P By GENE GILBERT VM M Cornet 1 .JllM ff r-- V- - - fT !ir' - Vi . .. J ' y -- t ' ? ' - i Be jerked the doll loose and tossed It out throagh the epen side window. PALMER soared through the sky light heart. He was leav-ing a hard life behind, years of h existence, years of depending on occasional charter trips and the. students able to pay the high rates on his big machine. The rature opened before him: He would get a new ship, one of those long-rang- all metal, jobs, go in for e competitive races. And he would have a swell-lookin- g girl with a pile of dough to pay the bills. He glanced at the instrument board, saw that everything was all right. The cabin ship roared stead-ily over Connecticut at four thou-sand feet. There were scattered clouds beneath him, but not enough to hide the ground. His luck was breaking right for the first time, just right. Reaching up, he patted the mascot swinging from the roof on a length of ribbon. It was a small doll, black of face, with two pearl buttons set in the satin for eyes, a piece of red silk stitched across the lower half of the face for a mouth. It was garbed in a loud plaid dress green and red. That d little figure had been hanging in this ship for over two years. Palmer had come to be-lieve it was lucky. The girl who had loaned him the down payment on the machine had put it there. He had met her one summer when he had beea barnstorming with a malL old ship, and they had kviocked around together for three months. She had been pretty sure of herself, Palmer recalled, loaned hiro money, talked about how "we" were going to make a fortune with th larger ship. Be recalled the night when they had won the doll at a small car-nival, in one of the ring-tos- s games. He had made up his mind already to pull out sometime soon. And it had annoyed him somewhat to see her having such a gay time. But he could not tell her, there was no need to say goodbye tearfully and have her bawl and carry on in front of him. On their way home she had that 'they go to the field where his ship was staked down In the open, and sit in the cabin for a few minutes. She had been big, and hght blonde and sentimen- - taL Just before they had left the cabin, she had pinned the thing to the upholstery on the ceiling. "That's our luck, Eric," she had said. "As long as she's there, we'll always be safe." an admission of remorse. And he had nothing to blame himself for. The doll had brought him luck at last: Eleanore. She had looks and background and money. Further-more, she had the kind of a spirit he liked, which he needed close to him. To her, a ship wasn't some-thing to work for a small house, for an ordinary living. She enjoyed what he enjoyed, fame, her name in the papers. She loved him, ail right, but she would always understand that he must take long chances. A HEAD, he saw the small field f where she was waiting. They would drive to her home, be mar-ried, and fly away. He tipped his left wing, banked lazily over a field. A bright spot of color de-tached itself from a long, sleek, dark car. Eleanore waving her scarf. That was servlce already: His girl waiting for him with a sixteen cylinder bus, complete with chauffeur. His spirits Surged higher. This was a private airport, no inspector would be around, so he was safe in giving her a show. He slammed the motor fuD on, nosed down then hauled the ship up and over in a tight loop. He leveled off and eased her around, a few wing-over- s and level Bight again. Something caught his eye, the doll, swinging from the roof, grin-ning redly. He smiled and slapped It like a punching-ba- a few times, glanced at his altimeter. He still had fifteen hundred feet. One last stunt and then he could land. He circled the field once more, swung around and when he was almost ov-er the car, shoved the throttle full on and dove in a screaming fall. The moving doll again attracted his glance. Eleanore had tightened her lips when he had told her it was a souvenir from a dame, before he got serious with her. It might be tactful to ditch it now scarcely the memento for a perfect honey-moon!, A small sacrifice to love. He reached out, jerked it loose and tossed it out through the open side window and pulled the wheel back to neutral. Eleanore was standing still by the side of the car, he noticed and he decided to level off. No need to frighten her. He hauled back fur-ther on the wheel. It yielded an Inch and stuck. He pulled again, hard-er, and the wheel stuck the wheel stuck He must get her nose up, level1 off he was doing better than two hundred and the ground was close. Too close ... Caught between the horizontal stabilizer and the counterweight for the elevators, the small black doll in the loud green and red plaid dress seemed to widen the grin of her scarlet satin mouth. Palmer had smiled, kissed her and taken her home. At dawn of the same morning, he had taken off and come East. He had never returned. Once In a while, a letter from her had caught up with him, but he had not answered. What was the use? He had intended to send her back the loan when he could. He was grateful for the help, and everything. But how could he explain without hurting her, that they were just not suited to each other? When the letters had stopped, coming, he had thought that she had understood. Then some fellow, who had known them both, had handed him a clipping, without a word. She had been killed in a crossing accident. It seemed that her car had stalled on the tracks, and that she had made no effort to get out. The fellow evidently thought she had done it on pur-pose. Palmer knew better. .That girl had had character, she would not have done away with herself over a few hundred bucks and a broken engagement. - He had been tempted to take that doll down. Then he had rea-soned that it would be, in a way. VXHILE variouj promoters still are groping in the dark for a new heavyweight champion, with Joe Louis in possible retirement, there is a chance that the world soon will be cluttered up with stars. They make an interesting group: It was a matter of 49 years ago that Jim Jeffries knocked out Bob Fitzsimmons. The heavyweight cham-pions followed in this order: Tommy Burns, Jack John-son, Jess Willard, Jack Dempsey, Gene Tunney, Max Schmeling, Jack Sharkey, Primo Camera, Max Baer, Jim Braddock and finally Louis. From this parade of 12 men, only DEMPSEY Johnson is missing. And he was killed in a motor car accident. Jef-fries is still alive hale and rather hearty and so are Burns, Willard, Dempsey, Tunney, Schmeling, Sharkey, Camera, Baer, Braddock and Louis. The span from Jeffries to Louis covers almost half a cen-tury, and to have 11 out of 12 still Inhabiting this planet Is full proof they are a hardy lot. Big Camera still is wrestling, or giving imitations thereof, and Dempsey still is refereeing now and then. Jeffries has been running a boxing school and holding fight nights. Louis says he is through, but he still hasn't turned la any formal or official abdication. Still in Good Shape Two men still in fine physical shape are Dempsey and Tunney. Both are now around 220 pounds, which could be a trifle lower, but they still look like ought to look. At least they look as If they could handle most of the phony heavyweights I've seen around in the last few years. It might also be mentioned that outside of Louis, the two old rivals are better fixed finan-cially than any other heavy-weight in history. Dompsey has one of the most beautiful homes in Los Angeles for his two laughters, while Tunney and his family never will have to wor-ry about the next beefsteak and ' caviar. I understand Sharkey isn't doing too badly, and I know Camera has been mopping up in the weird and incredible wrestling game. A Memorable Group Is it possible there could be any group more different than the 11 heavyweight champions still living? I doubt it I'd like to see motion picture shorts made of their lives: The big, burly bald-heade- d Jef-fries now over 70 the toughest of them all. He was aa old man physi-cally when he fought Johnson, who was far below Louis in all moral values but a great fighter. Bums over (0 hooked in some odd philosophy of life. Willard a d giant the least equipped of them all men-tally. Just a guy who weighed 250 pounds. Ask Dempsey and others. Dempsey a firebrand In his day, an Babe Ruth's suc-cessor. Tough and rough in the ring. One of the few gentlemen I've known outside of the ring. The one colorful figure left in sport. ' Dempsey, the killer, Is also Dempsey who always thinks of the underdog and has given away more money to bums and has-bee- than any two men in sports. As great a guy as any-- on I ever met. I tnly wish I knew more words to write shout him. Tunney the man who made himself. A man of character and Intelligence. Not too much inclined towards popularity. Dempsey loved people; Tunney never did. Smart, keen, a man of indomitable will power. A man you must know to like, since he makes no effort to make new friends. But one who has written a great chapter in sport that will be remembered later on. Far up the ladder. Fill-In- s for Tunney Schmeling, Sharkey, Camera, Baer, Braddock. Here are five heavyweights that just happened to fill in after Tunney retired. Demp-sey at bis peak could have stopped them all in two rounds. Tunney could have chopped them into mincemeat Camera was a clowa. Sharkey was aaother might-have-bee-n, who was never tee smart la the ring. "I had Dempsey knocked at tn the first round," ha told me, "whea I stopped to make an address to the crowd that had betted me. Dempsey was oa the ropes." Now Louis. A great champion. A boxer and a puncher. Especially a puncher. Game, but no Dempsey at taking a punch. They all came along and knocked Louis down. I think Dempsey would have knocked him out. New Unit Improves Ventilation of Barn Dairymen Find Device PariicuSarSy Effective Many of a cow's troubles can be traced to heat and humidity. A cow, unlike a human being, can perspire only through the mouth. So when the temperature and hu-midity inside a barn get high, the animal becomes uncomfortable and stubborn, particularly, at milking time. According to the department of agriculture, an average cow gives off almost a pint of water every hour through breathing. In addi-tion to the high humidity caused by this breathing, ' a cow has an extremely high body temperature. During the winter months, when the cows are in the barn most of the time, this combination results in generation of an enormous amount of water vapor and heat When the warm, moisture-lade- n air comes in contact with the cold walls, condensation occurs and frost is formed. The net result to farmers Is rot-ting beams, joist and siding; a loss of hay because of mold created by moisture and frost; milk contami-nation, disease, particularly among the young stock and reduction of milk production because of discom-fort to cows. A simple solution to all of these costly problems is an automatic cooling unit, which is proving pop-ular with dairy farmers. These automatic ventilation units, easily installed, reduce condensa- J, . - Picture on Vernon Jullns farm at Freeport, 111., shows installa-tion of automatic cooling unit in dairy barn. tion to a negligible degree less than 2 per cent. This action, in turn, decreases barn deterioration, hay mold, milk contamination and disease. It also provides much more comfort for the cows and in-creases milk production. In addi-tion, working conditions for the operator are much more pleasant. The cooling units are equipped with an automatic "airswitch" thermostat. HUOUSEHOLD Never fill a teakettle too full. Leave enough space for expan-sion or the water will boil over and you run the risk of its scald-ing someone. Don't put bananas im the re-frigerator as a low temperature arrests the banana's ripening process. Cake layers can be cut in half for frosting or filling by using a length of thread with a sawing motion. Never iron over buttons, snaps, zippers, or hooks and eyes, as such hard objects may scratch and soar the smooth ironing sur-face. I TRICKS FOR TEENS By NANCY PEPPER Mock Turtle. The latest fashion to turn into a fad is the turtle neck cotton knit You're wearing it in white only and you tie one of your shad-ed silk scarfs under the roll collar with the long ends hang-ing down in back. On the front of your turtle neck shirt you wear your trickiest pin or set of match- - are you waiting for a data with' Lon McAllister? Time Marches On. Oh, happy the days when dates were for eating And happy the days when dates were for learning; But, now you're a teen, there's no are for making, breaking , aad yearning. Ton Said It and You're Gladl "Well, Mock My Shodesl" Ex-- , pression of surprise whioh you could transpose to mean, "Well, Shook My Modesty." Only it wouldn't be so much fun that way. "Glad to Hear it" Your comment on any good news. "Sad to Hear It" Ditto on any bad news. ingpins. At a CALLING ALL GIRLS fashion show held up in Stamford. Conn., we counted no less than eight of these shirts, similarly scarfed, in the first row of the audience! Your favorite teen department has the T shirts, you have the scarfs so what "Concoct a Witticism" Very for-mal for "pop a corny." "That's Your Red Wagon" That's your worry. "Icky Bird" New name for a drip and no relation to the Dicky Bird who announces spring In that popular song. "T Man" Top man, formerly known as your O. A. O. "Once in a Red Moon" Indicates a much longer interval than the traditional "Blue Moon." "I Wish Your Mother Had Raised Ducks Instead" This retort can mean only one thing; that you wish the person to whom you're talking had never been born. "Chee Chee" You pipe it In a mousy voice and it means "wonder-ful." It also means you've been spinning Rose Murphy's platters. Well, as the man said when he followed the fire engines, "I want to see what's cooking!" TRIXIE TEEN SAYS You're so engrossed in how you're going to look for this important date that you haven't given much thought to how you're going to sound. You know he's a big basket ball play-er; you know he's a bug for avia-tion; you know he's majoring in his-tory and economics at school. They're all clues to his interests but you haven't had time to follow one of them. Instead, you've concen-trated on your clothes, your hair, your make-up- . Well, you'll be pret-ty as a picture, all right but haven't you heard that silent pic-tures are obsolete? These days, a boy prefers a picture with sound a talky that really has something to say.' Higher Yields Outweigh Cattle Spraying Costs An increase of $3.75 per head more than covers the cost of spraying beef cattle with DDT, it was re-vealed in a test of the value of fly control conducted at the University of Illinois college of agriculture. Protected cattle gained about 15 pounds more per head during the pasture season than a group that had not been sprayed. At 25 cents a pound, an increase of 15 pounds a head amounts to $3.75 a head, a return that far outweighs the cost of spraying. Beef cattle should be sprayed often enough to control flies, whether it requires two or three sprayings during the season or once a month. Herds and Flocks Use of 2, sprays for weed con-trol in pastures is not dangerous to grazing animals. A home-mixe- d spray of crude benzene hexachloride powder and water is more likely to taint eggs in poultry houses than a good com-mercial roost paint containing the effective portion of the same chem-ical Poultry houses with light colored roofs are cooler in summer than those with roofs painted black. To get water to begs ia distant pasture where there is no water sup-ply, pipes can be laid on top of the ground. To prevent freezing in winter, disconnect and drain the pipes. g Grace Noll Crowell M mxTKiP B WHO is glad for every day' bright ppgS bMUty' llEllll For a flower or a red leaf In the wood, Who seeks fresh color in each hour's drab duty, I think he thanks his Maker as he should. Tijlfk He who is brave to meet each day's new sorrow, I jst Whose courage marches with him as he goes, v Carries a stronger heart into tomorrow, tnu thanks God the very best he knows. ?pV j He who walks calmly, surely, through disaster, $8 III Trusting an unseen hand to bring him peace, $5S-- I' ll ' UP tis a Py" M1'0 Master, " It'i Ns And offers him a praise that does not cease. Jgi ill-H-e who moves gently when the stress is pressing, Lending a hand, such as a woman would, ZsrtSlSSIii Who turns his days and years into a blessing, --r"yrxffi$ff" s Iswk he AaDbhte Maka as be should. i Benzene Hexachloride Will Check Hog Mange If hogs stand around and rub in-stead of eating, they may have a touch of mange. Benzene hexa-chloride has been found to be more effective than lime sulphur. Ben-zene hexachloride should be applied when temperatures are up around 75 degrees, using one pound of 50 per cent powder to four gallons of water. It is important to see that the animal is completely covered, j including the inside of the ears. |