OCR Text |
Show ) . MTT.T.ABn COUNTY CHRONICLE. DELTA. UTAH ULilDLECnflFT PATTERNS Flowers for Your Tea Apron Pert and pretty apron with the New Look. Pattern 7071 has embroidery trans-fer; pattern. Our Improved pattern visual with easy-to-s-charts and photos, and complete directions makes needlework easy. Sewing Circle Needlccraft Dept. 364 W. Randolph St. Chicago SO, 111. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No Nfmm ArfHrpg Teach Youngsters How To Enjoy Water First You can't expect your youngster to enjoy swimming unless he learns to enjoy the water first. Try not to let older children tease baby and frighten him when he is near the water. When he is about five years old, take him to a competent instructor who will teach him so that he will gain con-fidence as he progresses. 1WIORNING GLORIES for your afternoon tea apron! Sim-plest embroidery on such a fabric-save- r. ONE yard for this wonder-ful pattern. bkiiskgiii A litte Va.tro.no, in each nostril quickly opens up nasal passages to relieve stuffy transient congestion. Invites rest-ful sleep. Relieves sniff ly, sneezy distress of head colds. Follow direc-tions in the package. Try itl Are Vou Able To or do you fidget and suffer from itchy burning of simple piles? So many find famous, medicated Resinol Ointment is wonderful for relieving such discomfort, why don't you try it? For careful cleans-ing use pure, mild Resinol Soap. jPMsfNO BOILING i! "' 3 NO STICKING fl1MVM.HM".'-ifTWlM- , 'J" JV JJ See how ' , 1 SCOTT'S helps J, , i build you up! j If you feal run down, g and colds hang on s3s. maybe you don't get r enough natural A&D wa Vitamin food. Then try g Scotfa Emulsionthe HIGH ENERGY i FOOD TONIC! See how yoa begin to get your strength back I How you can fipht off Scott's is a "gold mine" of natural A&D Vitamins and a natural oil. Easy to take. Economical. Buy today at your drug atore. - MORI than just a tonic - it's powerful nourishmenl! ? v,K it ASways li s "1 We Pay Highest Market Prices . ifj$J a For Your Ellt and Deer Slans s 'lQJ$ CO. 463 South 3rd West St. Salt Lake City 4, Utah Phone , H Branches j Ogden Logan 49 Garland 35-J- 3 p Affiliate I n I UTAH HIDE AND TALLOW CO. u I Spanish Fork 88 Heber City S7-- J i Lehi 216-- Richfield 732-- 1 !8Efwmm!ssCTSffi i i ' Efficient Fertilizer pse Boosts Yields Good Soil Management Must Aid Plant Food Every ton of fertilizer can be fetched or used more efficiently, costing crop yields at the same m Many farmers, says Middle nvst Soil Improvement committee, (ertilizer as a crutch. They try " m4ke it substitute for good practices. They put plant food in the soU without making jure the plant can send out its roots to use it Fertilizer is essential in giving the soil plant nutrients to feed But fertilizer can't do the crops whole job. "It mustTe teamed with other practices that build and main- -' tain soil structure and keep the top soil "nailed down." The soil needs good structure so roots can grow and reach out for plant food. Roots need air and wa-ter to live. When a soil is packed d0wn and tight, there is no room for the air and water needed by roots and plants for high crop production. soil structure is The way to build legumes and grasses regul-arly t0 grow in the rotation. These legumes make a thick layer of good soil. THE leaves are just beginning turn red and gold. The 1948 baseball campaign is over. But the surest sign of the end is the clarion call that rings across the landscape "Wait Till Next Year." What about next year? What can f7 ' 1. be done over a winter to make the White Sox, Cubs, Phillies, Reds, Browns and Tigers look vaguely like major league teams? Who is go-ing to whittle those killing margins of 35 and 40 games away from the teams at the top? DI MAGGIO The gaps in the American league especially are worse than disgraceful. Some of the American league teams wouldn't run in several of the stronger minor leagues. They are parasites, willing to live off the money they draw from better teams, but not willing to spend important cash to keep in the race. The second division of the Na-tional league has far better ball-players than the second division of the American. At least such teams as the Phillies and the Reds made attempts to get better ballplayers such as Richie Ashburn, Hank Sauer, Virgil Stallcup and others. Both teams should have finished better than they did. It has been something of a shock to see Chicago, with two clubs crawling along in the mire, offering a stout defense for the two cellar championships. Both Cubs and White Sox have been terrible all the year. Washington has been a joke. It is hardly a good minor league outfit. All Teams Need Talent Every team in the league will need new talent. They all need pitchers especially pitchers who know in what county the home plate is located. The Braves need outfield speed and outfield arms. The Red Sox need four or five good, depend-able pitchers. There is a heavy deficit in catchers. The crop is running thin. There is a definite need for better physical conditioning. Few ball-players know what real condition means. This goes for legs and arms. The Pirates proved what smart management and a sack full of doubloons could do in a year from a tie for last place up to a hot spot in pennant contention. A smart, aggressive front of-fice can make a big difference. A stupid, timid front office can wreck any team. And there are more than a few of the latter brand now operating. You can look at the standing of the clubs and at least guess who most of them are. We'll take up the case of the American league first: Yankees First of all, the Yan-kees need Bucky Harris. Harris has been one of the best in the game. It would be a baseball crime to let him go, an act of complete stupid-ity. After this, the Yankees need infield and pitching help badly. At least two harder hitting infielders and at least two new dependable pitchers. Their outfield is high grade, but their catching isn't any too hot. And Joe DiMaggio is getting no younger. Pitcher's for Red Sox Red Sox At least three good pitchers in addition to the crop they have which has been forced to depend on Red Sox hitting pow-er. Even two good additional pitch-ers would be enough. Indians Less than any other American league club. The Indians can use some outfield help, one more infielder and another good pitcher. Athletics Just about double the speed they now have. Far too slow. Joost and Majeski hardly likely to repeat 1948's brilliant play. Tigers The biggest disappoint-ment in baseball. Still have a fine pitching staff. Someone should clean out most of the others by sales and trades. Club spirit poor. Present squad is going nowhere. Browns, White Sox, Senators Browns much the best of these derelicts. They have some good ballplayers. White Sox and Senators will need heavy cash and several years to reach even partial respectabil-ity. They will likely cordinue to be clinging parasites, living on the rest of the league prac-tically beyond all hope for a long time to come. Here are a few National league's needs for 1949: The Braves More outfield speed and better throwing arms. Pitching help to relieve Sain and Spahn, two fine workmen. At least two new dependable pitchers needed badly. The Dodgers They were easily the best team In the league this season by six or seven games. Just keep what they have and use it intelligently, which Brooklyn didn't do this season. ' ft' W c ' HONOR FLIERS . . . Lt. Fran-cisco Tejeda lifts a Berlin so child that she can touch his plane at Templchof airport. It hap-pened when Bcrliners honored airlift fliers on 100th day of the operation. ) . . T - , i - . r-- ' .' : . ". ' ' " . ., v " U i r " " . - x : - . ' HELP ALLIED AIRLIFT ... In order to Increase the potency and efficiency of the Allied airlift Into beleaguered Berlin, more air strips had to be built. Scores of German women, like those pictured above, are aiding the Allies by helping to build a new runway at Tegcl, in the heart or the French sector of Berlin." These new strips relieve the heavy burden from the Tempelhof airport. - i 1 " A,' K ! POLIO TRAGEDI . . . Mother is dead, a victim of bulbar polio, and her brother Is in the hospital suffering from the dread disease, while bewil-dered by it all is Claudia Gene Kitchen of San Francisco. . I ; t j 'A SOLID AND SOUR . . . James Caesar Petrillo, czar of the musicians anion, tries his delicate touch on a harmonica while two virtuosos of that windy instrument bend a conple of ears. It happened in Chicago after Petrillo had admitted the harmonica troupe, known as the Ilarmonicats, into his musicians' union. Left to right ire Jerry Murad, Petrillo and Don Les. YOU CAN YOUR "fertilizer l": They add organic matter. Such soil has plenty of air space. Water soaks in quickly and more of it is held. Weak, scattered stands of legumes won't build soil structure. For strong, leafy stands and vigorous roots, the legumes need phosphate and potash that can b added in tommercial fertilizer. Getting thick stands isn't the whole story either. All these crops can't be cut for hay or graze close and still be expected to build the soil. At least a part of these crops must be turned back to the soil. HMOUSEHOLD When recipes call for "frying out" salt pork or other fat, cut it in small pieces and heat it slowly in a heavy frying pan until the fat is extracted. When putting: new elastic in a garment, pin the end of the new to the worn elastic. Then as the worn elastic pulls out, the new elastic will pull in. Milk containers made of waxed cardboard make a handy recep-tacle for bread crumbs after they are washed and thoroughly dried. Parsley is easiest cut with a scissors. Fold over several of the sprays of one stalk and hold be-tween the thumb and other fingers of the left hand and cut fine with the scissors. In the use of self-seali- lids for canning, the screw band must be screwed down tight before processing. By tight, it means with the full force of the hand. A regular shoe bag with its nu-merous pockets makes an ideal catch-a- ll for the kitchen. Tack it up in an place and put all the small things into it that usually get mixed up in some kitchen drawer. Fill cream puff or eclair shells with ice cream and serve with a tutti-frut-ti sauce made from cher-ries, bananas, oranges and pine-apple. A child's sprinkling can is a good size for watering house plants. f - . r- '-v .r: "FELIX" . . . Sgt. William B. Hollman of Daniels, Md., makes an adjustment on "Felix," the new air force bomb which is de-signed to guide its own fall onto targets giving off heat such as enemy ships, factories and oil refineries. Private Life of Bossy In the current craze for dissecti-ng private lives even Bossy is not immune. The inevitable prober comes up with these statistics: Bossy grazes only seven and a 'alt hour9 daily, regardless of how much feed she gets. She does 60 Per cent of her grazing during daylight hours, 40 per cent at light. She spends five hours a day eating at a rate of 50 to 70 tiles per minute. She chews her ud seven hours a day and spends 2 hours lying down, at nine dif-'e- nt times. While grazing, she travels two and a half miles in the daytime and one and a half at ""'Shi. She drinks 10 times a day. I V , v if '' " ' " '" " 1 f if - I k t fix ' t X .4 I y " " i SMILES BUT NO APPLAUSE . . . Russia's United Nations dele-gates Jacob Malik and Andrei Vishinsky may smile at photographers but they refused to applaud after the U. S. delegate. Secretary of State Marshall, made his first speech at the Chaillot Palace meeting of the United Nation's genera assembly. In his speech Marshal served notice on Eussia that the U. S. would make no compromise on basic principles. L ' rl k ... ,i .i r. ' - CROCHET CHAMP . . . Erwin Pragcr, Dorseyville, Pa., farmer, is shown giving his granddaughter. Joyce Houggy, a lesson in the womanly art of crochet. His tablecloth won fir; prize at the county fair. - ...nR.n.iim.w. Irrigation Used By Dairymen The tremendous possibilities of ir-rigation for dairying in Georgia has resulted in plans for widespread installation of irrigation systems, according to Everett H. Davis, Georgia extension service engineer. Dairymen who have already in-stalled irrigation systems have made enthusiastic reports of their value, especially during dry seasons. Davis says that irrigation is the answer to the problem of estab-lishing winter grazing pastures, and he quoted a livestock man, T. O. Asbury, as saying his portable sprinkler system would have paid for itself if used only once in five years. Souvenirs of Early Day Articels and souvenirs of the famed Lewis and Clark expedition can be found in the Sacajawea mu-seum near Spalding Park, Idaho. frosion Takes Alarming Toll of Good Crop Land Erosion is taking an increasingly a arming toll of good crop land in e United States. Estimates by ,?artment agriculture indi-- 4 ttat about 100 million acres of ' J,?00'1 crop Iand have been or nearly ruined for "opP'nS y erosion, another 'pillion acres have been badly maged and still another 100 mil- - a"es are eroding too fast mini' Sre now approximately 4R0 acres of good crop land in Wow "Eluding acreage now in acre tl' W6U s about 100 million ' irrij., need bearing, drainage, on or other Improvement. Ut 7 miUion a"es of ) i m'Ui0n acres are subject res ar0"""'6" protective meas-- adopted. ' - ' fx nvnlCAPPED CAMPAIGNER . . . Representative William E. Hess ,Hn Ohio) was not as young as he thooght, and when he tried to hall with some small boy friends he wound np in bed at Bcthesda play Maryland. Amidst a nightmarish effect of pulleys, naval no p rclse gadgets he conducts business as usual. He a nail and also directs his campaign for ' V - i l1 ' :.'' ' i ' "A P.,..': : ;' W A PERFORMS . . . DA PREEM Yes it's old satchelfoot himself, Prime Camera, former bv of the weight boxing champion for He's now wrestling The entertainment of Braz.ian. well at it-- in Rio and doing ying of Windbreak improve Farmstead Provtrr," major fatrr.stead PTieci-- Planting of a lot on! . arounl farm buildings of the rrn1kI'0Ve3 the aPPearance lives WI? 1 also saves fuel and wSCtcS.tlontothe buiId" kreak8'"011 to the regular wind- - brmsteaH n0rth and west of 1116 Warning , many farmers also are oath an4 garden windbreak on tho west of the garden. |