OCR Text |
Show MTLLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH rA WPT Love Finds a Way "Mabel, dear," began her friend, "I was so sorry to hear that Mac broke off the engagement. Did you have a quarrel?" "No," replied Mabel. "He met a girl from Aberdeen whose birth-day was on Christmas Day." Life With Father "Every minute your father with-holds his consent is torment to me." "Don't tell him; he'd be tickled to death if he thought he was tor-menting you." Sit zb lgft Vl :ll v -- T &E ai FOLLOW THE HARVESTS. IN THE CHERRY T.--y-r PIE SEASON I WORK THE CHERRY COUNTRY, : INTHE APPLE PiE SEASON, THE APPLE BELT." T "NO, IT S ENOCH .' YOU REMEMBERf THE BOY YOU WERE GOM6 TO SPEND THE REST 1 1 OF YOUR LIFE WITH LAST VlONT" yri 'Smy4sy N - Luscious Bran Muffins j . . . with Raisins! Tasty Kellogg's All-Br- and lus-cious raisins ... a mouth-wateri-flavor combination! 2 tablespoons 1 cup sifted shortening flour Vi cup sugar 2 teaspoons or molasses baking , powder 1 cup Kellogg s All-Br- teaspoon salt cup milk cup raisins Blend shortening and sugar thor-oughly; add egg and beat well. Stir in Kellogg's All-Br- and milk. Let soak until most of moisture is taken up. Silt flour with baking powder and salt; stir in raisins. Add to first mix-ture and stir only until flour dis-appears. Fill greased muffin pans two-thir- full. Bake in a mod-erately hot oven (400F.) 25 to 30 minutes. Make 9 marvelous muffing- j 4&Wy America's most " '' jUHiiinJ try a bowlful today! IflLLUikiii J Hi no hul like Jolly lj ) J J ceroritnw- - J7Tll BUY U. S. SAVINGS BONDS s - Keepsff&h fClS '--V ' I FOR MONTHS) ' fmW Got acquainted with Red Star I ' fpeeia acliv Dry Yeast ... try 'J4T7 ' "f tfilt tested recipe today. You Y?rv!!v!?-'- '' rt&ff will agree that Red Star savet I kitchen time in any recipe. I IS IT HARD FOR YOU TO CUT DOWN SHOKMG? Then change to SAUO, r ffce safer cigarette with I i4J 1 l If .7. ' CORK T Sano's scientific process cuts nice- - tfty tine content to half that of ordinary 17 cigarettes. Yet skillful blending WolJh. 0 . M makes every puff a pleasure. tVKrj I IXEMINO-HAL-L TOBACCO CO., INC.. N. T. JL f T'fr s 7 J E AterafftbajedonearuinulnataaofpopuIaTTandM 'liiyfyJi Jv? J . a row pocroit iigoiir siiwo ci64t ms SiJ-c- OV mm?mm ,1 , .I 'V, TfY rr mini i Rub in Ben-Ga- y, quickl Gently warming Ben-Ga-y brings speedy, welcome relief from chest-col- d discom- - fort. You see, Ben-Ga- y contains up to 2 V times more methyl salicylate and menthol two pain-relievi- S agents known to all doctors than five other widely i offered rub-in- s. Insist on genuine Ben-Ga- the crig--i inal Baume Analgesique. j Also for Pain due to RHEUMATISM, MUSCLE ACHE, and STRAINS. Ask for Mild Ben-G- for Children. Company Improves Side Delivery Rake Completely Engineered For Power Operations A new side-delive- rake, engi-neered from the ground up for power take-of- f raking and tedding, and completely designed for mech-anized farming- - is now in produc-tion. Manufacturers declare that a "history of the side-delive- rake, which is the machine you see piling up long rows of hay, straw and other crops for baling, shows that there has been little or no change in the machine since the advent of the tractor. It is the first all-ne-rake in 50 years." Exclusive features of the rake are the floating reel and basket which permits use of the full length of the 64 pairs of raking teeth at all times and a positive chain pitch control which changes the angle of the teeth for different raking condi-tions. Two speeds forward and oria speed for tedding, or reverse rak-ing, permit the operation of the First change in the mechanized y farm rake since the advent of the tractor is shown here. It has been engineered anew from the ground np and has floating reel and basket. rake at high tractor speeds. Th four-ba- r reel is lt powered from the chain-drive- n power take-off. The rake is this manufacturer's' third contribution toward complete mechanization of haymaking. A first one-ma- n, twine-tyin- g pick-u- p baler produced commercially, and the new field bale loader already have cut huge chunks from the farmer's haymaking schedule. L1TTLEREGGIE By Margarita 4AirTPS9T 1 1 THATS f WHV P P -- 11 CAUSE THEN --ZMd&rT 4i FINE DE ly --H (J1-1- - 5T,CK T0lV v TpS pE MUTT AND JEFF By Bud Fi.her ' moSn? 1 THEN I PONIT" Wm&?P&MJEFF, WHAT fcHA JiM ! (W. THE M gfe Support for Bossy This scantily-cla- d bovine beau-ty attracted wolf whistles at the second annual National Farm show in Chicago by appearing in a newly designed udder support. The novel "unmentionable" is said by the manufacturer to in-crease a cow's milk yield by 35 per cent. JITTER By Arthur Pointer TO POT THE ROAST IN --rnT "7 ri EtflNG )Y " KNOW REGULAR FELLERS By Gene Byrne. f--f BUSTEO. SO- -- N If JVEMBARRASilN ' l SOMETHlW He NEtDS AWPOL BAoJ (KSjy JnP( "I New Animal Repellent Will Lessen Free Meals Animal wildlife will find free lunches fewer and farther between next year. A new product developed by the B. F. Goodrich chemical company and tested by the state of Maine fish and game department at its Swan Island wildlife refuge, may be just what farmers have been seeking. At Swan Island, the new material has been sprayed on leafy crops by biologists who observe that it will not wash off and that a deer, after nipping at the treated leaves, will turn up his nose at future free meals. Certain types of insects also are discouraged by the action of the repellent, researchers revealed. Crop damage by raiding wild deer runs in excess of $150,000 an-nually in some districts of Maine and amounts to millions nationally. The search for satisfactory repel- lents has been a major project. r? . by Clark S. Haas '' , -- IF U KIDS DON'T OUIT ) A ( -- I'M GOING I GST p T r "rvos I l0 w 9! rnIR,G": By Len Kleis ( STOP THAT VJUCT WOULD NOU If rAV CLOTHES UME MAS MSy I 1 RACKET.' ( THINK OF ME F I TO 6E PUT UP-C- AM EITHER) WAV,. E i Beef Cattle Reported Liking Citrus Molasses Beef cattle really go for citrus molasses. Cattle having access to this feed not only have shown no hesitation about lapping it up from troughs, but have seemed to prefer it. Cattlemen feeding the molasses are using a combination of trough and drum molasses for making the material available to their animals. The trough used is 30 inches wide and about 12 feet long. |