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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE. DELTA, UTAH Cutwork Flowers Are Beautiful Prize-Winnin- g Pineapple Doily if v iSS W"'-- . SMl Bound to Win V to win first prize at the .jjsJ BOUND tllis summer is tnis hand-some : 5523 I doily It measures 23 inches HBfflffiMBMrwii mYtWiSUm starting w;th a chrysanthemum center and ending with pretty pineapple border. Pattern No. 5968 consists of completa crocheting instructions, stitch illustra-tions, material requirements and finishing directions. Send 20 cents In coins, your name, address and pattern number. SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 530 South Wells St. Chicago 7, III. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No. Name Address Dress Up Bedroom cutwork linens to dress-u- p LOVELY your bedroom. This jonquil and narcissus design on pillow-cases or towels will make perfect wedding gifts. Use white or soft pastel embroidery floss. Pattern No. 5523 consists of 2 n transfers, stitch illustrations, material requirements and finishing directions. Send 20 cents In coins. Your name, address and pattern number. delicious fj&e-i- fD I NUTRITIOUS IJff I J l GET SEVERAL j f PACKAGES TODAY U f j - ""'" t,.u P , ;V PA. SMOKES COOL . i f AND MM-AM- D I UK J v j i WAT GRAND, RiCHTASrelJ mw'V'i - If rj And Se new Humidor Top keeps P. A. Pipe fans and "makin's" smokers agree there's greater smoking pleasure in crimp cut Prince Albert America's largest-sellin- g smoking tobacco- - ngy-- w ' ( c&'MParj PRINCE ALBERT IS A I s ( MY TOBACCO! RA.H0UST k up rStand shapes J V . 7f UP EASY INTO MlUt d ' J "Crimp cut Pnnce Albert holds In the paper for fast roll--T I ing ol neat Cigarette, that are extra .ld.,y. C. Lorow. Top ure keeps P. A. fresh I j "And that new Humidor j MORE MEN SMOKE J THAN ANY OTHER TOBACCO l , , $ "THE NATIONAL joy SMOKE J ' i TUNE IN "Grand OK 0pr". Satarda Nights on NBC J Tobacco Important In Marshall Plan Is Present Prop Of Tobacco Farmer Tobacco, from the time of the Virginia colony, has marched along as an intimate part of the Amer-ican story to the present day. In the wake of World War II, as the United States emerged the strong-est economic power, the American cigarette became temporarily a universal wampum the chief cur-rency in both Berlin and Burma. "You have a cigarette economj from Paris to Peking," a member told the house of commons in 1946. John Rolfe, husband of Pocahon-tas, would be astonished if he could see what he started when he brought in the seed of modern to-bacco. In 1948, the United States made about 387 billion cigarettes, and the tobacco industry directly paid in excise and import taxes nearly two billion dollars. From Virginia and Maryland the tobacco fields, growing over 25 types, have spread into North and South Carolina, south Georgia and northern Florida, Connecticut and Massachusettes, and the great bur-le- y area of Tennessee, Kentucky and the north bank of the Ohio. America and the world have smoked the tobacco in pipes, cigars and cigarettes, and snuffed it in powdered form and chewed it. The "chaw" is the most Amer-ican of tobacco habits. European visitors have looked upon this habit with disgust. In 1947, addicts chewed 100 million pounds of to-bacco. The cigarette is the prime favor-ite. The modern cigarette, as we know it, was created almost on the eve of World War I. The formula for the popular brands sounds ap-petizing and nutritious. They mix with the bright leaf some Turkish tobaccos, much sweetened Burley and some Maryland. A quantity of glycerine or its equivalent pre-serves moisture. The whole is made tasty with such flavors as sugar, rum, licorice, chocolate, and vanilla-lik- e products or chem-icals. The cigarette has even wooed many of the ladies away from their pipes or snuff sticks. Tobacco is of considerable im-portance in the Marshall plan and the Marshall plan is the pres-ent prop of the tobacco farmer. ' ' f Vou'RE so duaabip brains 5.V 'swe Were dynamite, and some- - THE THIMG ABOUT JOAN IS YOU BODY TOUCHED A MATCH TO XCAN'T TR.UST HER I TOLD YOUC HAC 'iT' HER A SECRET LAST WEEK its v AMD SHE HASN'T TOLD IT T WOULDN'T EVEN e TOAUJJ Gj) T,LT YOUR HAT ' a" -- CXrh r k V" ROLAND COE X- - BEACH. ALL SHE EVER DOES IS SWIM; BE GOOP for, wrinkles MUTT AND JEFF By Bud Fisher .CKETSVOHMV LAST TRIP TO Uj WHERE ARE X CAN'T VOO )fJfK f61 TICKETS; K FINANCIALlly 5 PLEASE' I WASHINGTON I YOU GOING, J READ?-- - fif iTVvEAR ASKED ,pf THAT . J -- aip I FOR A ( MAN, THEM TO JQ ESTABLISHED I WENT ISLto vT 1 , I A 3 ipH TO WASHINGTON AS A tfX 1FLL MF VU lTWZLvti,? Chlordane Will Rout Mound-Buildin- g flnts One hundred per cent kill of mound-buildin- g ants has been ob-tained with chlordane under con-trolled tests conducted by ento-mologists working under the spon-sorship of the Colorado agricultural research foundation. Dr. George M. List, head of the department of entomology, reports three per cent chlordane applied as a spray in quantities of 250 to 300 cubic centimeters per nest pro-duced the desired results. Spraying the material into nests at the entrance and working the nozzle through the soil forming the nests proved to be the most effec-tive method of application. The problem of the mound-buildin- g ant is often overlooked or un-derestimated, List said. If there are 10 such nests on one acre, and each nest has made barren one square rod In addition to the seed robbed from adjoining plants, a goodly per cent of the acre pro-duces little or no vegetation. Arthur Pointer JITTER by Clark S. Haa, rJUNNVSIDE VTcH'SlSA, JfniPLM JEILVBANS. AND 1 Sift' J Lt 6 ALONG WITH) reNNVSUCKEKS. TOWN, ttUbk S ' (TrDTrT) RRECT ' European Corn Borer Reduced Crop in 1948 The European corn borer re-duced the 1948 crop of field corn by 85, million bushels, the U.S. depart-ment of agriculture announced in Washington, D.C. Surveys recently completed by the bureau of ento-mology and plant quarantine, with cooperating agencies, indicate this loss in corn production is mors than double that of 1947. By Charles Kuhn GRANDMA Mechanical Cleaner Suggested for Barns If you're building a new barn, or remodeling an old one, it would be a good idea to include plans for installing a mechanical barn clean-er. That's the advice of M. W. Forth, an engineer with the University of Illinois college of agriculture. Forth says it would pay to make provisions for a barn cleaner even though plans might not call for one right away. |