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Show , MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA. UTAH r. J New Type Sharpener Usable in Fields Will Sharpen Mower Blade While on Bar A new type of bay mower blade sharpener which makes it possible to sharpen the ordinary mower sec-tion right in the field without even removing It from the cutter bar thus saving time and labor and making it possible to cut more hay faster, has been placed on the mar-ket by the New England Carbide Tool Company, Inc. lliisaill The black tip of this new type mower blade sharpener Is made of oarboloy cemented carbide, hardest metal commercially avail-able. Mower blades can be sharp-ened quickly and easily In the field with this sharpener. The sharpener consists of a steel shank one-ha- lf inch square and about 5" long, chrome plated against rust and having rounded edges so that the tool can be carried safely in the pocket. The tip which does the actual sharpening is made of ultra-har- d carboloy cemented car-bide metal, which is attached se-curely to the steel shank. To sharpen mower blades with this "carbide tipped" tool, the edges of the blade to be sharpened are uncovered. The sharpener is held in the hand, palm down. The car-boloy tip is placed on the mower blade at about a thirty-degre- e angle, and drawn from back to front on the blade three or four times. This pro-duces an extremely sharp edge. Any small burr which many develop on the blade may be removed by drawing the carbide tip across the bottom of the blade. Welklly JPSeitminoe s?s 1 yr . ""' tut? iz4 Glory in the Power ... Man has fastened a harness on the rivers, a harness in the form of the vast masonry of dams which yoke the power of falling water and transform that energy into electricity for homes, farms and factories. With dams, too, he can store water in great reservoirs and dole it out for irrigation projects, and he can control rapacious floods. These pictures, from the American Edu-cator encyclopedia, show some of America's major dams. - - s - , s , , K.s J J" t- f ' "j t ' ! r ? H 1! 11 H if If h !! At the extreme top of the page is Okla-homa's multiple arch Grand river dam, claimed to be the longest of that type construction in the world. Above is the Bartlett dam on the Salt river showing reservoir full with a flow through the spillway. At right is one of the TVA's main river dams. Huge tows of gasoline, auto-motive equipment, coal, grain and other commodities may be seen on the river. s ' ' - i . ' ? ' " ' "i ' - , j J I IA ' : ; . . - I ' Topping most similar structures in sheer grandeur is Hoover dam on the Colorado River in Nevada. This photo shows dam and power plant with discharge from 84-in- needle valves as seen from a high mountain downstream. The multiple-purpos- e Hiwassee dam in North Carolina (right) controls the flow of the Hiwassee river, rises 307 feet above bed rock. Below is the magnificent Roosevelt dam, with spillways overflowing. mi ..II.IMP M. ,. J. wi.m.... ..I.. -- ....w.taw. n.i.. ;: - 'J f'' CQ 8V Scanoe 6 ON THE MARnV rWV . v!P5ii-cM- , i THwATithCAsNwlb.me oUi5cEcDpolE.WocSsT--tx 2 lh WSJ V fWL OR ON SNOW M IX FOR HIS FIRST JJ CAN BE EXECUTED GAME OF GOLF . .jd&y flfti IN ABOUT 3r AFTER THE Ma ffi&v&iSr SFCOMPf BASEBALL '"' J&jvS Ji'jm Bluebids for 4 f '' LOOKING for a bluebird? bring color and cheer C four kitchen towels. Even 7 '' ' youngsters will love embroider W, Jiem. ;V Designs every needlewoman rffective. Pattern 676 has tranSvV' W, ifs5K,x7y. inches Send 20c ach pattern. It's NEW It's wonderful-e- m Taft Catalog. Send fifteen CTf rations of newest designs that Sr.. ind easy experts prefer . . . croctaf M mg. embroidery, toys, dolls. ind personal accessories. "M r rinted In book. " BIT Sewing Circle 564 W. Randolph St. CM?.,,Tn, W Enclose 20 cents for pattern.' No . ba Name t Address I i I r' I Sc. y iflTMj.l I every can of Joy Tim To, it tod". IJJ '! Pops UP le,)de,r' irir l hull.I No other I .TTTt : no pop corn like J IV ) J i Time. Ak your P IslMjl , cerforitnow. fkJW'Tj r-- .- rz f srap SORETONE Liniment's Heating Pad Action Gives Quick Relief! When fatigue, exposure put misery in mnstla dons and back, relieve such sympioms quid! with the liniment specially made for ibis P"'P Soretone Liniment conlains effective rub cienx ingredients that acl like glowini ' from heating pad. Helps aiuact desh wiw blood supply. Soretone is in class by itself, fast! satisfying relief assured or price refundM Economy size S .00. Try Soretone for Athlete's Foot Kills ill type of commoD fungi on contact! Are you going tnrougb tha (Jj tlonal middle age' period Pu to women (38 to 52 yn l Do W make you sutler from hot las feel to nervous, blghstrung tl' Then do try Lydla E P Vegetable Compound to rellevej aymptom.. Plnkbam's Compo alao has whBt Doctors call v machlo tonlo eflectl emtti LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S w I Hdp Them Cleanse theBlooJ of Harmful Body VTa" Tour kidney, are MMUatly ' waste matter from the blood kidney, .ometimea lag m their r not act as Nature lutended- -! move Impurities that, if '"''""'.boli poiaon the ayatem and up' body machinery. taeH'1 Symptom, may be "Kn, persistent headache, attack! getting up nights, ""I"', under the eyea a feeling .'" aniiety and loaa of pep an '. ilf Other aigna of kidney or lf , order are aometrmea burning. too frequent urination. M0t There ahould be no doubt that la wiaer than Mfi iD, Doon'. Pilla. Doon'a have b M. new trlenda for more than lorw They have a natlon-wid- a tepu Are feeommended by V"'"ff country over. Atk liour iMfi . SPORTLIGHT --. College Mind Boon to Baseball ' By GRANTLAND RICE The College Influence fpHE ADDITION of Red Rolfe, the distinguished Dartmouth alum-nus, to the list of big league man-agers, increases considerably the influence of the college mind on our national game. The list of college-traine- d man-agers now includes Lou Boudreau t-- s of Illinois, Eddie X ' Dyer of Rice' Red ' ' '"ja. ' RIfe 01 Dartmouth 1 and Eddie Sawyer 1C Ct of Ithaca. This is ! f only four out of the 16, but it's at least rfs t" a lift from the old I " days when Jake Stahl of Illinois and ' the Red Sox was Grantland Rice about the only collegian in charge of a squad. Stahl' s Red Sox beat the Giants in the 1912 World Series. It isn't beyond reason to see Boudreau's Indians and Dyer's Cardinals hook up in another world series. This, however, is no even-mone- y bet. In the American league, the Indians still have the Red Sox, Yankees and Athletics to sub-due. In the National league, the Cardinals . still have the Dodgers, Braves, Pirates and Giants to lasso and handle. The four college-traine- d man-agers must also overpower such entries as Joe Mc- Carthy, Casey Stengel, Burt Shot-to- Leo Durocher, Billy South-wort- Billy Meyer and Connie Mack a rather formidable troop. What teams are going to win the two pennants, anyway? . With noth-ing better to do under a hot, steamy sun, we began interviewing ball-players not the rookies to get their angles. After all, they had played against these teams and ought to have some slant on the subject. Their opinions were quite From American league camps, we found that about 65 per cent gave Cleve-land the edge through stronger balance in pitching, hitting, outfield. Infield and catching. There's no doubt that Boudreau's Indians are the out-fit in either league. They have what should be the best pitching staff, a fine outfield, a strong infield and competent catching. The other 35 per cent went 25 for the Red Sox and 10 for the Yankees. I rate the Yankees much higher than this. They have the best outfield in the league, if Joe DiMag-gi- o is O.K. They have the weakest infield of the three contenders, but powerful piuhing possibilities. The Red Sox are only uncertain in the box, where pennants are won and lost. Anyway, most of the American leaguers thought the Indians would win again. They thought so rather violently. They are probably right, as Boudreau is a smart, keen, hust-ling manager who is going to stand for no loafing. Joe McCarthy must get better pitching and Casey Sten-gel must get better infield play, im-proved pitching and improved catching. Could happ.en. The National League Vote The National league vote was even more interesting. We only had the Cardinals, Reds, Phillies and Braves to talk to. The Giants and Pirates are too far away. So are the Dodgers in their madhouse at Vero Beach. All the Cardinals we talked to picked the Cardinals to win by some strange quirk. The Phillies and the Reds were split among the Braves, Cardinals and Dodgers, with the Braves slightly in the lead because of Sain, Spahn, Dark and Pete Reiser's po-tential gifts. Also a fellow by the name of Billy Southworth, at least one of the great managers of all time. In a series of five games, the Cardinals would probably win four. But 154 games was a different story. Here is a 1940-194- 1 squad facing a 1947-194- 8 squad younger, sounder, with stronger legs and stronger arms. There is no such creaking and clashing of worn-ou- t bones among the Dodgers that you hear from the Cardinal camp. The Redbird team must be re-built quickly. It is almost through although still powerful and dangerous. They are a much better ball team than the Dodgers or Giants. But I'm not sure they can go the long route as well as the Dodgers can tra-vel the pennant road. Oddly enough, few ot the Na-tional leaguers I talked to gave the Pirates or the Giants a chance. They liked the Pirates over the Giants. In a short series, they liked the Braves over the Cardinals on account of Sain and Spahn. DDT. Increases Yield '.! Of Clover Seed !; William Meinholz of Dane cor-ty, Wisconsin, increased his yi I f Ladino seed by wh- U he dusted it with 40 pounds o! per cent DDT per acre. Meinli eports dusting gave better r han spraying (one pound DDT: 100 gallons of water per acre while Henry Perry, Jeffera: county, reported an increei;: seed 'yield of 76 per cent in re: clover with the use of the sprar. Horses Are Dangerous melloA hello ) 'dobbin i yerself ) Never approach a horse with-out speaking to him. As a rule, farmers do not con-sider horses as especially dan-gerous animals, yet they accounl for more accidents of a serious nature than any other farm animal. According to the National Safety Council, approximately three times as many accidents occur with horses as with any other farm ani-mal. Farmers should always be cautious around these animals, the NSC continued. One phase of this precaution is a thorough check in the spring of all equipment to be used on or by horses, particularly harness. Only strong harness should be used and these should be inspected regularly and kept in good repair. Dry leather has low tensile strength and it should be cleaned with mild soap and warm water and treated with oil. Attention to equipment such as neck-yoke- tongues, single- trees, double-tree- s and eveners is also very necessary. The NSC suggests that many seri- ous farm accidents can be prevented by following these simple rules- - Never approach a horse without speakmg to him. When cleaning a stall, making no sudden movement. Knter the stall on the left side of the horse. When drivmg or horses, never wrap the lines around body. flOETHIl yToMG,ec..v 1: ' ' ' H , - , . Window screens ffH;', J..fljyfff CAN BE FASTENED NEAT- - :W : : : 1st METHOD C WASHER AMD olt LY AND EFFECTIVELY IN J K,Ji:EE?H THE METHODS SHOWN. THE ) J i HL -- ool.? METAL WASHER SHOULD BE i' rFffi:-Sff- l 'R . FLATTENED ON ONE SIDE igfo Vy-- Ja - 5:? WITH A FILE TO FORM AN f3frV if. ff ii t fl TO ECCENTRIC AND SCREWED W fj SM. lff:M'-f- ffi TO THE WINDOW CASING ,A fl J'f'fijSSSi 2 MtSF SO IT CAN BE TURNED TO l MA 'wffirSffi i Piffi HOLD THE SCREENS. THE W jlifflSftBilF K fi ffi CURTAIN-RO- HOOK SHOULD m I jJM'MSS-flt- : BU i B BE INSERTED INTO A HOLE 1 "41' a in. .. Tvt j . TMaJM A.ALSe- B0'tT0M WILI- - SOLVE THE PROBLEM ( WW SSv F HAV'NG VUR CAKES STICK TO THE BOT-- 'V ' Vvum,um. T0M OF DEEP BAKING PANS. PLACE. A f "T GREASED ALUMINUM DISK ON THE SKTiH.Sli BTBEF0RE- - pOURlNG THE CAKE ' QMTWI BATTER. UPON COMPLETION SlM- - ' r'TwA V PLV UFT THE PAlN FROM THE :ma--M- WPWm CAKE AS SH0WN AND remove NJhe oisk w't a KNIFE. Male Youngsters Drink More Milk Than Girls Results of a recent study shouK be of mterest to dairy farmers. The study revealed that teen-ag- e boys drink more milk than teen- HIJ E,aUng habits of sl girls, 15 years and over to both city and rura! schools were high studied for three It was found that 39 per cent ol th! bfSnd only 22 P cent ol drank a quart a day |