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Show MILLARD POTTIVTV CHRONICLE. DELTA. UTAH 'IV(i " " February Safest Month CHICAGO. February has an-other claim to fame beside being the shortest month of the year. It is also the safest month. There were 7,500 accidental deaths during February, 1948. This was 650 fewer deaths than the monthly average of 8,150 last year. Tomorrow Night without being awakened If you're forced up nightly because of urges, do this: Start taking FOLEY PILLS for Sluggish Kidneys. Tney purge kidney of wastes; they soothe those irritations causing those urges. Also allay backaches, leg pains, painful passages from kidney inaction. Unless yon sleep all night tomorrow night DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK. At your dnunst-- fit, W&SGT7?$filM0(s of Fml Make Donald act alive on your finger. I ' If Ytt You get ring and secret magnetic control. No Ill Jtringal No springs! No wires or batteries! " I V IJf Nothing to get out of order no skill needed. Cw.o.f. Easy directions included to g with each ring. " Whole-whe- at nourishment . . . richer . . . maltier BvJLl taste in every spoonful! Get hep get PEP! I I For each mi,mc25f in coin and your IfiM printed name and address with PEP box top Yo" 'M Y wf"i ft Dissolves r30 MINUTE ROLLS 1 I P>PI? 17" I P""3" Rcd s,ar 1 egg TV 7A 1 1 y Special Active Dry Yeast 3 cups sifted all purpose m.jtJt 1 cups warm water(105o flour i SPFCAL J ,oUOOF-- 2 tablespoons shortening, V cup sugar melted and cooled to I !STIC 1! teaspoons salt lukewarm V fi&f tffC I Step I: Dissolve yeast In warm water (105 to 110 F.) In J,'. large mlxlns bowl. Step 2s Add uar. salt, and unbeaten a 4 Add dour tradually. Beat well with electric mixer on Tv JJ:."" low or medium speed, or by band with large wooden I Js 1r W:2rC"'' spoon- Add shortening, beating undl thoroughly mired. ' S,eP 3: Spoon dough into well greased muffin pans, liliing L r f J ' about d full. Step 4: Let rise in warm place (90 f to 95 F.) until dough has risen level with top of muffin k V X. pans (about 25 to 30 minutes). Step 5: Bake in moder- - 0rt )'? s ately hot oven (375" to 400" F.) 20 mio. Step 6t Remove IV N ""l from pans and serve warm. Yields 18 to 24 rolls Try this new way to faster, easier baking. Red Star I ,:.-- r Dry Yeait keeps fresh for months right on the t-- n in t.---- " " '"-- "1 pantry shelf. It's always ready when you need it. Right in pipes right in papers! That's why mora and mora men ara smoking choice, crimp cut Prince Albert America's largest-sellin- g smoking tobacco. L i ,...il. l. ... h r YES; SIR! PRINCE ALBERT i T Lj ! IS RIGHT FOR MY AND PA. IS RIGHT FOR. ' j ',' PIPE! R A. SMOKES ; VlAKINS' SMOKES, TOO! ITS 1 COOL AND MILD , A CINCH TO ROLL EXTR- A- J AND HAS A GRAND, MILD, EXTRA-TAST- Y it i RICH TASTE, TOO I " CIGARETTES WITH EASY-- i ' IK Din CRIMP CUT i : i, PRINCE ALBERT!" j s ...i,: B. J. B&ruolUB lobuto Co.. Wlmbui-fialu- N. C I'l e choice, naturally mild tobacco selected for use in 1 1 . Prince Albert is specially treated to insure against tongue W1 k'te or extra smoking comfort And the new Humidor U Top locks in crimp cut Prince IuHlX'' irrf Albert's freshness and flavor for i0m greater smoking joy. ' ' - jsti More Men Smoke J POifJGO I 1 , J I than any other Vmi 10b3 CC0 at MMMH-- i -- fc a- TUNE IN "GRAND OLE OPRY", SATURDAY NIGHTS ON NBC The Master Swimmer TWENTY-FIV- E YEARS ago I saw Paavo Nurmi run in the Olym-pic Games at Paris. He was some-thing to see just as Babe Ruth and Jack Dempsey were. You knew you were looking at the master a run-ner good enough to win from the mile tothe 10,000 meters. "I felt the same way when I saw Furuhashi swim," Bob Kiphuth of Yale told me. I felt as if I were looking at another Nurmi another master." "I understand the new Japanese swimming reco-rds may force a change in swim-ming style and Grantland Rice form," I said to Kiphuth, one of the greatest physical condition-ers of all time. "That isn't quite the way it is," Yale's director of athletics said. "Furuhashi is another Nurmi another Ruth another Cobb far above the mass. You can't make rules for a genius." "Here are some of the perti-nent facts," Kiphuth continued. "Furuhashi is now 21 years of age, is a junior this year and has another year to go at Nip-pon university in Tokyo. He started to swim when he was eight years old, was an out-standing school-bo- y competitor and many of his records are still on the books. During the war he was in war industry and as soon as it was over and pools were available, he started his practice again. "With maturity, he has gained terrifically in power and skill with a great determination to be the world's outstanding swimmer. How he has succeeded is clearly shown in the results of his swimming the past two or three years. "In the summer of 1948 on the same day of the finals in the 1,500 meters event at the Olympic games in London, Hironoshin Furuhashi in the Japanese consolation meet turned in 18:37.0 against the Olympic time of 19:18.0. This particular race was a ding-don- g battle between Furuhashi and Shiro Hashizume. The pic-tures show there was never more than a stroke separating these two boys, and Furuhashi finally won by 710 of a sec-ond." Ame Borg's Great Swim "One of the great swims of all times was Arne Borg's 1500 meter in the European championships in Bologne in 1927. Borg in that race swam about one minute faster than he had ever done before, and he never came within a minute of that time afterwards. It was truly one of the most astounding athletic per-formances of all time in swimming. "When the Japanese came to great swimming power in the late twenties and early thir-ties, they went after that 19:07 plus record, trying to break the mark. I have seen them over and over again on my visits out there try to do, the job, but they always missed b y about two seconds because tsorg witn a very erratic pace, cut his lap time down after 900 meters and started to go even faster. In the natural process of deceleration, any advantage the Japanese had piled up at that point was slowly lost and by the end of the race the Jap-anese had lost out, too. "However, in 1938, Amano finally cracked the Borg record by doing 18:58.8, so it was really amazing in 1948 when Furuhashi turned in 18:37.0. He also bettered the world time for the 400 meter and 800 meter events during the same sum-mer. "Nevertheless, we were not pre-pared for what he did in Los An-geles this past month. His 1,500 meter was 18:19.0 and he also went under his marks in the 400 and 800 meters, and was anchor man in the 800 meter relay, swimming his 200 meter leg in record time. He vir-tually threw the record book in middle-distanc- e swimming right out the window, and it reminded me so very much of the middle-distan-running of the Finns, espe-cially Nurmi, in the Paris Olympic Games in 1924! "In doing this, Furuhashi has aroused a great deal of comment because of his un-orthodox style. y He has developed tremendous facility in the water and is really the only person who can swim the Furuhashi stroke. He is quite or-thodox, in a sense, in his arm stroke, but in his leg kick he uses a six-be- rhythm and only kicks three or four beats in each style, dragging his legs the rest of the time. However, the beats that he does use are executed with a snap which gives him tremendous n power." These observations from Bob Kiphuth should help clear up the many rumors about form. - f T( T) V r3v " zr, pm By Clay Hunter I 'Mm' PJi i''MSS mQAM utt t W. 11 II ' ' r. -- - o. l3D By MELLORS J iSTLSAy, UNCLE SOOF, i WHATS WIWNS V WONT SHOOT ) ' I 7 T 1 rVOULD YOU FIX T f WITH IT? LOOKS RIGHT --r ( AGGRAVATING, ) IUTT AND JEFF By Bud Fi,her !AREllNTOTHE HEART OF V I'M LOOKIN'FOR NATIVES HARK.' I HEAR iU 5 " "7 t"" """1 "eV. txV& iy fOOhS' THE HAWAIIAN JUNGLE VVITH THEIR WEIRD DRUMS! GOOVER DO i IGtV homIT Uf"A mutt?)awav from all of AND keep an eye J the I Jc oT.AV a?M ... mfl eiVILIZAT.ONTOGET Wlft EXOT'C OK 'EM WHILE I M SDG'( j4VTF'' ONOSLIA.L SOUNDS FOR frX RHYTHMS' CHECK THE CAMERAl) I E&Jfijf.k- J JITTER By Arthur Pointer I YOU'LL DANCf?V SBNTLEIAEN - OUR PA.NCE DlRECTDR tS AN ' . ytHILETHE LPA- D- EXPERT. ..STEP INTO THS AUDI7DI?tuM J ?i'c,'NJc ;ejrrTERcxrA,N R?3 ( insanvlays AND WATCH him in action ' - f rXT errSrt I''Vl1 ''I 1" MEANWHILE THE PRODUCER INTERVIEWS ' L f ) I j, qgga S ' I I THE 6ENTLEMEN OF THE PRESS .g--Si- AND VfOQLY By Bert Thomas CJ WOOLY UNTIE MEf ) I HE TIED AAE UP AND ) , K ,'VE NEVER TEN VULTURES FLEW BY", THEY M I'M A VICTIM OP ' ( LEFLriy(SI ) V BEEN MORE J LOOKER AND DJONJT EVEN STQPfl ) a v msAAAi ninf Ml Vt insulted in ( it l SOMEBODy TOLD WETR SHE HAP f AN ALLURIN6 ShAMJ" i " WOULD THAT BE FOR A CAM OF I ,.- - I PEACHES OR A LEFT TURN ? " |